释义 |
propertied, a.|ˈprɒpətɪd| [f. next + -ed2.] †1. Having a specified property, quality, nature, or disposition. Obs.
1606Shakes. Ant. & Cl. v. ii. 83 His voyce was propertied As all the tuned Spheres, and that to Friends. 1633Heywood Eng. Trav. i. Wks. 1874 IV. 9 This approues you To be most nobly propertied. [1862F. Hall Hindu Philos. Syst. 94 The expression dharma-dharmyabhedát, ‘because of the non-difference of a property and that which is propertied.’] 2. Possessed of, owning, or holding property.
1760–72H. Brooke Fool of Qual. (1809) III. 30 You are still in the flesh, in a carnal and propertied world. 1834Fraser's Mag. IX. 267 They are the propertied class. 1887M. Arnold Ess. Crit. Ser. ii. viii. (1888) 296 Whatever the propertied and satisfied classes may think. 3. Furnished with theatrical properties.
1901Westm. Gaz. 10 Jan. 2/1 The great picture of ‘An Audience in Athens during the Representation of Agamemnon’..is too ‘staged’ and ‘propertied’ to be very convincing. 1909M. E. Albright Shakesperian Stage 147 The Elizabethan stage..was little more than a union of the old sedes and plateæ of the moralities, or the propertied and unpropertied stages of the interludes. |