| 单词 | deadly | 
| 释义 | deadlyadj. a.  Subject to death, mortal. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > dead person or the dead > 			[adjective]		 > liable to death deathlyeOE deadlyc1000 brotel1340 mortalc1390 mortuala1500 deathful?1624 mortalized1633 cadaverable1651 cadaverizable1651 c1000    Homilies in  B. Thorpe Anc. Laws Eng. II. 186 (Bosw.)  				Ðæt an deadlic man mihte ealne middaneard oferseon. c1230    Hali Meid. 13  				Iþis deadlich lif. 1340    Ayenbite 		(1866)	 244  				Ne eȝe dyeadlich ne may [þet] naȝt ysy. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 10919  				Godd bicom man dedli. c1400    Mandeville's Trav. (Roxb.) vii. 24  				I am a creature dedly. 1477    Earl Rivers tr.  Dictes or Sayengis Philosophhres 		(Caxton)	 		(1877)	 lf. 62  				Thinke thou art dedely. 1533    J. Gau tr.  C. Pedersen Richt Vay sig. Ki  				This deidlie body sal be cled with inmortalite. a1563    J. Bale Sel. Wks. 		(Parker Soc.)	 97  				Many holy prophets that were deadly men were martyred. 1845    P. J. Bailey Festus 		(ed. 2)	 254  				Even man's deadly life Can be there, by God's leave. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > 			[noun]		 hadc900 lifesmaneOE maneOE world-maneOE ghostOE wyeOE lifeOE son of manOE wightc1175 soulc1180 earthmanc1225 foodc1225 person?c1225 creaturec1300 bodyc1325 beera1382 poppetc1390 flippera1400 wat1399 corsec1400 mortal?a1425 deadly?c1450 hec1450 personagec1485 wretcha1500 human1509 mundane1509 member1525 worma1556 homo1561 piece of flesh1567 sconce1567 squirrel?1567 fellow creature1572 Adamite1581 bloat herringa1586 earthling1593 mother's child1594 stuff1598 a piece of flesh1600 wagtail1607 bosom1608 fragment1609 boots1623 tick1631 worthy1649 earthlies1651 snap1653 pippin1665 being1666 personal1678 personality1678 sooterkin1680 party1686 worldling1687 human being1694 water-wagtail1694 noddle1705 human subject1712 piece of work1713 somebody1724 terrestrial1726 anybody1733 individual1742 character1773 cuss1775 jig1781 thingy1787 bod1788 curse1790 his nabs1790 article1796 Earthite1814 critter1815 potato1815 personeityc1816 nibs1821 somebody1826 tellurian1828 case1832 tangata1840 prawn1845 nigger1848 nut1856 Snooks1860 mug1865 outfit1867 to deliver the goods1870 hairpin1879 baby1880 possum1894 hot tamale1895 babe1900 jobbie1902 virile1903 cup of tea1908 skin1914 pisser1918 number1919 job1927 apple1928 mush1936 face1944 jong1956 naked ape1965 oke1970 punter1975 the world > people > 			[noun]		 maneOE worldOE all fleshc1000 mankinOE earthOE little worldc1175 man's kinda1200 mankinda1225 worldrichec1275 slimec1315 kindc1325 world1340 sectc1400 humanityc1450 microcosma1475 peoplea1500 the human kindred?1533 race1553 homo1561 humankind1561 universality1561 deadly?1590 mortality1598 rational1601 vicegerent1601 small world1604 flesh and blooda1616 mannity1621 human race1623 universea1645 nations1667 public1699 the species1711 Adamhood1828 Jock Tamson's bairns1832 folx1833 Bimana1839 human1841 peeps1847 menfolk1870 manfolk1876 amniota1879 peoplekind1956 personkind1972 ?c1450    Life St. Cuthbert 		(1891)	 l. 2867  				Þare is nane dedely..þat suffice to serche þe domes of god. ?1590    King James VI & I Speech Gen. Assembly in  D. Calderwood True Hist. Church Scotl. 		(1844)	 V. 106  				I..sall maintane the same against all deidlie. 1685    London Gaz. No. 2009/2  				Whom we shall humbly Obey..Maintain and Defend with our Lives and Fortunes, against all deadly, as our only Righteous King and Soveraign.  a.  In danger of death, like to die. Obsolete. ΚΠ a1300    E.E. Psalter xliii. 22 (Mätz.)  				For al dai dedelik er we [L. morte afficimur] for þe. c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer Franklin's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 332  				My lady hath my deeth ysworn..but thy benygnytee Vp on my dedly herte haue some pitee. a1640    J. Fletcher  & P. Massinger Custome of Countrey  v. iv, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 sig. Cc3v/2  				How does the patient? Clod. You may inquire Of more than one; for two are sick, and deadly..her healths, despaird of, And in hers, his. