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单词 campaign
释义 I. campaign, n.|kæmˈpeɪn|
Also 7–8 campagne, 7 -agn, -aine, -aigne.
[a. F. campagne country, open country, champaign, ‘the field’, campaign, which in the course of the 16th c. took the place of the earlier champagne in all its senses (except as the proper name of a French province). It was introduced into Eng. in the 17th c., and at first occasionally used in all the senses of the earlier champaign, but was at length differentiated, and restricted to the military sense, for which it is now the proper term. The forms campagna, -agnia, -ania were also in 17th c. use (see above).
Littré treats 16th c. Fr. campagne as a substitution of the northern or Picard dialect form for the Parisian champagne; but there can be no doubt that it was actually an adaptation of It. campagna (common in the military sense in 16th c., e.g. Caro Virgil's æn. xii. 563 ‘Turno la campagna aprendo’, Turnus opening the campaign), and may have been taken into F. first in military phraseology, and gradually extended to other senses, the advantage of a form which could not be confounded with the name of the province Champagne perhaps conducing to the result. For ultimate etymology see champaign, campania.]
1. A tract of open country; a plain; = champaign. Obs.
1628Hobbes Thucyd. (1822) 130 The River Achelous..running through..most part of the campagne of Acarnania.1647Clarendon Hist. Reb. II. vi. 34 There was between the Hill and the Town a fair Campaigne.a1718Garth (J.) Where Tiber..fattens, as he runs, the fair campaign.1765Sterne Tr. Shandy (1802) VII. v. 12 The outworks stretch a great way into the campaign.
2. Open country as opposed to hills, woods, etc.; country as opposed to town; = champaign.
a1667Cowley Dang. in Much Company Wks. 1710 II. 762 To be sure not to venture his Person any longer in the open Campaign, to retreat and entrench himself.1684Scanderbeg Rediv. ii. 9 For that the Countrey is there Composed of vast Campagn and level woods.1699Maundrell in Journ. Jerus. (1721) T ij b, We hunt in the most delightful Campaign.1706Collier Refl. Ridic. 194 They that see you in the Campaign in the Summer.
3. Mil. The continuance and operations of an army ‘in the field’ for a season or other definite portion of time, or while engaged in one continuous series of military operations constituting the whole, or a distinct part, of a war. (In Ger. Feldzug.)
The name arose in the earlier conditions of warfare, according to which an army remained in quarters (in towns, garrisons, fortresses, or camps) during the winter, and on the approach of summer issued forth into the open country (nella campagna, dans la campagne) or ‘took the field’, until the close of the season again suspended active operations. Hence the name properly signifying the ‘being in the field’, was also applied, now to the season or time during which the army kept the field, and now to the series of operations performed during this time. In the changed conditions of modern warfare, the season of the year is of much less importance, and a campaign has now no direct reference to time or season, but to an expedition or continuous series of operations bearing upon a distinct object, the accomplishment or abandonment of which marks its end, whether in the course of a week or two, or after one or more years. The history of the sense is seen in early Dictionaries; e.g.
1656Blount Glossogr. s.v., A word much used among Souldiers, by whom the next Campaine is usually taken for the next Summers Expedition of an Army, or its taking the field.1721Bailey, Campain, [in Military Affairs] the space of time every Year, an Army continues in the Field, during a War.1730–6A summer's war.1755Johnson, Campaign, the time for which any army keeps the field, without entering into quarters.
1647Clarendon Hist. Reb. I. i. 49 After he had made two or three Campaigns..he came in the leisure of the Winter to visit his Friends in England.1667Pepys Diary 28 June, Several commanders that had not money to set them out to the present campagne.1693Mem. Ct. Teckely i. 37 And prepared themselves to open the Campagn in good time.1708Swift Predict. for 1708 Wks. 1755 II. i. 153 It will be a glorious campaign for the allies.1790Beatson Nav. & Mil. Mem. II. 218 The want of success in the last campaign.1847Emerson Repres. Men, Napoleon Wks. (Bohn) I. 375 In the Russian campaign he..said ‘I have two hundred millions in my coffers, and I would give them all for Ney’.
4. transf.
a. A naval expedition; a voyage or cruise. Obs. (So F. campagne, It. campagna.)
1708J. Bion Suffer. Prot. in Arb. Garner VI. 404 Being several Campaigns, Chaplain aboard one of the Galleys.
b. An expedition or excursion into the country; a summer's trip or sojourn.
1748H. Walpole Corr. I. 123 A campaign at Twickenham furnishes as little matter for a letter as an abortive one in Flanders.1749E. Montagu Lett. (1813) III. 82 The waters are good..the place agreeable, and you cannot make a better summer's campaign.1789Wolcott (P. Pindar) Subj. for Painters 59 A man in rather an exalted station..Made frequent curiosity campaigns; Sometimes caught grass-hoppers.
c. Ironworks. The period during which a furnace is in continuous operation.
1871Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Eng. I. 98 By their corrosive action on the lining..they shorten a campaign or run to a few days.1881in Raymond Mining Gloss.
5. a. fig. Applied to any course of action analogous to a military campaign, either in having a distinct period of activity, or in being of the nature of a struggle, or of an organized attempt aiming at a definite result.
