释义 |
galliardise arch.|ˈgælɪəˌdaɪz| Also 6 ? galiardise, 7 galliardize, gagliardise, 9 gaillardise. [ad. F. gaillardise, f. gaillard galliard n.] Gaiety, mirth, revelry. Also, a merry trick.
c1570Pride & Lowl. (1841) 58 A man..Whose trade is galiaudise [? read galiardise], drinke, and disport. 1619T. Milles tr. Mexia's Treas. Anc. & Mod. Times II. x. xiii. 962/1 Landgartha..obseruing some rare galliardise, euen in the gracefull lookes of her female followers. 1643Sir T. Browne Relig. Med. ii. §11, I am no way facetious, nor disposed for the mirth and galliardize of company. 1828Scott F.M. Perth xxx, ‘How stands it with the bona robas and the galliards?’ ‘Little galliardise stirring, my lord.’ 1842L. Hunt Palfrey v. 129 This were a crowning galliardise For king himself to tell in hall. 1893Harper's Mag. Feb. 394 Your life is one long gaillardise. Hence † ˈgalliarˌdizing ppl. a., tending to revelry; enlivening, exciting to levity.
1697Collier Immor. Stage vi. (1730) 182 The Tunes are generally airy and gailliardizing. 1703― Ess. Mor. Subj. ii. 25 One word of Church Musick..There must be..no light and galliardizing notes. |