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单词 dinger
释义

dingern.1

Forms: 1500s dynger.
Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: poddinger n.
Etymology: Origin uncertain; perhaps a shortening of or error for poddinger n. Perhaps compare later ding n.2
Obsolete.
Perhaps: a kind of household vessel. Cf. ding n.2
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > [noun] > other vessels
mitOE
utensil1502
dinger1533
ding1595
baikie1629
caddinet1662
Betty1725
conch1839
oxybaphon1850
ampoule1947
polypod1951
1533 Will of Johan Kene in F. W. Weaver Wells Wills (1890) 40 ij candelstyks of latyn vj dyngers of pewter.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021).

dingern.2

Brit. /ˈdɪŋə/, U.S. /ˈdɪŋər/, Scottish English /ˈdɪŋər/, Irish English /ˈdɪŋər/
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: ding v.1, -er suffix1.
Etymology: < ding v.1 + -er suffix1. With sense 2 compare earlier ding n.1 1.
1.
a. Scottish. A person who hits or strikes another. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1601 in T. Mair Narr. & Extracts Rec. Presbytery of Ellon (1898) 34 The ordinance anent the deforceing and dinging off Kirk officiars..the dinger to pay 20 merks.
b. British colloquial, Scottish, and English regional. A heavy or violent blow; a hard punch.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific degree of force > [noun] > striking heavily > a heavy blow
smitea1200
ponder1339
clouta1400
whopc1440
routa1450
maul1481
sousec1500
dunta1522
flake1559
lambskin1573
lamback1592
daud1596
baster1600
mell1658
thumper1682
lounder1723
smash1725
plumper1756
spanker1772
douser1782
thud1787
bash1805
stave1819
batter1823
belter1823
wallop1823
whacker1823
belt1825
smasher1829
dingbat1843
dinger1845
oner1861
squeaker1877
clod1886
wham1923
dong1941
the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific degree of force > [noun] > striking violently > a violent blow
lashc1330
birrc1400
dushc1400
swackc1425
reboundc1503
pash1611
slam1622
stoter1694
blizzard1829
dinger1845
1845 Bell's Life in London 28 Dec. 8/3 First blood was awarded to Baker, who tipped Harry a right-handed dinger on the proboscis.
1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words I. 183 Dinger, a violent blow. ‘He gave him such a dinger.’
1889 A. J. Ellis On Early Eng. Pronunc. V. 208 I gov' 'im a dinger on the chop, so he soon given over.
1942 P. Wettstein Phonol. Berwickshire Dial. 58/2 Dinger, hard blow.
2.
a. colloquial (chiefly U.S. and (now esp.) Irish English). An impressive or exceptional thing or (less commonly) person; something superlative of its kind; an outstanding example of (the specified category). Cf. humdinger n. 1.In U.S. use now regional (Midwest and south Midland).In quot. 1861: a large profit made by a bookmaker as a result of a horse race being won by an outsider at long odds.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > excellence > [noun] > excellent thing
starOE
dainty1340
daisyc1485
say-piece1535
bravery1583
paragon1585
daint1633
rapper1653
supernaculum1704
dandy1785
roarer1813
sneezer1823
plum1825
trimmer1827
sockdolager1838
rasper1844
dinger1861
job1863
fizzer1866
champagne1880
beauty1882
pie1884
twanger1889
smasher1894
crackerjack1895
Taj Mahal1895
beaut1896
pearler1901
lollapalooza1904
bearcat1909
beaner1911
grande dame1915
Rolls-Royce1916
the nuts1917
pipperoo1939
rubydazzler1941
rumpty1941
rumptydooler1941
snodger1941
sockeroo1942
sweetheart1942
zinger1955
blue-chipper1957
ring-a-ding1959
premier cru1965
sharpie1970
stormer1978
1861 Baily's Monthly Mag. Jan. 203 Ravella being proclaimed winner by a couple of lengths amidst the deafening cheers of the fieldsmen, who had landed a dinger, and had now a chance of getting a little more out of other horses during the winter.
1909 Amer. Mag. Nov. 1 She'll ne'er backward linger, this land of our dads..for she is a dinger at nailing the scads.
1939 J. Steinbeck Grapes of Wrath iv. 37 See how good the corn come along until the dust got up. Been a dinger of a crop.
1982 É. Mac Thomáis Janey Mack me Shirt is Black iii. 26 Some priests were real dingers at giving out the ashes. Dead straight, right in the centre, a real professional job.
2006 Ireland's Own Feb. 28/3 I gave him a dinger of a reason.
b. Baseball slang. A home run.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > [noun] > base-playing or running > types of run
home run1856
tally1856
steal1867
homer1868
round trip1895
double steal1897
round-tripper1908
stroll1908
grand slam1920
dinger1968
1968 Portsmouth (New Hampsh.) Herald 17 Apr. 14/2 Morehead was ecstatic when he heard that ‘Yaz hit two dingers’ and the Bosox [sc. the Boston Red Sox] had won.
2017 Chicago Daily Herald (Nexis) 23 May 23 Following a strikeout, Tuttle sent a dinger over the 360-feet left field wall.