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > 			[adjective]		 > relating to death mortalc1425 deadly1470 capitalc1475 mortuary1542 parting?1570 deada1586 defunctive1601 lethal1607 deathly1763 deathya1822 1470–85    T. Malory Morte d'Arthur  xiii. xi  				Not longe after that Ioseph was layd in his dedely bed. 1484    W. Caxton tr.  G. de la Tour-Landry Bk. Knight of Tower 		(1971)	 cxxxv. 179  				She..became seke, and laye in her dedely bedde. ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > absence of life or consciousness > 			[adjective]		 lifelessOE unlivingOE bloodless and bonelessOE deadlya1225 dead1430 natureless1548 exanimate1552 inanimatea1555 unlively1563 spiritless1570 unquickened1610 unanimate1615 inanimal1623 inanimated1646 unvital1661 unanimated1697 unbreathing1709 unconscious1744 pulseless1820 azoic1854 not-living1869 abiotic1873 unvitalized1874 a1225    Juliana 22  				To luten dedliche schaften as ȝe schulden to godd. c1440    Secrees 132  				It is swilk a secre þat vnnethis mannys brest may it vnderstonde, how may it þanne be wrete in dedly skyns?  4.   a.  Causing death, or fatal injury; mortal, fatal. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > cause of death > 			[adjective]		 deadlyc893 deathlyOE deathfula1250 mortalc1390 capitalc1426 exitialc1475 fey1488 mortuala1500 perishinga1500 fatal?1518 ferial1528 mortiferousa1538 deadc1540 exitious?1545 deathlike1548 mortifying1555 starvingc1600 lethal1604 speedingc1604 vital1612 irrecoverable1614 feral1621 lethiferous1651 mortific1651 mortifical1657 daggering1694 exitiose1727 fateful1764 kill-devil1831 unsurvivable1839 lethiferal1848 tachythanatous1860 the world > life > death > dead person or the dead > 			[adjective]		 > dying deadlyc893 swelting?a1400 dyingc1450 at (the) utterance1525 in (the, his) extremes1551 parting1562 Acherontic1597 ending1600 departing1603 on one's last legs1614 expiring1635 mortifying1649 morient1679 upon one's last stretch1680 gasping1681 à la mort1700 moribund1721 outward-bound1809 terminal1854 on the brink of the grave1872 defunctive1929 c893    tr.  Orosius Hist.  iii viii. §3  				Forbræcon Romane heora aþas..and þær deadlicne sige geforan. 1297    R. Gloucester's Chron. 		(1724)	 223  				Ac ouercome vas he noȝt, þey ys wounden dedlych were. c1377    G. Chaucer Anelida & Arcite 258  				The cause..Of my dedely adversitie. c1430    Pilgr. Lyf Manhode 		(1869)	  i. xxvii. 19  				Þer is no wounde so cruelle; for with out remedye it is dedlych. 1562    N. Winȝet Certain Tractates 		(1888)	 I. 3  				Lyke..to ane schip in ane dedely storme. 1603    R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 48  				Euerie houre expecting the deadly blow of the hangman. 1774    J. Beattie Minstrel: 2nd Bk. xii. 7  				Though Fortune aim her deadliest blow. 1874    J. Morley On Compromise 27  				The narrowing and deadly effect of the daily iteration of poor short-sighted commonplaces.  b.  As a quality of things: Having the property or capacity of causing death or fatal injury; poisonous, venomous, pestilential. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > cause of death > 			[adjective]		 > of things deadlyc1380 the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > poison > 			[adjective]		 > having specific qualities (of poison) deadlyc1380 starkc1485 virulent1577 lingeringa1616 irritant1828 intoxicative1854 c1380    Eng. Wycliffite Serm. in  Sel. Wks. I. 361  				Dedli drynke, ȝif þei taken it..anoieþ hem not. 1567    J. Maplet Greene Forest f. 57v  				The inhabitants..doe set the whole Groue on fire, and by that meanes the deadly Serpents..are driuen away. 