释义 |
wiˈthinside, adv., prep., (n.) Now arch. or dial. (Also with hyphen, or rarely as two words.) [f. within + side n.1, after inside.] A. adv. 1. On the inner side: = inside adv. 1, within adv. 1 (in part). Also const. of.
a1595Southwell Hundred Medit. (1873) 70 The windows..were wider..withinside than without. 1651French Distill. i. 38 The salt..which adheres to the neck of the Retort withinside. 1731Miller Gard. Dict. s.v. Greenhouse, Within-side of the Windows..you should have good strong Shutters. 1772Graves Spir. Quix. iv. xii, A small oval picture,..fixed in a pannel, within-side of the door. 1800T. Green Diary Lover Lit. (1810) 204 He employs..the illustration of a man withinside, and another withoutside, of a sphere, disputing on its convexity or concavity. c1850Rudim. Navig. (Weale) 154 String, one or two planks withinside, next under the gunwale, answering to the sheer⁓strakes withoutside. 2. In (or to) the inner part or interior (of): = inside adv. 2, within adv. 1 (in part), 1 b, 1 d. Also, indoors: = within adv. 2 b.
1598Barret Theor. Warres v. i. 126 Cauallero, or a mount withinside distant from the curtine. 1712Steele Spect. No. 533 ⁋2 What passes..within-side of those Vehicles. a1723Sir C. Wren in Lucy Phillimore Mem. (1881) 347 A Basis of squar'd stone fifty foot high..so contrived within⁓side as to form a very intricate Labyrinth. a1774Goldsm. Surv. Exp. Philos. (1776) I. 389 The diver..sate upon a small seat within-side. 1774― Nat. Hist. (1862) I. vi. xi. 464 The porcupine's quill is within-side spongy. 1801M. Edgeworth Irish Bulls vii, The imprudence of firing at the door of a house without having previously examined whether any one was withinside. 1806R. Cumberland Mem. (1807) II. 153 An edifice, that requires a day to examine it within side and without. Ibid. 397 A gaudy equipage will attract notice, though it shall carry a dull company withinside of it. 1807Southey Espriella's Lett. xxxvii. (1808) II. 78 We meant..to have forsaken the roof and taken our seats within⁓side. 1889Stevenson Master of Ballantrae x. 260 My gentleman sat withinside tailor-wise and busily stitching. 3. fig. Within the limits of.
1856J. Grote in Cambr. Ess. 104 The classical range is restricted withinside of Greek and Latin literature. B. prep. = inside prep. 1. On the inner side of: = within prep. 1 b, d.
1760–72H. Brooke Fool of Qual. (1809) III. 99 The stake..they run up withinside the spinal bone. a1766F. Sheridan Nourjahad (1767) 25 It was within-side the walls of the temple. 1851Borrow Lavengro xcix. (1893) 398 Various evolutions withinside the pale. 1852Thackeray Esmond i. ix, Holiday music from within-side a prison wall. 2. In the inner part of: = within prep. 1.
1686Plot Staffordsh. 198 Why may not these imperfect Metalls..grow..withoutside the stalks of Gorse, as well as the perfect both without and withinside other plants? 1782E. N. Blower Geo. Bateman II. 200 Permit her to stay within-side the house. 1815Jane Austen Emma I. x, Harriet..had never..been within side the Vicarage. 1849De Quincey Engl. Mail Coach Wks. 1863 IV. 348 note, Graves within-side the cathedrals. †C. n. The inner side: = inside n. 1. Obs. rare.
a1814Bandit ii. in New Brit. Theatre I. 409 She fastens the within-side. So wiˈthinsides adv. arch. or dial.
1891Stevenson Island Nts.' Entert., Bottle Imp (1893) 154 Withinsides something obscurely moved. a1894― Fables xviii. Touchstone, His soul withinsides was as little as a pea. 1910Kipling Rewards & Fairies 74 That thought shrivelled me withinsides. |