单词 | disease |
释义 | diseasen. a. Harm, injury, wrong; (also) an instance of this. Obsolete. to do disease to: to harm, to injure; = disease v. 2a. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > harm, injury, or wrong > [noun] loathc900 harmOE teenOE griefc1330 injurec1374 injuryc1384 truitc1390 spitea1400 wrethec1400 supprise1442 trouble1463 damage1470 objectionc1475 interess1489 tort1532 mishanter1754 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > harm, injury, or wrong > harm, injure, or commit offence against [verb (transitive)] misdoc1230 forworkc1275 wrongc1330 to do (one) spite or a spitec1380 to commit (also do, make) an offencec1384 offenda1387 unrighta1393 to do disease toc1400 injuryc1484 offence1512 misfease1571 watcha1586 injure1597 envya1625 disserve1637 hinder1639 disservice1837 serve1887 c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Dan. vi. 2 That..the kyng shulde not suffre eny disese [L. molestiam]. 1387–8 Petition London Mercers in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. (1931) 37 (MED) For oon the grettest remedye..forto ayein-stonde many of thilke diseses..we prayen..that the statut ordeigned and made bi parlement holden at westmystre in the sexte yere of owre Kyng..mowe..be execut. 1414 Petition in Rotuli Parl. (1767–77) IV. 58/1 To have remedie and socour of the grete wronges, mischiefs, and diseses, the whiche we have suffred these x zer. ?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 98 Nedders and oþer venymous bestez of þat cuntree duse na diseese to na straungers ne pilgrimes. a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (BL Add. 9066) (1879) 309 The Emperour comaunded, that no man shuld dispoile the ymages..ne to hem do no disease. b. Hardship, suffering; pain, misery, misfortune; an instance of this. Obsolete. Π ?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) ii. l. 4110 Go & mak his pes or he do þe more stoure, & þou to þi deses may haf þe frute & floure. c1405 (c1395) G. Chaucer Canon's Yeoman's Tale (Ellesmere) (1875) l. 747 Vn-to shrewes ioye it is and ese To haue hir felawes in peyne and disese. c1450 (?c1400) Three Kings Cologne (Cambr. Ee.4.32) (1886) 26 (MED) Ihesu crist..was bore of oure lady..withoute any dissese or sorwe of her body. ?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) l. 151 Sho sufferd calde, sho sufferd hete, So sho was to dyses vsed, Þat no trauayle sho refused. a1500 in Antiquary (1901) 37 54 (MED) Put in a tonne full of fervent brennynge oyle..she..abode therin withoute any Disease, joiyng her there. 1696 T. Rogers Happiness of Quiet Mind 57 When St. Paul had a Thorn in the Flesh, a painful Disease, that created as much trouble to him, as a Thorn usually does in the tender Flesh; He sought the Lord thrice. 2. a. Now chiefly in form dis-ease. Absence of ease; uneasiness, discomfort; disquiet, disturbance; trouble. Formerly also: †inconvenience, annoyance (obsolete).Apparently falling out of use after the early 17th cent. and re-coined in the late 19th cent., probably as a separate formation directly from dis- prefix and ease n. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > state of being upset or perturbed > [noun] stirringc888 maleasea1300 uneasea1300 diseasec1330 perturbationa1382 unrestfulnessc1384 disturbancea1387 unroc1390 distroublancea1400 perturbancec1425 unquietnessc1460 inquietation1461 conturbationc1470 unheart's-ease1470 distroubling1487 wanease15.. inquietness?1504 unrufe1508 sturt1513 pertroublancea1522 inquieting1527 unquieting1548 turmoiling1550 unquiet1551 agitation?1555 storm1569 wanrest1570 discountenance1577 float1579 disquiet1581 brangling1584 diseasefulnessa1586 restlessness1597 hurry1600 disturbancy1603 disquietment1606 disordera1616 laruma1616 uneasinessa1616 diseasementa1617 discomposture1622 discomposition1624 whirr1628 discomposednessa1631 discomposure1632 pother1638 incomposedness1653 inquietude1658 uneasefulness1661 toss1666 disquietednessa1680 intranquillitya1699 disquietude1709 bosom-broil1742 discomfort1779 rufflement1806 feeze1825 uncomfortableness1828 discomforture1832 astasia1839 dysphoria1842 purr1842 peacelessness1852 palaver1899 perturbment1901 heebie-jeebies1923 wahala1966 agita1979 a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1871) III. 287 Þe disese of þouȝt mowe be putte away. a1400 (?c1300) Bevis of Hampton (Egerton) l. 1418 Disseise [c1330 Auch. Þow schelt haue meche miseise..til þow be ded, Boute ech a dai quarter of a lof bred]. c1430 N. Love Mirror Blessed Life (Brasenose e.9) (1908) 143 His disciples weren in the see in grete disese. a1500 (?c1450) Merlin iii. 54 Thei shull haue grete dissese for lakke of water. a1547 Earl of Surrey Poems (1964) 16 Till thou know my hole disseyse my hart can have no rest. ?1615 G. Chapman tr. Homer Odysses (new ed.) iv. 1088 Doth sleep thus seize Thy powers, affected with so much dis-ease? 1623 W. Lisle in tr. Ælfric Saxon Treat. Old & New Test. Ded. xxiii Some grudge of old disease, Which will enforce us fortifie our townes. 