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单词 disagree
释义

disagreen.

Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: disagree v.
Etymology: < disagree v. Compare earlier disagreeing n., disagreement n.Compare Anglo-Norman disagree refusal to agree (late 14th cent.).
Obsolete. rare.
Disagreement, dissent.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > [noun]
unsibeOE
unsaughta1122
un-i-sibc1275
conteckc1290
discordingc1325
distancec1325
discordance1340
dissensionc1384
batea1400
discordc1425
variancec1425
variationc1485
disgreement?1504
distinction1520
factiona1538
jar1546
variety1546
disagreeance1548
disagreeing1548
disagreement1548
misliking1564
odds1567
mislikea1586
discordancy1587
disagree1589
distancy1595
dissent1596
dislike1598
secting1598
dichostasy1606
fraction1609
dissentation1623
ill blood1624
misintelligence1632
clashing1642
misunderstanding1642
discomposure1659
disjointinga1715
uneasiness1744
friction1760
misunderstand1819
unharmony1866
inharmony1867
trouble at (the or t') mill1967
1589 R. Greene Ciceronis Amor 26 It may be that the destinies haue appointed their disagree.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2021).

disagreev.

Brit. /ˌdɪsəˈɡriː/, U.S. /ˌdɪsəˈɡri/
Forms: see dis- prefix and agree v.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation; originally modelled on a French lexical item. Etymons: dis- prefix, agree v.
Etymology: < dis- prefix + agree v., in sense 1 after Anglo-Norman disagreer, disagrer, desagreer to withhold assent (14th cent. or earlier). Compare later disgree v.Compare Old French, Middle French desagreer, French désagréer (12th cent.), Old Occitan desagradar, Spanish desagradar (beginning of the 14th cent.), all in sense ‘to displease (a person)’, and also post-classical Latin disagreare (a1540 in a British source).
1. intransitive. To withhold assent; to refuse to consent to a proposal; to refuse to concur with a statement or opinion. Chiefly with to, with, †from.In quot. 1474 transitive: to refuse to agree to.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > statement > dissent or disagreement > dissent or disagree [verb (intransitive)] > refuse assent
disassentc1425
dissentc1425
disagree1474
disconsent1526
discondescend1579
the mind > language > statement > refusal > [verb (intransitive)] > refuse consent or agreement
dissentc1425
disagree1474
disaccord1596
non-consent1645
1474 in W. Brown Yorks. Deeds (1914) II. 160 He shall not..disagree nor disavowe any accion or sute takyn in his name.
1495 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VII (Electronic ed.) Parl. Oct. 1495 §10. m. 8 If the..duke..disagree to þe seid acte.
1528–30 tr. T. Littleton Tenures (new ed.) f. xx If the parcener..hath yssue & dyeth, the yssue may dysagre to the partycyon.
1583 J. Foxe Actes & Monuments (ed. 4) I. 705/2 The sayd Duke before dyd disagree from that mariage.
1589 W. Warner Albions Eng. (new ed.) vi. xxxi. 138 Mine is to loue, but hers to disagree.
1651 Whole Triall Mr Love 87 Mr. Love did disagree to the sending the money.
1732 A. Boyer Polit. State Great Brit. Sept. 206 Agree or Disagree to the Motion.
1752 L. Carter Jrnl. House of Burgesses 17 Apr. in Diary (1965) I. 105 An amendment disagreed to by the house was sent back.
1818 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. (ed. 2) IV. 495 In such cases the grantee may, by deed only, disagree, and disclaim the estate.
1869 W. E. Gladstone Speech in House of Commons in Daily News 16 July I shall move to disagree to that clause..I beg now to move that the House disagree with the Lords' amendment..of the preamble of the Irish Church Bill.
1930 Scotsman 5 June 10/3 The President of the Board of Trade moved to disagree with an amendment.
1994 M. Hart et al. Decision at Midnight viii. 155 The Senate's failure to disagree to the administration's notice of intent permitted the negotiations to begin in earnest.
