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单词 chemise
释义

chemisen.

Brit. /ʃəˈmiːz/, /ʃəˈmɪz/, U.S. /ʃəˈmiz/, /ʃəˈmɪz/
Forms:

α. Old English cemes, Old English–Middle English kemes, Middle English kemese, Middle English kemse.

β. Middle English– chemise.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: Latin camisia; French chemise.
Etymology: Partly (in α. forms) < post-classical Latin camisia (see below), and partly (chiefly in β. forms) < Anglo-Norman chemés, kemese, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French, French chemise linen undergarment (c1000 as chamisae ), book cover (1351), wall lining an earthen rampart (1676), lining of a furnace (1799 in the passage translated in quot. 1800 at sense 4) < post-classical Latin camisia, camisa linen undergarment (c400), priestly garment (6th cent.), book cover (10th cent.), of uncertain origin (see below). Compare Old Occitan camisa (first half of the 12th cent.), Catalan camisa (1204), Spanish camisa (early 13th cent.), Portuguese camisa (1057), Italian camicia (end of the 13th cent. as camiscia).Post-classical Latin camisia appears first in Jerome c400 ( Epistulae 64. 11 ‘volo pro legentis facilitate abuti sermone vulgato; solent militantes habere lineas, quas camisias vocant’, ‘I wish to use colloquial language for the convenience of the reader; soldiers usually have linen garments which they call chemises’). It is also in Salic law (58. 4) and in Isidore (19. 21. 1, 22. 29 ‘Camisias vocari, quod in his dormimus in camis, id est stratis nostris’, ‘chemises are so called, because we sleep in them in our beds’). Compare also the derivative post-classical Latin camisile , campsile fine linen, alb, etc. (see chaisel n.). The further etymology of Latin camisia is uncertain. It appears to be a borrowing from another Indo-European language and ultimately related to the Germanic group comprising Old English hemeðe , Old Frisian hamethe , hemethe , Middle Dutch hemde (Dutch hemd ), Old Saxon hemiði (Middle Low German hēmede , hemmede ), Old High German hemidi (Middle High German hemede , German Hemd ), ultimately < Indo-European base of hame n.1 It is possible that the Latin word was borrowed < Germanic, although this poses phonological problems. Alternative suggestions include mediation via a Celtic language (although this would need to be distinct from the attested Celtic words cited below), or perhaps a borrowing from a cognate in a related language of the Balkans. Early Irish caimmse shirt, chemise (Irish caimse , now literary), Welsh †camse robe, gown (14th cent.), and Old Cornish camse article of female clothing, are all ultimately < Latin. Welsh hefis , hefys (14th–15th cent.) and Old Cornish heuis (Middle Cornish hevys ) apparently reflect early borrowings into British < Germanic. The word apparently became obsolete in the 16th cent. and was reborrowed < French in the late 17th cent. in sense 2 and slightly later in sense 1. With sense 3 compare French chemise à feu (1676).
1.
a. In early use: a long shirt or shirt-like undergarment worn (esp. by women) for warmth and to protect clothing from sweat; a shift, a smock. Subsequently esp.: a short nightdress or similar item of lingerie (cf. night-chemise n. at night n. and int. Compounds 3b); a long shirt worn as an overgarment.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > underwear > [noun] > vest or undershirt
chemiseeOE
sarkOE
shirtOE
wyliecoat1478
semmitc1485
commission1567
shift1601
undershirt1648
mish1667
subucula1695
linder1768
surcoat1768
smish1807
under-vest1813
flesh-bag1819
under-tunic1819
vest1851
underfug1924
skivvy1932
wife-beater1993
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > underwear > [noun] > vest or undershirt > for women
chemiseeOE
smocka1000
simar1636
smicketc1685
shift1712
shimmy1837
vestee1963
α.
eOE Cleopatra Gloss. in W. G. Stryker Lat.-Old Eng. Gloss. in MS Cotton Cleopatra A.III (Ph.D. diss., Stanford Univ.) (1951) 84 Camisa, ham, cemes.
OE Wærferð tr. Gregory Dialogues (Corpus Cambr.) (1900) i. ix. 68 He cwæð, þæt..full oft butan his kemese [L. sine linea] & eac gelomlice butan his tunecan he eft on hire [sc. his meder] huse cyrde.
a1400 (c1300) Northern Homily: Serm. on Gospels (Coll. Phys.) in Middle Eng. Dict. at Kemes(e His moder dremid..Al the mikel water of temis Rin in the bosem of hir kemes.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) ii. l. 2989 In þe snowe for syght scho [sc. Matilda] ȝede out in hir smok; ouere þe water of Temse þat frosen was with iys, withouten kirtelle or kemse, saue kouerchef, alle bare vis.
β. a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 163 (MED) Hire chemise smal and hwit..and hire smoc hwit. 1706 C. Gildon Post-boy robb'd of his Mail (ed. 2) ii. lxxiv. 455 Hearing you lie without a Shirt, I do the same without a Chemise.1789 Bath Jrnl. 29 June A chemise of very clean gauze, put over a dress of rose taffety.1835 Naut. Mag. 4 689 The idea of a sailor's chemise is not bad.1835 A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 392 Each [girl] is provided with fine flannel chemises by the proprietors.1850 L. Hunt Autobiogr. III. xxiv. 218 That harmless expression [shift]..has been set aside in favour of the French word ‘chemise’.1914 M. R. Rinehart Street of Seven Stars xxvi. 313 It was rumored also that she wore no chemise, but instead an infinitely coquettish series of..garments.a1946 C. Carswell Lying Awake (1950) iii. 31 We wore in winter heavy woollen combinations and over that a substantial long cloth chemise.1978 Chatelaine Dec. 75/1 A sensuous lacy chemise to wear with satin evening blazers.2004 Time Out N.Y. 30 Sept. 151/4 [She] spends most of the play in a pink chemise, ankle tats showing, panties flashing.