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  iii, in  tr.  Virgil Wks. 109  				Dire Stepdames..mix, for deadly Draughts, the poys'nous  Juice.       View more context for this quotation 1764    O. Goldsmith Traveller 21  				Where beasts with man divided empire claim, And the brown Indian takes a deadly aim. 1788    E. Gibbon Decline & Fall 		(1846)	 V. l. 3  				The winds..from the south-west, diffuse a noxious and even deadly vapour. 1839    C. Darwin in  R. Fitzroy  & C. Darwin Narr. Surv. Voy. H.M.S. Adventure & Beagle III. xi. 240  				Many savages..have seen..small animals killed by the musket, without being..aware how deadly an instrument it was. 1866    J. Lindley  & T. Moore Treasury Bot. II. 1140  				To camels..it is a deadly poison.  c.  spec. In names of poisonous plants. deadly carrot, the genus  Thapsia of umbelliferous plants, natives of Southern Europe.  deadly nightshade, the  Atropa Belladonna (family  Solanaceæ), a rare shrub with dark purple flowers and large round black berries; the name is often popularly misapplied to the common Woody Nightshade,  Solanum Dulcamara, with ovoid scarlet berries (also figurative). ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > plants perceived as weeds or harmful plants > poisonous or harmful plants > poisonous bush or tree > 			[noun]		 > deadly nightshade nightshadeOE dwale14.. garden nightshade1576 deadly nightshade1578 sleeping nightshade1578 belladonna1597 death's herb1598 sleepy nightshade1611 banewort1861 the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular medicinal plants or parts > 			[noun]		 > thapsia or deadly carrot Thapsiac1400 deadly carrot1842 1578    H. Lyte tr.  R. Dodoens Niewe Herball  iii. xxi 446  				Of great Nightshade, or Dwale. This noughtie and deadly plant is taken for a kinde of Solanum..The..fresh leaues of this deadly Nightshade may be applyed outwardly..The fruite of this Solanum is deadly. a1652    J. Smith Select Disc. 		(1660)	  i. i. 5  				That venemous Solanum, that deadly Nightshade, that derives its cold poyson into the Understandings of men. 1774    T. West Antiq. Furness 94  				There grows the Lethal Bekan, or deadly nightshade. 1842    Penny Cycl. XXIV. 282/2  				The species [of Thapsia] are mostly natives of the countries of the Mediterranean, and are known under the generic name Deadly Carrot. 1850    O. Winslow Inner Life i. 15  				Satan has ever sought to engraft the deadly nightshade of error upon the life-giving Rose of Sharon. 1886    Pall Mall Gaz. 27 Aug. 4/1  				The plant..popularly known as deadly nightshade in England is the woody nightshade or bitter-sweet..The appearance of the deadly nightshade, atropa belladonna of botany and medicine, is very different.  5.  Theology.  a.  Of sin: Entailing spiritual death; mortal (opposed to venial); esp. applied to the seven chief or ‘cardinal’ sins: see sin n. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > sin > kinds of sin > 			[adjective]		 > mortal headlyOE headOE deadly?c1225 mortala1475 lethal1583 unvenial?1589 ?c1225						 (?a1200)						    Ancrene Riwle 		(Cleo. C.vi)	 		(1972)	 47  				He [sc. David] dude þreo deadliche heaued sunnen. 1340    R. Rolle Pricke of Conscience 3362  				Thir er tha hede syns that er dedely. 1340    Ayenbite 		(1866)	 9  				Lecherie..is on of þe zeuen dyadliche zennes. 1340    Ayenbite 		(1866)	 16  				Hi byeþ heaued..of alle zennes, and ginninge of alle kueade, be hy dyadliche, be hy uenial. c1400    Mandeville's Trav. (Roxb.) iii. 10  				Þai say also þat fornicacion es na dedly bot a kyndely thing. 1484    W. Caxton tr.  G. de la Tour-Landry Bk. Knight of Tower 		(1971)	 lxxxviii. 120  				By this synne of glotonye men falle in alle the other sixe dedely synnes. 1544    Letanie in  Exhort. vnto Prayer sig. Bv  				Fornication, & al deadly synne. a1616    W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure 		(1623)	  iii. i. 110  				Sure it is no sinne, Or of the deadly seuen it is the  least.       