Phrases

colloquial. to go (also do) one's (also a) dinger.
a. Scottish and Irish English (northern). To do something in a vigorous or boisterous fashion; to move quickly or energetically.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > act or do vigorously [verb (intransitive)]
twig1573
to go at ——1675
to go it1794
to come it1796
to lay it on thick1806
to blaze away1826
bushwhack1837
steam1842
split1844
rustle1882
to work like a demon1884
yank1888
go-at-it1904
to go somea1911
to put a jerk in it1919
to go (also do) one's (also a) dinger1923
to work (etc.) one's ass off1924
to go to town1933
to gie (or give) it laldy1974
1923 G. Watson Roxburghshire Word-bk. 112 A vigorous course of action: ‘She's gaun' a dinger the now.’
1970 Sc. Internat. No. 11. 20/2 ‘The band's gaun their dinger, eh!’.. It was as if they were trying to jericho down the chapel walls by sheer volume of sound.
2020 Belfast Tel. Online (Nexis) 8 Aug. I was..a nervous wreck and my legs were going a dinger with nerves.
b. Scottish. To get extremely angry or passionate; to lose one's temper; to rant and rave.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (intransitive)] > become angry
wrethec900
wrothc975
abelghec1300
to move one's blood (also mood)c1330
to peck moodc1330
gremec1460
to take firea1513
fumec1522
sourdc1540
spitec1560
to set up the heckle1601
fire1604
exasperate1659
to fire up1779
to flash up1822
to get one's dander up1831
to fly (occasionally jump, etc.) off (at) the handle1832
to have (also get) one's monkey up1833
to cut up rough, rusty, savage1837
rile1837
to go off the handle1839
to flare up1840
to set one's back up1845
to run hot1855
to wax up1859
to get one's rag out1862
blow1871
to get (also have) the pricker1871
to turn up rough1872
to get the needle1874
to blaze up1878
to get wet1898
spunk1898
to see red1901
to go crook1911
to get ignorant1913
to hit the ceiling1914
to hit the roof1921
to blow one's top1928
to lose one's rag1928
to lose one's haira1930
to go up in smoke1933
hackle1935
to have, get a cob on1937
to pop (also blow) one's cork1938
to go hostile1941
to go sparec1942
to do one's bun1944
to lose one's wool1944
to blow one's stack1947
to go (also do) one's (also a) dingerc1950
rear1953
to get on ignorant1956
to go through the roof1958
to keep (also blow, lose) one's cool1964
to lose ita1969
to blow a gasket1975
to throw a wobbler1985
c1950 R. McLeish Gorbals Story i. in Sc. People's Theatre (Assoc. Sc. Lit. Stud.) (2008) 4 I once listened tae one o' thae Scottish Nationalist fellas—he..was fair gaun his dinger about Scotland—terrify ye, listenin tae him.
1985 M. Munro Patter 20 The aul man'll go his dinger when he finds out!
2018 Scotsman (Nexis) 29 Sept. I grabbed Bert's training kit.., ripped it up and chucked it down the hall. Bert was doing his dinger: Who did this?
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

