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单词 dinge
释义

dingen.1

Brit. /dɪn(d)ʒ/, U.S. /dɪndʒ/
Forms: 1600s dindge, 1700s– dinge.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: dinge v.1
Etymology: < dinge v.1 Compare ding n.1 2a.
Now chiefly regional.
A depression, hollow, or indentation in a surface, typically one caused by a blow or collision; a dent. Also occasionally: a blemish or bruise on the skin of a fruit. Also figurative. Cf. dinge v.1, ding n.1 2a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > unevenness > condition or fact of receding > [noun] > action of making indentation > an indentation on a surface
hollowc897
printa1387
impression1398
puncha1430
dent1565
dint1590
dinge1611
doke1615
impressurea1616
depressure1626
depression1665
dawk1678
swage1680
indent1690
sinking1712
dunkle1788
indenture1793
delve1811
subsidation1838
indention1839
recess1839
indentation1847
incavation1852
deepening1859
sink1875
malleation1881
ding1922
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Bosselure, a bruise, dindge, or dint, in a peece of plate, or mettall.
1773 T. Hatton Introd. Clock & Watch Work i. 19 He has kept his plates remarkably thin, and without hollows and dinges.
1836 Belmont (Wisconsin Territory) Gaz. 28 Dec. She [sc. a mare] has a small dinge or scar on the left side of the neck, produced when a colt, by a kick.
1862 C. E. L. Riddell World in Church (1865) xvii. 189 In my keeping your pride shall not even get a dinge.
1894 Times 27 Oct. 8/1 The paint only is scratched, and there is not a dent or dinge anywhere else.
1931 Evening Sun (Hanover, Pa.) 13 Jan. 3/7 The right front fender of the Mitzel car had a dinge in it, about nine inches long and five inches wide.
1999 in D. Bolger Ladies' Night at Finbar's (2000) 208 The bed, with a dinge in the red duvet where her husband had obviously sat for a time, watched her.
2019 @kbear58 4 Nov. in twitter.com (accessed 7 Sept. 2020) Wasn't allowed to use dialect words like toatie (small) dinge (bruise on apple) etc like my grannie used. Mum had lived in England.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

dingen.2adj.