View more context for this quotation a1711    T. Ken Hymnotheo in  Wks. 		(1721)	 III. 269  				The Seven curs'd deadly Sins..Pride, Envy, Sloth, Intemp'rance, Av'rice, Ire, And Lust. 1819    P. B. Shelley Cenci  iv. iii. 69  				We do but that which 'twere a deadly crime To leave undone. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > sin > kinds of sin > 			[noun]		 > mortal > person deadly sinnera1631 a1631    J. Donne Serm. 		(1959)	 IV. 292  				In those Duels..He that comes alive out of the field comes a dead man, because he comes a deadly sinner, and he that remaines dead in the field, is gone into an everlasting death.  6.  Aiming, or involving an aim, to kill or destroy; implacable, mortal, to the death. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > cause of death > 			[adjective]		 > of hate or enmity deadlyc1275 capital1395 mortalc1425 c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 4264  				Þine dæd-liche iuan. c1380    Sir Ferumbras 		(1879)	 l. 600  				A leyde to þe Sarsyn strokes smerte riȝt als til his dedly fo. c1430    Freemasonry 309  				Throwghe envye, or dedly hate. 1582    R. Stanyhurst tr.  Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis  i. 1  				Iunoes long fostred deadlye reuengement. a1661    T. Fuller Worthies 		(1662)	 Worc. 181  				Betwixt whom and Sir Henry Berkeley, was so deadly a quarrell. 1703    N. Rowe Fair Penitent  i. i. 206  				With deadly Imprecations of her Self. 1813    Ld. Byron Bride Abydos  ii. xii. 196  				Although thy Sire's my deadliest foe. 1845    M. Pattison in  Christian Remembrancer Jan. 68  				The contest..becomes sharp and deadly.  7.  Resembling or suggestive of death, death-like.  a.  Of colour or aspect: pale like that of a corpse. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > skin > complexion > paleness > 			[adjective]		 blatec1000 whiteOE greena1275 blakec1275 bleykea1300 wana1300 palec1330 bleach1340 pale and wan (wan and pale)c1374 colourlessc1380 deadlyc1385 deadc1386 bloodlessc1450 earthlyc1460 ruddylessc1460 wan visaged?a1513 wanny1555 as pale or white as a clout1557 bleak1566 mealy1566 pale-faced1570 ghastly1574 white-faced1577 bleakish1581 pallid1590 whiggish1590 tallow-faced1592 maid-pale1597 lily1600 whey-colour1602 lew1611 roseless1611 Hippocratical1615 cadaverousa1661 Hippocratic1681 smock-faced1684 white-looked1690 livid1728 as white (or pale) as a sheet1752 squalid1753 deathly1791 etiolated1791 light-skinned1802 suety1803 shilpit1813 blanched1828 tallowy1830 suet-faced1834 pasty1836 tallowish1838 whey-faced1847 pasty-faced1848 aghast1850 waxen1853 complexionless1863 light-skin1877 lily-cheeked1877 lardy1879 wan-faced1881 exsanguinous1889 wheatish1950 c1385    G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Thisbe. 869  				Who koude wryte which a dedely chere Hath Tesbe now. c1460						 (?c1400)						    Tale of Beryn l. 1337  				His coloure gan to chaunge in-to a dedely hewe. 1561    R. Eden tr.  M. Cortés Arte Nauigation  ii. xix. sig. G.ii  				If [the Sunne] shew yealowe or deadly, tempest is like to folow. a1616    W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors 		(1623)	  iv. iv. 94  				I know it by their pale and deadly  lookes.       View more context for this quotation 1796    R. Southey Joan of Arc 289  				By the flush'd cheek..And by the deadly paleness which ensued. 1803    Med. Jrnl. x. 152  				In consequence of the..deadly look of the child.  b.  Death-like in unconsciousness or physical prostration. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > unconsciousness > 			[adjective]		 insensible1426 senselessa1547 deadly1548 unsensible1568 slumbered1590 exanimate1619 lifeless1668 unconscious1832 impassive1846 1548    Hall's Vnion: Henry V f. lvi  				The Normans hearyng of the kynges arriual wer sodenly striken with a deadly feare. 