释义 |
▪ I. † transˈmiss, n. Obs. exc. Hist. [ad. L. transmiss-us, -um: see next.] A copy of an Irish Bill returned to the Irish Parliament with the king's approval.
1764Jrnl. Irish Ho. Comm. 11 May, Resolved That no Bill shall pass in this House until a Committee of this House shall compare the Transmiss with the original Heads of a Bill, and report, if any, and what alterations have been made therein, to the House. 1812in Rep. Comm. Pub. Rec. Irel. (1815) 75 Transmisses of Public and Private Acts of Parliament.—The oldest Transmisses we could yet discover, are of the Reign of Henry VIII. ▪ II. † transˈmiss, ppl. a. Obs. rare. [ad. L. transmiss-us, pa. pple. of transmittĕre to transmit.] Transmitted. (Const. as pa. pple.)
1647H. More Poems 116 Souls..If they shoot out, be they equally transmisse Around this body? Or but upward start? Ibid. 181 Neither Speech nor Language is Where their voice is not transmisse. ▪ III. † transˈmiss, v. Obs. rare. [f. L. transmiss-, ppl. stem of transmittĕre to transmit. It occurs in the pa. pple. transmiss'd, app. representing L. transmissum. Cf. dismiss.] = transmit.
a1643W. Cartwright Ordinary iii. v, Any reversions yet? nothing transmiss'd? |