单词 | damned |
释义 | damnedadj. 1. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > judging > conviction or judicial condemnation > [adjective] > convicted or condemned convicta1340 damnedc1440 taint1496 convict1549 cast1587 convicted1611 condemned1712 c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 113 Dampnyd, dampnatus. 1495 Act 11 Hen. VII c. 48 §2 Felons, fugitif, outlawed, convicte and dampned persones. 1551 R. Robinson tr. T. More Vtopia sig. Dviv Condempned to be common laborers...In some partes..thies seruyng men (for so be thies damned persons called) do no common worke. 1620 N. Brent tr. P. Sarpi Hist. Councel of Trent vi. 472 To shew what bookes did containe damned or apocryphall doctrine. 1821 C. Lamb Witches in Elia 1st Ser. The reveries of the cell-damned murderer. b. Condemned by publicly expressed disapproval, as a play, etc.: also transferred of an author. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > dispraise or discommendation > [adjective] > dispraised > censured or condemned > publicly damned1708 1708 A. Pope Corr. 10 May (1956) I. 49 Damnation follows Death in other Men, But your damn'd Poet lives and writes agen. 1710 A. Pope Corr. 17 May (1956) I. 87 I am, it must be own'd..Dead in a Poetical Capacity, as a damn'd Author. 2. a. Theology. Doomed to or undergoing eternal punishment; condemned or consigned to hell. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > reprobation > [adjective] > affected by unsalveda1240 damned1393 reprobate?a1425 prescit?a1450 losta1533 reprobated1541 condemned1543 unredeemed1548 devoted1611 unsaved1648 non-elect1650 presciteda1660 damning1662 unelected1836 1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis I. 189 O dampned man to helle. 1508 Bp. J. Fisher Wks. (1876) 20 The dampned spyrytes. 1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream iii. ii. 383 Damned spirits all, That in crosse waies and floods haue buriall. View more context for this quotation 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost ii. 482 For neither do the Spirits damn'd Loose all thir vertue. View more context for this quotation 1882 D. G. Rossetti Rose Mary in Ballads & Sonn. ii. 43 Full well hath thy treason found its goal, O thou dead body and damnèd soul. b. absol. as n. plural. The souls in hell, ‘the lost’. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > deity > hell > [noun] > inhabitant of > damned soul warlockOE damned?1507 society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > reprobation > [noun] > person affected by > collective reproved1435 reprobate1548 damneda1616 ?1507 Communyc. (W. de W.) C ij The payne..That dampned haue in hell. a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) i. ii. 291 It was torment To lay vpon the damn'd . View more context for this quotation 1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan iii. xxxviii. 242 The place of the Damned. 1827 R. Pollok Course of Time I. v. 229 In dreadful apparition, saw before His vision pass, the shadows of the damned. c. See quot. 1791 (Cf. French âme damnée.) ΚΠ 1791 F. Grose Grumbler viii. 32 A set of men, who attend at the Custom-house, under the denomination of Damned Souls, in order, for a certain fee, to swear out any goods whatsoever for the merchants. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > state of being accursed > [adjective] > as everyday imprecation stinking?c1225 misbegetc1325 banned1340 cursefula1382 wariablea1382 cursedc1386 biccheda1400 maledighta1400 vilea1400 accursedc1400 whoresona1450 remauldit?1473 execrable1490 infamous1490 unbicheda1500 jolly1534 bloodyc1540 mangy?1548 pagan1550 damned1563 misbegotten1571 putid1580 desperate1581 excremental1591 inexecrable?1594 sacred1594 putrid1628 sad1664 blasted1682 plagued1728 damnation1757 infernal1764 damn1775 pesky1775 deuced1782 shocking1798 blessed1806 darned1815 dinged1821 anointed1823 goldarn1830 darn1835 cussed1837 blamed1840 unholy1842 verdomde1850 bleeding1858 ghastly1860 goddam1861 blankety1872 blame1876 bastard1877 God-awful1877 dashed1881 sodding1881 bally1885 ungodly1887 blazing1888 dee1889 motherfucking1890 blistering1900 plurry1900 Christly1910 blinking1914 blethering1915 blighted1915 blighting1916 soddish1922 somethinged1922 effing1929 Jesus1929 dagnab1934 bastarding1944 Christless1947 mother-loving1948 mothering1951 pussyclaat1957 mother-grabbing1959 pigging1970 society > morality > moral evil > wickedness > [adjective] > wicked or accursed wariedc975 un-i-seliOE awariedc1000 curseda1400 manseda1400 accursedc1400 damned1563 sacred1594 1563 A. Nowell in W. K. Clay Liturg. Services Q. Eliz. (1847) 493 Filthy and dampned Mahomet, the deceiver of the world. 