1562    N. Winȝet Certain Tractates 		(1888)	 I. 6  				Quhat deidly sleip is this that hes oppressit ȝow? 1671    W. Salmon Synopsis Medicinæ  iii. xxii. 413  				Narcotick, causing deadly sleep. 1853    E. Bulwer-Lytton My Novel III.  xi. vii. 270  				A deadly faintness seized her.  c.  Death-like in darkness, gloom, dullness, silence, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > dejection > 			[adjective]		 > gloomy or depressing darkOE unmerryOE deathlyc1225 dolefulc1275 elengec1275 dreicha1300 coolc1350 cloudyc1374 sada1375 colda1400 deadlya1400 joylessc1400 unjoyful?c1400 disconsolatea1413 mournfula1425 funeralc1425 uncheerfulc1449 dolent1489 dolesome1533 heavy-hearted1555 glum1558 ungladsome1558 black1562 pleasureless1567 dern1570 plaintive?1570 glummish1573 cheerless1575 comfortless1576 wintry1579 glummy1580 funebral1581 discouraging1584 dernful?1591 murk1596 recomfortless1596 sullen1597 amating1600 lugubrious1601 dusky1602 sable1603 funebrial1604 damping1607 mortifying1611 tearful?1611 uncouth1611 dulsome1613 luctual1613 dismal1617 winterous1617 unked1620 mopish1621 godforsaken?1623 uncheerly1627 funebrious1630 lugubrous1632 drearisome1633 unheartsome1637 feral1641 drear1645 darksome1649 sadding1649 saddening1650 disheartening1654 funebrous1654 luctiferous1656 mestifical1656 tristifical1656 sooty1657 dreary1667 tenebrose1677 clouded1682 tragicala1700 funereal1707 gloomy1710 sepulchrala1711 dumpishc1717 bleaka1719 depressive1727 lugubre1727 muzzy1728 dispiriting1733 uncheery1760 unconsolatory1760 unjolly1764 Decemberly1765 sombre1768 uncouthie1768 depressing1772 unmirthful1782 sombrous1789 disanimating1791 Decemberish1793 grey1794 uncheering1796 ungenial1796 uncomforting1798 disencouraginga1806 stern1812 chilling1815 uncheered1817 dejecting1818 mopey1821 desponding1828 wisht1829 leadening1835 unsportful1837 demoralizing1840 Novemberish1840 frigid1844 morne1844 tragic1848 wet-blanketty1848 morgue1850 ungladdeneda1851 adusk1856 smileless1858 soul-sick1858 Novemberya1864 saturnine1863 down1873 lacklustre1883 Heaven-abandoneda1907 downbeat1952 doomy1967 a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Gött.)	 l. 17881  				Þe folk in dedeli mirknes stadd. a1535    T. More Dialoge of Comfort 		(1553)	  ii. i. sig. F.iiiv  				Continuall fatigacion, would make it [sc. the mind] dull and deadly. 1600    E. Blount tr.  G. F. di Conestaggio Hist. Uniting Portugall to Castill 29  				There was such a deadlie silence in the porte. 1608    W. Shakespeare King Lear xxiv. 285  				Als chearles, darke and deadly .       View more context for this quotation a1659    F. Rous Aspirations of Student in  Academia Cœlestis 		(1702)	 166  				Sitting in Darkness and, a Deadly Shadow.  8.   a.  Excessive, ‘terrible’, ‘awful’. colloquial. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adjective]		 > very great or extreme strangec1380 overpassinga1382 passinga1387 most?c1430 extremec1460 horriblea1464 violenta1500 mainc1540 immortal?c1550 exquisite1552 sore1555 three-piled1598 thundering1618 devilish1639 shrewda1643 deadly1660 woundy1681 vast1696 monstrous1711 mortal1716 terrific1743 hell-fired1754 hellish1764 colossal1794 severe1805 awful1818 all-fired1829 terrible1829 quare and1847 ferocious1877 pluperfect1889 raging1889 giddy1896 utter1898 stiff1905 1660    S. Pepys Diary 1 Nov. 		(1970)	 I. 280  				A deadly drinker he is, and grown exceeding fat. 1660    S. Pepys Diary 7 Dec. 		(1970)	 I. 312  				So to the Privy Seale, where I signed a deadly number of Pardons. 1745    M. Delany Autobiogr. & Corr. 		(1861)	 II. 382  				It has been a deadly while I have taken to answer your kind letter. 1773    O. Goldsmith She stoops to Conquer  i. 14  				You're come a deadly deal wrong! 1842    J. Wilson Recreations Christopher North I. 217  				The quantity of corn that a few sparrows can eat..cannot be very deadly. 