2. intransitive. To fail to correspond, harmonize, or be in accordance; to differ. Also with with, †to, †from.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > statement > dissent or disagreement > dissent from or disagree with [verb (transitive)]
to fall from ——a1425
objectc1460
disagreea1513
dissent1565
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > disharmony or incongruity > be unharmonious or incongruous [verb (intransitive)]
missounda1382
discordc1384
disaccorda1500
disagreea1513
disgree1530
miscord1532
to agree (etc.) like harp and harrow1563
antipathizec1630
to jump awry1762
disharmonize1863
a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. lxvi. f. xxiiii That sayinge disagreeth to the wrytynge of Eutropius.
1578 J. Lyly Euphues f. 84 [He] soroweth to see thy behauiour so farre to disagree from thy birth.
1637 G. Gillespie Dispute against Eng.-Popish Ceremonies iv. iii. 8 Those things we call morally good, which agree to right reason: those morally evill, which disagree from right reason.
1685 E. Stillingfleet Origines Britannicæ i. 4 A Tradition..disagreeing to the Scripture.
1725 I. Watts Logick ii. iv. §2 We have neither a very clear Conception in our selves of the two Ideas contained in the Words, nor how they agree or disagree.
1764 T. Reid Inq. Human Mind ii. 53 This idea agrees with that of present existence, but disagrees with that of past existence.
1874 A. B. Davidson Introd. Hebrew Gram. §48 The other numerals are nouns, and disagree in gender with the words which they enumerate.
1884 tr. H. Lotze Logic iv. 235 Particular circumstances which agree or disagree with given facts.
1910 Pennsylvania Mag. Hist. & Biogr. 34 381 The dates in the Register and upon the canvases often disagree.
1996 St. Petersburg (Florida) Times (Nexis) 23 Oct. (Sports section) 1 c Cox said McMichael has pitched well, but the numbers disagree.
2011 G. W. Hunter in R. J. G. M. Florax et al. Improving Energy Efficiency through Technol. vi. 159 Moments when empirical evidence disagrees with the predictions of theory.
3.
a. intransitive. To hold or express a different opinion or view from another. Also with †from, with.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > statement > dissent or disagreement > dissent or disagree [verb (intransitive)]
disagree?1521
misagree1530
differ1563
square1600
to think from1625
dissent1654
non-concur1836
?1521 J. Fisher Serm. agayn Luther sig. D.iiv The doctours full often disagre.
1559 in J. Strype Ann. Reformation (1725) I. App. xi. 35 If any..disagreed from his forefathers, he is..to be judged suspected.
1662 E. Stillingfleet Origines Sacræ i. i. §20 Those who disagree from that former Computation, place it yet lower.
1695 J. Edwards Disc. conc. Old & New-Test. III. xii. 487 The 70 Seniors disagreed in their Translation.
1733 A. Pope Of Use of Riches 1 Who shall decide, when Doctors dis-agree?
1775 P. Pott Chirurg. Observ. 118 Practitioners and writers disagree..about the kind of medicines which they think most proper.
1874 J. Morley On Compromise 140 The sincere beliefs and conscientiously performed rites of those..from whose religion he disagrees.
1883 J. A. Froude Short Stud. IV. ii. ii. 187 He could not place himself in the position of persons who disagreed with him.
1905 Westm. Gaz. 14 Apr. 7/3 A general proposition..which applies just as much to those who disagree from me as to those who agree with me.
1972 Lat. Amer. 18 Aug. 260/1 He said he respected Lanusse, but disagreed with him on many points.
2006 Best Life Nov. 30/1 We disagreed about pretty much everything—politics, religion, career choice.
b. intransitive. With with. To dissent from or disapprove of something; to hold or express an opinion opposed to a proposal, practice, etc.
ΚΠ
1889 Pharmaceut. Jrnl. & Trans. 26 Jan. 595/2 He..disagreed with the idea of recommending one's own preparations.
1892 N.Z. Parl. Deb. 76 236 Most of them disagree with the tax.
1957 R. W. Beachey Brit. W. Indies Sugar Industry v. 91 Watts and Harrison..disagreed with the practice of..allowing a crop to ratoon.
1981 Internat. Stud. Q. 25 591 If bureaucrats disagree with their government's negotiating position, they can help the exporter by..arguing for bargaining concessions.
2005 Spokesman Rev. (Spokane, Washington) (Nexis) 18 Nov. a1 He's not surprised that some people would disagree with the motion.