1603 R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 48 A damned writing was subscribed by the yoong emperor her son. a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) v. i. 33 Out damned spot: out I say. View more context for this quotation 1667 Sir R. Moray in O. Airy Lauderdale Papers (1885) II. lv. 88 There is a Damned book come hither from beyond sea called Naphtali, or the Wrestlings of the Church of Scotland. 1792 J. Wolcot Ode to Burke in Wks. (1812) III. 35 What Bat-like Demon, with the damn'dest spite, Springs on thy fame. 1871 B. Taylor tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust I. xix. 210 And so, though even God forgive, On earth a damned existence live! 4. a. Used profanely as a strong expression of reprehension or dislike, or as a mere intensive. Now usually printed ‘d——d’. In the southern U.S., a common epithet prefixed to Yankee. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > malediction > oaths > [adjective] > oaths other than religious or obscene > damn damneda1616 goddamned1816 goldarned1853 goldasted1881 a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) v. i. 111 Where is that damned villaine Tranio? View more context for this quotation 1664 S. Butler Hudibras: Second Pt. ii. ii. 126 And streight another with his Flambeaux Gave Ralpho's, o're the eys, a damn'd blow. 1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones VI. xvi. ii. 11 It is a d——m'd Lie, I never offered him any Thing. View more context for this quotation 1812 Weekly Reg. (Baltimore) 3 45/1 Take the middle of the road or I'll hew you down, you d'——d Yankee rascal. 1818 H. B. Fearon Sketches Amer. 210 His friend..said that there was ‘nothing in America but d——d Yankies and rogues, and that it was not fit for a dog to live in’. 1833 H. Barnard Let. 30 Apr. in Maryland Hist. Mag. (1918) 13 361 It is only surpassed by their hatred of the d——d Yankees. 1865 N.Y. Evening Post 28 Sept. 1/1 They swore to some men of a cavalry patrol camped across the river, that they would shoot the first d——d Yankee who tried to cross the bridge. b. as adv. Damnably. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > state of being accursed > [adverb] > as everyday imprecation wickedlya1375 terrible1490 cursedly1570 plaguilya1586 damnably1598 cursefully1606 damnedly1607 lousily1611 damnablea1616 execrably1633 excrementitiously1638 infernally1638 mangilya1640 putidly1654 infamously1695 consumedly1707 damned1757 damnationly1762 shockingly1768 damn1787 deucedly1819 peskily1833 pesky1833 beastly1853 dashedly1888 stinkingly1906 rasted1919 effing1945 the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > extremely or exceedingly swithlyc888 micklelyeOE swith971 hardOE un-i-fohOE sevenfoldlOE unmeet?c1225 innerlyc1330 horribly1340 too1340 sore1474 horriblec1475 vehemently1483 outrageous1487 done?a1513 exquisite1529 strangely1532 exceeding1535 exceedingly1535 angardlyc1540 angerlyc1540 choicec1540 vengeable1542 vengeably?1550 extremelya1554 monstrous1569 thrice1579 amain1587 extremea1591 damnably1598 fellc1600 tyrannically1602 exquisitely1603 damnedly1607 preciously1607 damnablea1616 impensively1620 excellingly1621 main1632 fearful1634 vengeancelya1640 upsy1650 impensely1657 twadding1657 vastly1664 hideous1667 mainly1670 consumed1707 consumedly1707 outrageously1749 damned1757 nation1771 shockingly1777 deuced1779 darn1789 darned1807 felly1807 varsal1814 awful1816 awfy1816 frightfully1816 deucedly1819 dogged1819 awfully1820 gallowsa1823 shocking1831 tremendously1832 everlasting1833 terribly1833 fearfully1835 ripping1838 poison1840 thundering1853 frighteninglyc1854 