1770Junius Lett. xxxix. 201 They..rest from the..labours of the campaign.1773C. Macklin Man of World (1793) 36 Their amorous equipage for the nuptial campaign.1868Dickens Lett. (1880) II. 388, I am now preparing for a final reading campaign.1887Pall Mall Budg. 31 Mar. 3 A campaign is being carried on in Paris..against the interlopers who sell tickets at the doors of the theatres.
b. esp. in Politics, An organized course of action designed to arouse public opinion throughout the country for or against some political object, or to influence the voting at an election of members of the legislature. Also attrib. orig. U.S.
c. The Plan of Campaign in Ireland, entered upon in the winter of 1886–7, a method of conducting operations against landlords who refused to lower rents, according to which the tenants in a body were to pay what they considered the fair rent into the hands of a political leader, charged to retain it until the landlord should accept the sum offered, less any amount subsequently expended in maintaining the struggle.
1809J. Steele Papers (1924) II. 601 The electioneering campaign having become much warmer than I had anticipated.1844Talladega (Ala.) Dem. Watchtower 12 June 2/6 We issue our Campaign Paper to meet the wants of numerous Associations.1857S. Bowles Let. 16 Feb. in G. S. Merriam Life & Times S. Bowles (1885) I. xxv. 291 We should get those amendments out of the way before we strike out for the summer campaign.1880Webster Supp., Campaign, (U.S. Politics) the season of excitement and effort preceding an election; canvass.1880Daily Union (San Diego) 1 Sept. 1/1 He will take care of the Indiana campaign expenses, with the understanding that he be not called on to contribute to the campaign fund for other states.1882Nation 21 Dec. 522/3 Garfield seems to have reposed great confidence in Dorsey as a campaign manager.1884Boston (Mass.) Jrnl. 20 Sept., The attempt of the Republicans to introduce the tariff as one of the issues of the campaign.1886United Ireland 20 Nov. 272/2 The ‘Plan of Campaign’ as laid down in United Ireland of October 23rd.1886Pall Mall G. 24 Nov. 2/1 The plan of campaign is..the proposal that whenever a landlord refuses to settle at the abatement proposed by his tenants..the reduced rent of all the tenantry is to be banked with an unknown individual, who is to act as paymaster and dole out weekly allowances to such of the tenants as are evicted by the landlord for non-payment of rent.a1888Mod. The electoral campaign has now begun in earnest.1907Daily Mail 14 Jan. 7/3 A born campaign-manager.1968W. Safire New Lang. Politics 62/2 Just as there is an unwritten law that takes for granted campaign exaggerations, there is also an unwritten law that a candidate may not afterward disown his campaign statements.
6. Short for campaign-coat, -lace: see 7 b. Obs.
1690Mundus Muliebris, Campaine, a narrow kind of lace.1692Tryon Good Housew. i. 7 A Flannel Shirt, and a Wastcoat, Doublet, Coat, and Campaign, a Gown over all lin'd.
7. attrib. and in Comb.:
a. Of the nature of open country; belonging to the open country.
1628Hobbes Thucyd. (1822) 129 The campagne country beyond Strymon.1634Holland Pliny II. 84 The Campaign Rose bloweth early and is very forward.1768G. White Selborne xv. 43 The stone curlew..abounds in all the campaign parts of Hampshire and Sussex.1882Elwes tr. Capello & Ivens II. iv. 77 We plunged into the vast campaign country to the north.
b. Of, belonging to, or used on a military campaign: as campaign-coat, campaign-lace, campaign-oven, campaign-shoes, campaign-wig. (Some of these were perhaps merely catch names referring to the famous campaigns of Marlborough.)
1677Lond. Gaz. No. 1180/4 Wearing a brown serge Sute, and a brownish *Campaine Coat.1690B. E. Dict. Cant. Crew, Campaign-coat, originally only such as Soldiers wore, but afterwards a Mode in Cities.1725New Cant. Dict., Campaign-coat, in a Canting Sense, the ragged, tatter'd..Coat, worn by Beggars and Gypsies, in order to move Compassion.
1682Lond. Gaz. No. 1769/4 A green Mohair Silk Petticoat, with a *Campain Gold and Silver Lace.
1708Kersey, *Campaign-Oven, a portable Oven..us'd by Confectioners.1730–6Bailey, Campaign oven, a portable oven made of copper, of a convenient length, and about three or four inches high, being raised on feet, so that fire may be kindled underneath, and on the cover or lid of it are ledges to hold fire also.
1693Lond. Gaz. No. 2840/4 A Highway Robber..with a *Campagne Perriwig.
1691Satyr agst. French 7 Our stockings must be Mill'd, our Shooes *Campaign.
1688R. Holme Armoury ii. xviii. §118 A *Campaign Wig, hath Knots or Bobs (or a Dildo on each side) with a Curled Forehead, a Travelling Wig.1846–60Fairholt Costume, Gloss., A wig called a ‘campaign-wig’ was introduced from France about 1712. It was plain, and close-fitting.
II. campaign, v.|kæmˈpeɪn|
[f. prec. n.]
1. intr. To serve in, or go on, a campaign. Also fig. and transf.
1701[see campaigning].1766G. Canning Anti-Lucretius v. 401 Without an host what General could campaign?1801Sir R. Musgrave Hist. Irish Reb. p. vi. (T.) The officers, who campaigned in the late rebellion.1875Jowett Plato (ed. 2) III. 280 He..feeds his heroes, when they are campaigning, on soldiers' fare.1885Pall Mall G. 20 Feb. 2/2 You will campaign in the Soudan.
2. trans. (nonce-use.)
1768Sterne Sent. Journ. (1778) I. 114 An old soldier..campaign'd and worn out to death in the service.
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