释义 |
▪ I. chitty, n. Anglo-Indian.|ˈtʃɪtɪ| [a. Hindī chiṭṭhī, Mahrātī chiṭṭī:—Skr. chitra spot, mark, etc.] ‘A letter or note; also, a certificate given to a servant, or the like; a pass’ (Yule).
1698Fryer Acc. E. India & P. iii. iv. 126, I sent my Gulleon Peon..with his Master's Chitty, or Pass, to the Governor. 1786Tippoo's Let. 284 (Y.) Every merchant from Muscat who brings you a chitty from Meer Kâzim. 1829Mem. of Col. Mountain (ed. 2) 80 (Y.) He wanted a chithee or note, for this is the most note-writing country under heaven. ▪ II. † chitty, a.1 Obs. rare. [f. chit n.2 + -y1.] Freckled or warty.
1552Huloet, Chytty, or full of chyttes or wartes, lentiginosus. c1729R. Drury Rural Milliners ii. xi, Shall they, such chitty Jades, so happy be. ▪ III. chitty, a.2 [Apparently deduced from chitty-face, q.v., but afterwards associated with chit n.1] Said of the face: a. Lean and pinched. b. Puny, childish, baby-like.
1616Pasquil & Kath. i. 229 A chittie, well complexion'd face; And yet it wants a beard. 1621Burton Anat. Mel. iii. ii. iv. i. (1651) 519 Every Lover admires his Mistress, though she..have a..lean, thin, chitty face. 1755Johnson, Chitty, childish, like a baby. ▪ IV. chitty var. chetty. |