释义 |
typic, a.|ˈtɪpɪk| [a. F. typique (1582 in Hatz.-Darm.), ad. L. typicus, a. Gr. τυπικός typical, figurative, f. τύπος type; see -ic. So Pg. typico, Sp. and It. tipico.] 1. = typical a. 1.
1610Donne Pseudo-martyr 5 Those Typique times, and Sacrifices of the old law. 1692J. Salter Triumphs Jesus 7 Of various colour'd Plumes their wings are made The Rain-bows to 'em are but Typick shade. 1839Bailey Festus x. (1848) 110 This air-filled bowl is typic of the world. 1856Mrs. Browning Aur. Leigh ix. 134 Already swearing at my feet That I'm the typic She. 1886Swinburne Stud. Prose & Poetry (1894) 181 With what passionate magnificence of rapture the poet would have sung the fall of the typic prison. 2. Of a fever: Conforming to a particular type (see type n.1 4); recurring at regular intervals; intermittent; periodic. ? Obs.
1601Holland Pliny xxviii. xvi. II. 335 As touching feavers,..if it bee any of these Typicke and Periodicall agues, which be intermittent and returne by fits. 1857Dunglison Med. Lex., Typic, typical,..characterized by periodicity, as a ‘typical fever’; or one which observes a particular type. |