Brit. /dɪn(d)ʒ/, U.S. /dɪndʒ/
Forms: 1800s– dinge, 1900s– dinghe (rare).
Origin: Formed within English, by back-formation. Etymon: dingy adj.1
Etymology: Back-formation < dingy adj.1 Compare earlier dinge v.2 Compare also earlier dinginess n.
A. n.2
1. U.S. Criminals' slang. A dark night. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1807 Narr. Life H. Tufts iii. iv. 316 Dinge, a dark night.
2. The quality or condition of being dingy; disagreeable lack of brightness or freshness of colour or hue; = dinginess n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > quality of colour > [noun] > dullness
dinginess1758
dinge1846
sombreness1847
drabbiness1872
drabness1878
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > soiled condition > [noun] > dinginess or discolouration
discolouration1545
tarnish1713
dinginess1758
miscoloration1822
discolorization1827
dinge1846
1846 E. D. Bancroft Let. 2 Nov. in Lett. from Eng. (1904) 12 I cannot get accustomed to the London dinge.
1860 W. M. Thackeray Roundabout Papers (1863) 117 The dinge and wrinkles of their wretched old cotton stockings.
a1967 J. R. Ackerley My Father & Myself (1968) xvi. 182 The dust and dinge of the cluttered house.
2003 New Yorker 22 Dec. 112/1 When he tried to look out, the trees seemed to be pasted onto the waxy dinge of a still wintry sky.
3. slang (offensive and derogatory). Cf. sense B.
a. U.S. A black person; (sometimes) spec. a black musician. Cf. dingy n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > ethnicities > division of mankind by physical characteristics > black person > [noun]
AfriceOE
MoorOE
EthiopOE
blomana1225
Ethiopiana1325
blue mana1387
Moriana1387
black mana1398
blackamoor1525
black Morian1526
black boy1530
molen1538
Nigro1548
Nigrite1554
Negro1555
neger1568
nigger1577
blackfellow1598
Kaffir1607
black1614
thick-lipsa1616
Hubsheea1627
black African1633
blackface1704
sambo1704
Cuffee1713
Nigritian1738
fellow1753
Cuff1755
blacky1759
mungo1768
Quashie1774
darkie?1775
snowball1785
blue skin1788
Moriscan1794
sooterkin1821
nigc1832
tar-brush1835–40
Jim Crow1838
sooty1838
mokec1847
dinge1848
monkey1849
Siddi1849
dark1853
nigre1853
Negroid1860
kink1865
Sam1867
Rastus1882
schvartze1886
race man1896
possum1900
shine1908
jigaboo1909
smoke1913
golliwog1916
jazzbo1918
boogie1923
jig1924
melanoderm1924
spade1928
jit1931
Zulu1931
eight ball1932
Afro1942
nigra1944
spook1945
munt1948
Tom1956
boot1957
soul brother1957
nig-nog1959
member1962
pork chop1963
splib1964
blood1965
non-voter1966
moolinyan1967
Oreo1968
boogaloo1972
pongo1972
moolie1988
1848 Ladies' Repository Oct. 316/1 Dinge, a negro man.
1933 E. Hemingway Winner take Nothing 43 That big dinge took him by surprise..the big black bastard.
1940 R. Chandler Farewell, my Lovely i. 9 ‘A dinge,’ he said. ‘I just thrown him out.’
1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang §576/2 Dinge,..a negro musician.
a2002 ‘F. X. Toole’ Pound for Pound (2006) xiv. 130 Bust up that fuckin dinge for me.
b. Jazz. A type of rapid or exaggerated vibrato associated with or considered characteristic of the playing of black musicians.
ΚΠ
1935 Swing Music Apr. 48/1 The main characteristics of Chicago phrasing are short simple phrases.., negro ‘hot tone’ and an intriguing habit of sustaining a note with excessive vibrato (‘croaky tone’, ‘dinge’).
1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang §579/1 Dinge, ‘Negro vibrato’ played with a very rapid, violent shake.
1984 Storyville Dec. 63/1 Sandy plays two solos..with the typical ‘dinge’ in his tone.
B. adj.
U.S. slang. (offensive and derogatory). Designating a black person; of, relating to, frequented by, or associated with black people. Cf. sense A. 3, dingy adj.1 2b.Frequently in jazz contexts, esp. in the early 20th cent.With quot. 1958, cf. sense A. 3b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > ethnicities > division of mankind by physical characteristics > black person > [adjective]
blackOE
Morian1504
African1548
Negro1593
black Morian1631
neger1657
Ethiopian1684
nigger1689
Hubshee1698
Kaffir1731
Nigritian1757
Ethiopic1778
dingy1785
blackamoor1813
nigger-looking1837
darkie1840
Negroid1844
Negroloid1844
dinge1848
Melanian1861
negroish1861
Negroidal1878
Africanoid1885
chocolate?1886
melanodermic1924
nigra1938
tan1950
the world > people > ethnicities > division of mankind by physical characteristics > black person > [adjective] > relating to
Moresco?1551
blacka1652
Negro1653
negroish1746
niggerish1825
darkie1839
dinge1848
niggery1855
Negrotic1863
negritic1870
Nigritic1889
melanoderm1926
soul1960
Nubian1971
1848 Ladies' Repository Oct. 316/1 Covess dinge, a negress, sometimes called dinge blowen... Dinge kinch, a negro child.
1918 Geyer's Stationer 28 Mar. 13/2 The ‘Eureka’ quartette rendered the night air melodious with a lotta ‘Jazz’ stuff. Say, they are some colored quartette... The Dinge quartette fellows..harmonized very well.
1940 R. Chandler Farewell, my Lovely i. 10 ‘You say this here is a dinge joint?’.. ‘I told you it's a coloured joint.’
1958 V. Bellerby in P. Gammond Decca Bk. Jazz xvii. 205 The ‘dinge’ piano trill, deriving from the efforts of the early Negro instrumentalists to sing through their instruments, instinctively holding the rich overtones of Negro speech.
1969 A. Hunter Gently Coloured i. 8 A dinge bit. It has to be.
1993 M. F. Manalansan in E. S. Nelson Crit. Ess.: Gay & Lesbian Writers of Color 69 To designate a bar as a rice bar, as with dinge bars for Black gay men or cha-cha bars for Latinos, obliterate [sic] the corporeality of Asian men.