dingern.3

Brit. /ˈdɪŋə/, U.S. /ˈdɪŋər/
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: ding v.2, -er suffix1.
Etymology: < ding v.2 + -er suffix1.
colloquial.
1. A person whose work involves hammering metal; a smith. rare (now historical).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > workers with specific materials > metalworker > [noun] > forger or smith
smithOE
smithier1379
forgerc1380
encloser1382
hammersmith1382
metalsmithc1384
fevera1450
hammerman1483
smithera1525
anvil-beater1677
metalworker1851
dinger1863
drummer1881
1863 C. Dickens Uncommerc. Traveller in All Year Round 29 Aug. 13/2 Twelve hundred hammerers,..armourers,..smiths, shipwrights; twelve hundred dingers, clashers, dongers, rattlers, clinkers, bangers bangers bangers!
2004 B. Price Rise of Jaguar (2020) (e-book ed.) ix The panels..needed finishing with..lead. Not to mention much panel shape finishing by an army of smiths, known in the trade as ‘dingers’ by reason of the ringing noise that they made.
2. A device or instrument that emits a ding (ding n.3 2), typically as an alert or reminder; esp. a timer on a microwave or conventional oven.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > signalling > audible signalling > signalling with other sounding instruments > [noun]
dinger1914
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > electrical appliances or devices > [noun] > timer
dinger1914
phototimer1942
pinger1950
1914 L. E. Jackson & C. R. Hellyer Vocab. Criminal Slang 23 Chip, a cash-box; a till; a cash drawer without belling device. A cash receptacle with belling device is called a ‘combination chip’..or a ‘dinger’.
1957 St. Louis Daily Livestock Reporter 2 Jan. (Ann. Rev. & Outlook ed.) 3/5 The ‘dinger’ on the stove is set to go off an hour after eating, so the youngsters are not always asking ‘when is it time to go in swimming?’
2009 M. E. Koontz Lie in Grave xi. 52 I pop it in the microwave for forty-five seconds. Before the dinger dings, the [apartment] door opens.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

dingern.4

Brit. /ˈdɪŋə/, U.S. /ˈdɪŋər/, Australian English /ˈdɪŋə/
Origin: Of uncertain origin. Apparently formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: an element of uncertain origin, ding n.8, -er suffix1.
Etymology: Origin uncertain. Perhaps (i) < an element of uncertain origin (compare the possible etymons discussed at ding n.8, although ring n.1 7q is first attested slightly later) + -er suffix1, or perhaps directly (ii) < ding n.8 (although this is first attested later) + -er suffix1.
slang (chiefly Australian, originally Military).
A person's buttocks; the bottom, the backside. Also: the anus; the rectum. Sometimes: an animal's rump, anus, or rectum. Cf. ding n.8Now somewhat dated.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > animal body > general parts > rump and tail > [noun] > rump
arseeOE
croupc1300
crouponc1400
rumpc1425
rumplec1430
narsea1500
podex1601
poop1611
rump enda1658
breech1710
cushion1710
postabdomen1824
stern1830
bottle1935
dinger1943
ding1957
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > trunk > back > buttock(s) > [noun]
flitcha700
arse-endseOE
culec1220
buttockc1300
tail1303
toutec1305
nagea1325
fundamentc1325
tail-end1377
brawna1382
buma1387
bewschers?a1400
crouponc1400
rumplec1430
lendc1440
nachec1440
luddocka1475
rearwarda1475
croupc1475
rumpc1475
dock1508
hurdies1535
bunc1538
sitting place1545
bottom?c1550
prat1567
nates1581
backside1593
crupper1594
posteriorums1596
catastrophe1600
podex1601
posterior1605
seat1607
poop1611
stern1631
cheek1639
breeka1642
doup1653
bumkin1658
bumfiddle1661
assa1672
butt1675
quarter1678
foundation1681
toby1681
bung1691
rear1716
fud1722
moon1756
derrière1774
rass1790
stern-post1810
sit-down1812
hinderland1817
hinderling1817
nancy1819
ultimatum1823
behinda1830
duff?1837
botty1842
rear end1851
latter end1852
hinder?1857
sit1862
sit-me-down1866
stern-works1879
tuchus1886
jacksy-pardy1891
sit-upon1910
can1913
truck-end1913
sitzfleisch1916
B.T.M.1919
fanny1919
bot1922
heinie1922
beam1929
yas yas1929
keister1931
batty1935
bim1935
arse-end1937
twat1937
okole1938
bahookie1939
bohunkus1941
quoit1941
patoot1942
rusty-dusty1942
dinger1943
jacksie1943
zatch1950
ding1957
booty1959
patootie1959
buns1960
wazoo1961
tush1962
1943 J. Binning Target Area xiv. 104Dinger’, by the way, is a word born in the A.I.F. [= Australian Imperial Force] It describes, neatly, the place on which you sit.
1953 T. A. G. Hungerford Riverslake 40 He thinks the sun shines out of its dinger.
2001 Newcastle (New S. Wales) Herald (Nexis) 21 June 28 If you don't like it, you can stick it up your dinger!
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