1843    T. Carlyle Past & Present  iv. iv. 362  				Why such deadly haste to make money?  b.  Characterized by dead accuracy. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > 			[adjective]		 > strict, rigorous just1490 nicea1522 point-devicea1529 exact1533 narrow1551 rigorousa1564 point-vice1574 curious1614 rigid?1626 hard1690 strict1749 deadly1909 1909    P. A. Vaile Mod. Golf v. 95  				The peculiarity of the stymie stroke, played parallel with the ground, is its deadly direction. Compounds C1.    deadly-dinted,  deadly-handed,  deadly-headed,  deadly-like adjs. ΚΠ 1594    W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2  v. iii. 10  				The deadly hand of Clifford. 1596    C. Fitzgeffry Sir Francis Drake sig. D4  				An hundred deadly-dinted staves. 1630    S. Rutherford Lett. 		(1863)	 I. 55  				She is in a most dangerous and deadly-like condition.  C2.     deadly-lively adj. combining dullness and liveliness, lively in a gloomy and depressing way (colloquial); hence  deadly-liveliness. ΚΠ 1839    C. Dickens Nicholas Nickleby xli. 398  				Even her black dress assumed something of a deadly-lively air from the jaunty style in which it was worn. 1881    Mrs. Oliphant in  Macmillan's Mag. 43 492  				He was taken to Mentone..to the deadly-liveliness..and invalid surroundings of that shelter of the suffering. 1891    Spectator 12 Dec. 855  				The deadly-liveliness of flippant and forced humour. Draft additions February 2005  slang (originally U.S., now chiefly Australian (esp. in Australian Aboriginal usage) and Irish English). Great, wonderful; fantastic. ΚΠ 1941    Life 27 Jan. 78/2  				America's teen-age girls speak language of their own that is too divinely super... An orchestra that gives well (or sends) [i.e. thrills, excites] is called deadly, by way of approval. 1976    T. Murphy On Outside 21  				Great, that's great, that's just deadly now. 1984    Black Voices Apr. 30  				The next day..was painting day and the nice new coat of green paint looked deadly, real deadly. 1991    J. Chi  et al.  Bran Nue Dae in  H. Gilbert Postcolonial Plays 		(2001)	 337/2  				I just wanna tell you that I think you singing good, that's good, that's deadly. 2000    M. Keyes Sushi for Beginners 		(2001)	 xxxii. 283  				He's cool. Ashling, this is deadly news! Well, I hope you enjoy yourself. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1894; most recently modified version published online September 2019). deadlyadv. a.  In a way that causes death; mortally, fatally; to death. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > cause of death > 			[adverb]		 deadlyc1050 deathlya1250 fellyc1330 mortallyc1390 à la mort?1536 deadlily1621 lethally1661 mortiferously1685 perishingly1698 deathfully1761 vitally1891 c1050    in  T. Wright  & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. 		(1884)	 I. 436/8  				Loetaliter, deadlice. a1330    R. Mannyng Chron. 		(1810)	 33  				He wonded þe Kyng dedely fulle sore. c1440    Promptorium Parvulorum 115  				Dedely, mortaliter, letaliter. 1561    T. Norton tr.  J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig. 		(1634)	  i. xiv. 71  				They are wounded, but not deadly. 1627    T. May tr.  Lucan Pharsalia 		(new ed.)	  ix. sig. R5  				The snakes bite deadly, fatall are their teeth. c1679    in  Roxburghe Ballads VI. 147  				Killing Beauty..Be no more so deadly Cruel. 1816    Ld. Byron Childe Harold: Canto III  xxix. 17  				When shower'd The death-bolts deadliest. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > sin > kinds of sin > 			[adverb]		 > mortal deadly?c1225 mortally1526 ?c1225						 (?a1200)						    Ancrene Riwle 		(Cleo. C.vi)	 		(1972)	 49  				Ȝef he is ifonded swa þet he sunege deadliche. 1340    Ayenbite 		(1866)	 223  				Ine oþre cas me may zeneȝi, oþer liȝtliche, oþer dyadliche. c1400    Mandeville's Trav. (Roxb.) iii. 10  				Þai say we synne dedly in þat we schaue oure berdes. ?1504    S. Hawes Example of Vertu sig. gg.viv  				A dongeon longe and wyde Made for theym that do synne dedely. 