b. A priest's alb. Obsolete.
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society > faith > artefacts > vestments > outer garments > [noun] > alb
albOE
chemisec1230
chrisom1570
c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 216 Ȝef sum riueð surpliz oðer measse kemese.
c. A herald's robe. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > heraldic coat or vest
coat-armourc1384
coat of arms1490
paludament1543
chemise1562
tabard1598
midlag1824
1562 G. Legh Accedens of Armory (1597) f. 288v The Herehaught..In a chemise blanke, powdred and spotted with mullettess Sable.
d. A straight dress of simple design. Also chemise dress.The late 18th cent. chemise dress is a long dress which is gathered beneath the bust and then hangs straight, while that of the 20th cent. and later is shorter, often sleeveless, and hangs straight from the shoulders.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > dress, robe, or gown > types of > hanging straight from shoulders
chemise1785
tube dress1948
shift1957
shift dress1966
1785 A. M. Bennett Anna III. lvii. 109 Mrs. Edwin's dress was a beautiful spotted gauze chemise with pale pink persian.
1919 Times 9 June 13/3 Another [girl] wears a little chemise dress in pale blue, silk jersey trimmed with silver.
1958 Punch 17 Sept. 384/1 The summer chemise was the prettiest, most impudent, provocative fashion that we have seen for many a day.
1998 G. O'Hara Callan Dict. Fashion & Fashion Designers 84/2 A beltless chemise dress with standaway collar.
2. Fortification. A wall with which a medieval earthwork was lined as a fortification. Also chemise wall. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > defence > defensive work(s) > defensive walls > [noun] > wall of fortified town > inner wall
countermure1524
chemise1691
1691 A. Swall tr. S. Le P. de Vauban New Method Fortification i. iv. 10 The Shirt or Chemise [Fr. chemise], is the Solidity of the Wall from the Talus to the Stone Row.
1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I Chemise, in Fortification, is a Wall with which a Bastion, or any other Bulwark of Earth is lined for its greater Support and Strength.
1745 Mil. Dict. in Theatre of Present War (at cited word) Chemise, a Word almost out of Date, formerly signifying the Wall that faced or lined a Work of Earth.
1853 J. H. Stocqueler Mil. Encycl. 57 Chemise, in mediæval fortification, an additional escarp or counter-guard wall, covering the lower part of the escarp.
1888 D. Macgibbon Archit. of Provence & Riviera 248 The donjon, or redoubt, which was detached from the other works,..often had a ditch and an enclosing wall, or chemise.
1952 M. A. Owings Arts in Middle Eng. Romances 46 The approach to the keep was then by a gateway through the chemise into the court.
2003 C. Gravett Norman Stone Castles II. 11 The tower is set within a chemise wall that seems to have been built at the same time or possibly earlier.
Thesaurus »
Categories »
3. fire chemise (see fire n. and int. Compounds 2a).
4. The lining of a furnace. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1800 tr. E. J. B. Bouillon-Lagrange Man. Course Chem. II. 34 The anterior part of the furnace..in French la Chemise [Fr. la chemise]... Zinc..is there condensed, and falls back in grains into charcoal-dust, spread out on a stone..placed at the bottom of the chemise in the furnace.
1830 S. F. Gray & A. L. Porter Chem. of Arts II. 504 In these figures..E, is the external lining, or chemise, formed of clay mixed with small stone or slags.
1843 A. Ure Dict. Arts (ed. 3) 995 Fig. 1127 represents a schachtofen, or pit-kiln, for coking coals in Germany. a is the lining (chemise) made of fire bricks.
5. The iron lining or core on which a gun barrel is welded. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1881 W. W. Greener Gun & its Devel. 231 All the better quality Damascus barrels are welded upon a ‘chemise’, or plain iron lining, which is bored out after the barrels are welded.
1926 Trans. Newcomen Soc. 5 59 In England it was not customary to use the inner tube, or chemise, but to wind spirally the skelp or riband of two to four skelps, and weld the coils together.
6. A loose protective covering for a book. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > book > parts of book > [noun] > cover > wrapper or loose cover
wrapper1806
fall1837
book wrapper1844
jacket1850
book jacket1859
chemise1893
dust cover1902
book folder1925
dust jacket1928
dust-wrapper1932
1893 Quaritch Catal. No. 138. 1 In wooden boards..wrapped in a modern morocco chemise.
1928 E. G. Millar Eng. Illumin. MSS XIVth & XVth Cent. i. 3 It still retains its binding of this period with a sheepskin ‘chemise’.
1946 E. Diehl Bookbinding II. xix. 294 Before a case is made for a book, a ‘chemise’, or cover, should be made for it if it is bound in full leather and is elaborately tooled.
1960 G. A. Glaister Gloss. Bk. 65/2 Chemise, a cover of silk or chevrotain sometimes used in the 15th century as a protection for embellished leather-bound books.
2006 E. Duffy Marking Hours ii. 30 (caption) Mary of Burgundy at prayer her precious Primer protected by its chemise.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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更新时间:2024/9/21 3:38:10