raring1854 hell's own1863 goldarned1866 goddamned1870 doggone1871 acutely1872 whooping1874 stupidly1878 everlastingly1879 hideously1882 densely1883 storming1883 good and1885 thunderingly1885 crazy1887 tremendous1887 madly1888 goldarn1892 howling1895 murderously1916 rasted1919 goddam1921 bitchingly1923 Christly1923 bitching1929 falling-down1930 lousy1932 appallingly1937 stratospherically1941 Christ almighty1945 effing1945 focking1956 dagnab1961 drop-dead1980 hella1987 totes2006 1757 R. Lloyd Satyr & Pedlar in Poet. Wks. I. 57 Damn'd's the superlative degree; Means that alone and nothing more..Examples we may find enough, Damn'd high, damn'd low, damn'd fine, damn'd stuff. a1777 S. Foote Devil upon Two Sticks (1778) i. 15 How damn'd hot it is! 1847 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair (1848) xiii. 106 I believe she's d——d fond of me. c. Substantival use of superlative in one's damnedest (damndest): (a) the worst one can do, the utmost evil or harm possible; (b) one's very best effort (the usual recent sense). Π 1830 J. Galt Lawrie Todd I. ii. i. 90 The pigs may do their damnedst with me. 1846 J. J. Hooper Some Adventures Simon Suggs xii. 144 I..tried my d——dst, but it wouldn't grind no way. 1891 H. Herman His Angel 176 Now do your damnedest at your peril. 1928 S. Vines Humours Unreconciled xviii. 237 She..had done her ‘damnedest’ to please him. 1932 S. Gibbons Cold Comfort Farm xx. 268 Reuben..gave her thirty pounds with which to do her damndest. 1955 Times 31 Aug. 5/3 The frenzy of fanaticism invites choir and orchestra to do their damnedest. 1958 H. M. Hayward & M. Harari tr. B. Pasternak Dr. Zhivago i. vi. 183 Now, do your damnedest to get hold of a cab. DerivativesΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > state of being accursed > [adverb] > as everyday imprecation wickedlya1375 terrible1490 cursedly1570 plaguilya1586 damnably1598 cursefully1606 damnedly1607 lousily1611 damnablea1616 execrably1633 excrementitiously1638 infernally1638 mangilya1640 putidly1654 infamously1695 consumedly1707 damned1757 damnationly1762 shockingly1768 damn1787 deucedly1819 peskily1833 pesky1833 beastly1853 dashedly1888 stinkingly1906 rasted1919 effing1945 the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > extremely or exceedingly swithlyc888 micklelyeOE swith971 hardOE un-i-fohOE sevenfoldlOE unmeet?c1225 innerlyc1330 horribly1340 too1340 sore1474 horriblec1475 vehemently1483 outrageous1487 done?a1513 exquisite1529 strangely1532 exceeding1535 exceedingly1535 angardlyc1540 angerlyc1540 choicec1540 vengeable1542 vengeably?1550 extremelya1554 monstrous1569 thrice1579 amain1587 extremea1591 damnably1598 fellc1600 tyrannically1602 exquisitely1603 damnedly1607 preciously1607 damnablea1616 impensively1620 excellingly1621 main1632 fearful1634 vengeancelya1640 upsy1650 impensely1657 twadding1657 vastly1664 hideous1667 mainly1670 consumed1707 consumedly1707 outrageously1749 damned1757 nation1771 shockingly1777 deuced1779 darn1789 darned1807 felly1807 varsal1814 awful1816 awfy1816 frightfully1816 deucedly1819 dogged1819 awfully1820 gallowsa1823 shocking1831 tremendously1832 everlasting1833 terribly1833 fearfully1835 ripping1838 poison1840 thundering1853 frighteninglyc1854 raring1854 hell's own1863 goldarned1866 goddamned1870 doggone1871 acutely1872 whooping1874 stupidly1878 everlastingly1879 hideously1882 densely1883 storming1883 good and1885 thunderingly1885 crazy1887 tremendous1887 madly1888 goldarn1892 howling1895 murderously1916 rasted1919 goddam1921 bitchingly1923 Christly1923 bitching1929 falling-down1930 lousy1932 appallingly1937 stratospherically1941 Christ almighty1945 effing1945 focking1956 dagnab1961 drop-dead1980 hella1987 totes2006 1607 T. Middleton Revengers Trag. iii. sig. F4v Sup. Fell it out so accursedly? Amb. So damnedly. 1675 R. Head Proteus Redivivus 186 He mortgages his Soul to the Devil, by swearing damnedly there is not a cleaner piece of Wine between Aldgate and Westminster. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1894; most recently modified version published online March 2019). < |
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