释义 |
euphemious, a. rare.|juːˈfiːmɪəs| [f. Gr. εὔϕηµ-ος fair of speech, also well reputed (f. εὐ- eu- + ϕήµη speaking, fame) + -ious.] a. = euphemistic. b. That has a reputable name.
1867L. Campbell tr. Plato's Polit. Introd. 50 He may have recourse to the more ‘euphemious’ plan of emigration. Hence euˈphemiously adv. = euphemistically.
1853Fraser's Mag. XLVII. 683 The ‘poets’ had ‘mounted their horse’, as getting drunk was euphemiously called by that polite people. 1884B. Nicholson in Athenæum 28 June 824/3 It is euphemiously said to be a ‘change of three letters’. |