1579    L. Tomson tr.  J. Calvin Serm. Epist. S. Paule to Timothie & Titus 112/2  				To see those men, which were as it were Angels of God, fall: yea, & that deadly. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > killing > 			[adverb]		 > aiming to kill deadlyc1330 c1330    R. Mannyng Chron. Wace (Rolls) 2644  				Sheo louede mykel þe slayn broþer, & dedlyk [v.r. dedely] hated sche þat oþer. 1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis I. 332  				Thus hate I dedely thilke vice. 1578    J. Lyly Euphues f. 33  				I haue hearde that women eyther loue entirely or hate deadly. 1650    S. Clarke Marrow Eccl. Hist. 		(1654)	  i. 44  				The spitefull Devil deadly pursuing him.  3.  In a manner resembling or suggesting death; as if dead; without animation. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > 			[adverb]		 > resembling death deadlya1400 deathly1791 deathy1811 a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 18155  				Þaa waful wras sa dedli dim, All lighted þe lem þat come wit him. c1430    Pilgr. Ly. Manhode 		(1869)	  i. lxxxix. 50  				Al dedliche [Fr. tout mornement] he answerde hire. 1597    W. Shakespeare Richard III  iii. vii. 26  				They..Gazde each on other and lookt deadly pale. 1633    P. Fletcher Purple Island  vii. iii. 107  				How comes it then that in so near decay We deadly sleep in deep securitie? 1864    C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend 		(1865)	 I.  i. i. 3  				Seeming to turn deadly faint.  4.  To a fatal or extreme degree; ‘mortally’, ‘to death’; extremely, excessively. colloquial. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adverb]		 > extremely or exceedingly > excessively cruellyc1385 overa1400 fullc1400 parlouslyc1425 mortalc1440 perilousc1440 spitefulc1450 devilish1560 pestilently1567 spitefully1567 cruel1573 parlous1575 deadly1589 intolerable?1593 fellc1600 perditlya1632 excessively1634 devilishly1635 desperate1636 woundya1639 woundlya1644 desperately1653 wicked1663 killing1672 woundily1706 wounded1753 mortally1759 dreadful1762 intolerably1768 perishing1776 tremendously1776 terrifically1777 diabolically1792 woundedly1794 thundering1809 all-firedly1833 preponderously1835 painfully1839 deadlilya1843 severely1854 furiously1856 diabolish1858 fiendish1861 demonish1867 sinfully1869 fiendishly1879 thunderingly1885 only too1889 nightmarishly1891 God almighty1906 Christ almighty1945 a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 17225  				I þat es sa dedli dill.]			 1589    G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie  iii. xviii. 162  				He..did..deadly belie the matter by his description. 1591    E. Spenser Virgil's Gnat in  Complaints sig. I4v  				Iudgement seates, whose Iudge is deadlie dred. 1688    G. Miege Great French Dict.  ii. sig. Qqq2/1  				He is deadly slow, il est furieusement long. 1703    N. Rowe Ulysses Epil. 31  				These Cups are pretty, but they're deadly dear. 1809    W. Scott Let. 14 Jan. 		(1932)	 II. 150  				In this deadly cold weather. 1866    A. Trollope Belton Estate I. ix. 225  				It is so deadly dull. 1878    H. B. Stowe Poganuc People xiii. 142  				We were deadly tired.  5.  In a dead manner; like a dead thing. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > absence of life or consciousness > 			[adverb]		 deadly1581 1581    G. Pettie tr.  S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. 		(1586)	  ii. 50  				To fall deadlie to the grounde, as a bodie without breath. 1844    J. B. Mozley Ess. 		(1878)	 II. 126  				There is a belief in the Bible which is mere Bibliolatry, and..rests deadly in a mere book. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1894; most recently modified version published online December 2019). < | 
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