Compounds

dinge queen n. U.S. slang (offensive and derogatory) (originally and chiefly among gay men) a gay man (typically one who is white) who is predominantly attracted to black men.
ΚΠ
1964 Lavender Lexicon Dinge queen, a white homosexual who prefers, as a sex partner, a negro.
2020 @thetwerkinggirl 30 May in twitter.com (accessed 26 Aug. 2020) White gay friends being called ‘Dinge Queen’ or ‘Dirt Queen’ for dating Black/POC? It's a no from me!!
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

dingev.1

Brit. /dɪn(d)ʒ/, U.S. /dɪndʒ/
Forms: 1600s dindge, 1800s– dinge.
Origin: Probably a word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Probably the reflex of Old English dengan to strike, beat (see note), cognate with Old Icelandic dengja to hammer (see ding v.1).Old English dengan is attested once securely in the sense ‘to strike, beat (in the context of corporal punishment)’ (other possible evidence for the verb in Old English is problematic and disputed). As a weak Class I verb, it is presumed to show palatalization and assibilation of the original stem-final velar plosive. Compare:OE tr. Chrodegang of Metz Regula Canonicorum (Corpus Cambr. 191) l. 271 Ælcum gemete þonne ne sceal arung beon þære gyltendan geogoðe, ac swiðor..ma sceal heora sidan, þæt hi ne heardian, mid gierdon gelomlice dencgan [L. uirgis assidue tundenda sunt]. For the assumed raising of the stem vowel to i compare the better attested pair sprenge v. and springe v.1 and the phonological discussion at springe n. In early use this word is very difficult to distinguish from ding v.1 (compare the forms listed at that entry), which is earlier and more common (although it is attested later in the semantically most closely related sense, ding v.1 6). For this reason, any ambiguous examples have been assigned to that entry.
Now chiefly regional.
transitive. To make one or more depressions, hollows, or indentations in (an object or its surface), especially by striking or pressing; to dent or damage in this way.In some contexts it is impossible to be sure whether the form dinged represents this word or ding v.1 6.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > unevenness > condition or fact of receding > form a recess in [verb (transitive)] > form as an indentation > make indentation(s) in
denta1398
indentc1595
dint1597
dinge1611
indenturec1770
dunkle1822
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Bosseler, to dindge, or bruise, to make a dint in vessell of mettall, or in a peece of plate.
1862 A. Brinckman Rifle in Cashmere iii. 21 The bear got up and charged, sending A—— and his shikaree down a khud, smashing the stocks of his guns, and dingeing the barrels of my rifle in the fall.
1921 Internat. Clinics 31st Ser. 3 259 Any force which has been strong enough to dinge the skull causes a marked laceration of the soft tissues.
1997 W. Rollinson Dict. Cumbrian Dial. 45/1 Tha's dinged t'bucket.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

dingev.2

Brit. /dɪn(d)ʒ/, U.S. /dɪndʒ/
Origin: Formed within English, by back-formation. Etymon: dingy adj.1
Etymology: Back-formation < dingy adj.1
In later use chiefly English regional.
transitive. To make (something) dingy or dirty; to darken or discolour, esp. with smoke, grime, etc. Cf. dinged adj.1No certain evidence of recent use has been found; quot. 1995 may indicate the survival of the word in Lincolnshire.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > soiled condition > soil [verb (transitive)] > make dingy or discoloured
tarnish1598
dinge1693
tache17..
1693 S. Snowden Deo Ecclesiæ & Conscienti ergo 50 If a Man..conforms not to the Ceremonial part of Divine Worship, he dinges the Gold of the Temple, he is a Debtor to the Law, and he shall pay for it.
1753 ‘T. Broderick’ Lett. from Several Parts Europe & East I. xxix. 224 There is a vast profusion of brass and silver work within the church; but the eternal burning of the lamps has dinged both that, and even the walls on the inside, so that the whole has but a dirty appearance.
1823 C. Lamb in London Mag. Dec. 614/1 A suit, originally of a sad brown, but which..has been dinged into a true professional sable.
1891 S. O. Addy Suppl. Gloss. Words Sheffield (at cited word) It dinges (or ? dingies) my hands sitting in the house.
1995 J. M. Sims-Kimbrey Wodds & Doggerybaw: Lincs. Dial. Dict. 77/2 Dinge, to get dirty. ‘Doernt git yersen a' dinge; Ah'm tekkin' yer ter yer nan's atter, mind.’]
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.11611n.2adj.1807v.11611v.21693
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