4. intransitive. To quarrel, argue, fall out.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > be in dissension or at variance [verb (intransitive)]
discorda1382
vary?1428
disagree1534
dissent1538
differ1568
result1572
at difference1583
interferea1644
the mind > attention and judgement > testing > debate, disputation, argument > controversy, dispute, argument > contend, dispute, argue [verb (intransitive)]
flitec900
witherc1000
disputea1225
pleadc1275
strive1320
arguec1374
tolyc1440
toilc1450
wrestlec1450
altercate1530
disagree1534
dissent1538
contend1539
controvert1563
wrangle?1570
contestate?1572
to fend and prove?1578
contest1603
vie1604
controverse1605
discept1639
ergot1653
digladiatea1656
misprove1662
spar1698
argufy1804
spat1809
to cross swords1816
argle1823
to bandy words1828
polemize1828
controversialize1841
caffle1851
polemicize1881
ergotize1883
argy-bargy1887
cag1919
snack1956
1534 W. Turner tr. J. von Watt Of Olde God & Newe sig. Ev The christen men dyd disagree and were at variance amonge them selues.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry IV f. xxixv Takyng a corporall othe..neuer after to disagre or renewe any displeasure.
1602 W. Watson Decacordon Ten Quodlibeticall Questions 235 The Iesuits doe mightily disagree, and are often at open warres.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost ii. 497 Devil with Devil damn'd Firm concord holds, men onely disagree Of Creatures rational. View more context for this quotation
1758 S. Hayward Seventeen Serm. xvii. 531 Children of the same family ought not to disagree.
1790 By-stander 79 Two of these different professions having disagreed, they went to boxing.
1835 E. Bulwer-Lytton Rienzi I. ii. i. 196 Come, we must not again disagree.
1857 Frank Leslie's Illustr. Newspaper 29 Aug. 194/3 She never seems so pleased as when she has made two people disagree and quarrel.
1952 Daily Republic (Mitchell, S. Dakota) 13 Mar. 4/1 When nations disagree violently there are no international laws to fit the emergency.
1987 Boys' Life Nov. 44/3 When good friends disagree, they talk about the things that are bothering them.
2004 Oklahoman (Nexis) 17 May (Sports section) 1 b Folks disagree and fight, scratch and claw, break up and occasionally make up.
5. intransitive. To be unsuited or incompatible; esp.(of food, climate, lifestyle, etc.) to have an adverse or incompatible effect; to be unhealthy or inappropriate. Chiefly and now only with with.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > disharmony or incongruity > unsuitability or inappropriateness > be unsuitable [verb (intransitive)]
disagree1768
1568 [implied in: T. Hill Proffitable Arte Gardening (rev. ed.) ii. xxix. f. 103v The Greeke wryters, thyncke the Basyll soo dysagreing and contrarie to women, that..she shal not after tast of the meate. (at disagreeing adj. 4)].
1585 Briefe Disc. Balsame sig. A.viv The thinges which greatly disagree are wines, spice, salt meats.
1681 W. Salmon Iatrica i. v. 304/1 It does not disagree with some to have their Heads shaven, and a plaster applied.
1768 tr. L. Cornaro Disc. Sober & Temperate Life 15 To try, whether those, which pleased my palate, agreed or disagreed with my stomach.
1799 T. R. Malthus Diary 12 June (1966) 60 The Norwegians..always find the rye bread disagree with them.
1820 P. B. Shelley Œdipus Tyrannus ii. 39 So plain a dish Could scarcely disagree.
1827 W. Scott Life Napoleon VI. ix. 244 Ascribed to his health's disagreeing with the air of that capital.
1865 J. W. Carlyle Lett. III. 288 It couldn't have been sound, that champagne..or it wouldn't have so disagreed with me.
1926 Illustr. London News 26 June 1123/1 The keeper thought..that the animal had eaten something which disagreed with him.
1958 Lock Haven (Pa.) Express 26 Sept. 4/1 The very cold climate disagreed with both ladies, who rapidly developed severe colds.
2006 E. Lipski Digestive Wellness for Children xvi. 159 Chronic diarrhea can result from..food or beverages that disagree with the child's system.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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