dingern.5

Brit. /ˈdɪŋə/, U.S. /ˈdɪŋər/
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: ding n.6, -er suffix1.
Etymology: < ding n.6 + -er suffix1. Compare earlier dingus n. 2a, ding-dong n. 4, and dingle-dangle n.1 2b.
slang (originally U.S.).
The penis.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > sex organs > male sex organs > [noun] > penis
weapona1000
tarsec1000
pintleOE
cock?c1335
pillicock?c1335
yard1379
arrowa1382
looma1400
vergea1400
instrumentc1405
fidcocka1475
privya1500
virile member (or yard)?1541
prickc1555
tool1563
pillock1568
penis1578
codpiece1584
needle1592
bauble1593
dildo1597
nag1598
virility1598
ferret1599
rubigo?a1600
Jack1604
mentula1605
virge1608
prependent1610
flute1611
other thing1628
engine1634
manhood1640
cod1650
quillity1653
rammer1653
runnion1655
pego1663
sex1664
propagator1670
membrum virile1672
nervea1680
whore-pipe1684
Roger1689
pudding1693
handle?1731
machine1749
shaft1772
jock1790
poker1811
dickyc1815
Johnny?1833
organ1833
intromittent apparatus1836
root1846
Johnson1863
Peter1870
John Henry1874
dickc1890
dingusc1890
John Thomasc1890
old fellowc1890
Aaron's rod1891
dingle-dangle1893
middle leg1896
mole1896
pisser1896
micky1898
baby-maker1902
old man1902
pecker1902
pizzle1902
willy1905
ding-dong1906
mickey1909
pencil1916
dingbatc1920
plonkerc1920
Johna1922
whangera1922
knob1922
tube1922
ding1926
pee-pee1927
prong1927
pud1927
hose1928
whang1928
dong1930
putz1934
porkc1935
wiener1935
weenie1939
length1949
tadger1949
winkle1951
dinger1953
winky1954
dork1961
virilia1962
rig1964
wee-wee1964
Percy1965
meat tool1966
chopper1967
schlong1967
swipe1967
chode1968
trouser snake1968
ding-a-ling1969
dipstick1970
tonk1970
noonies1972
salami1977
monkey1978
langer1983
wanker1987
1953 V. Randolph & G. P. Wilson Down in Holler v. 101 The noun dinger means penis, too, but I don't think it is as old, or as widely used [in the Ozarks], as the other names here listed.
1970 G. Schenck & W. Marks Barquero xii. 97 Man, I've been in them mountains so long, my dinger could douse that campfire.
2018 @spookperson 5 Aug. in twitter.com (accessed 21 Aug. 2020) Sometimes I wonder how the guy who sent me a dick pic is doing after I let him know his dinger had disease symptoms.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.11533n.21601n.31863n.41943n.51953
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