1895 H. W. Dresser Power of Silence i. 14 Can we not become adjusted to the situation as it actually is, and stop this continual rebellion, this sense of dis-ease and lack of harmony with the inevitable? 1935 W. H. Auden & C. Isherwood Dog beneath Skin iii, in Eng. Auden (1986) 114 When he to ease His heart's disease Must cross in sorrow Corrosive seas As dolphin go. 1960 Encounter Mar. 78/1 The fear and dis-ease which underlie the more obvious nostalgia. 2020 Jerusalem Post (Nexis) 13 Nov. (Features section) 35 We each may feel or show a sense of dis-ease in differing ways. Talk to your children and help them put a name on their feelings so that they can better understand them. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > state of annoyance or vexation > [noun] > cause of annoyance or vexation thornc1230 dreicha1275 painc1375 cumbrance1377 diseasec1386 a hair in one's necka1450 molestationc1460 incommodity?a1475 melancholya1475 ensoigne1477 annoyance1502 traik1513 incommode1518 corsie1548 eyesore1548 fashery1558 cross1573 spite1577 corrosive1578 wasp1588 cumber1589 infliction1590 gall1591 distaste1602 plague1604 rub1642 disaccommodation1645 disgust1654 annoyment1659 bogle1663 rubber1699 noyancea1715 chagrins1716 ruffle1718 fasha1796 nuisance1814 vex1815 drag1857 bugbear1880 nark1918 pain in the neck (also arse, bum, etc.)1933 sod1940 chizz1953 c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Nun's Priest's Tale (Ellesmere) (1872) Prol. l. 3961 It is a greet disese Where as men han been in greet welthe and ese To heeren of hire sodeyn fal. ?1443 M. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 218 Sende me a letter as hastely as ȝe may, yf wrytyn be non dysesse to yow. a1667 Bp. J. Taylor Serm. xxv. §5, in Wks. (1850) IV. 641 The disemployed is a disease, and like a long sleepless night to himself, and a load to his country. 1712 H. Prideaux Direct. Church-wardens (ed. 4) 59 [It] is only for their own ease, and that must not be made a dis-ease to the rest of the Parish. 1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. (at cited word) I hope I shan't be no disease to ee. 3. a. Sickness (in a person, animal, or plant); disturbance or impairment of the function (and often also the structure) of the body, a part of the body, or the mind. In later use frequently with modifying word, indicating the site, nature, cause, etc., of sickness. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > [noun] unhealc700 untrumnessc897 adleeOE sicknessc967 cothec1000 unhealthc1000 woe?a1200 ail?c1225 lying?c1225 maladyc1275 unsoundc1275 feebless1297 languora1375 languishc1384 disease1393 aegritudea1400 lamea1400 maleasea1400 soughta1400 wilc1400 malefaction?a1425 firmityc1426 unwholesomenessc1449 ill1450 languenta1500 distemperancea1535 the valley of the shadow of death1535 affect?1537 affection?1541 distemperature1541 inability1547 sickliness1565 languishment1576 cause1578 unhealthfulness1589 crazedness1593 languorment1593 evilness1599 strickenness1599 craziness1602 distemper1604 unsoundness1605 invaletude1623 unhealthiness1634 achaque1647 unwellness1653 disailment1657 insalubrity1668 faintiness1683 queerness1687 invalidity1690 illness1692 ill health1698 ailment1708 illing1719 invalescence1724 peakingness1727 sickishness1727 valetudinariness1742 ailingness1776 brash1786 invalidism1794 poorliness1814 diseasement1826 invalidship1830 valetudinarianism1839 ailing1862 invalidhood1863 megrims1870 pourriture1890 immersement1903 bug1918 condition1920 a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vi. l. 1016 He was full of such desese, That he mai noght the deth eschape. c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 2549 He was fallen in a feuire... Þai..said ilkane to othire: ‘Be þis disese to ser Darie & his dukis knawen, He sall vs..surely en[c]ounbre.’ 1661 R. Lovell Πανζωορυκτολογια, sive Panzoologicomineralogia 417 The strabisme, or squintness, caused by evil conformation, custome, or disease. 1744 J. Thomson Summer in Seasons (new ed.) 97 The dire Power of pestilent Disease. 1788 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall (1846) V. l. 10 The legions of Augustus melted away in disease and lassitude. 1834 J. Hayward Inq. Causes Fruitfulness & Barrenness Plants & Trees vi. 150 The indications of disease in plants are as perceptible and evident to the eye of a careful observer, as those of animals. 1852 Guy's Hosp. Rep. 2nd Ser. 8 289 We shall find that the occurrence of kidney disease alone is far less frequent than that of heart or liver disease alone. 1879 ‘E. Garrett’ House by Wks. II. 42 Suppressing disease instead of curing it. 1908 J. G. Adami Princ. Pathol. I. i. 20 If health be regarded as the indication of perfect functional activity, and disease of imperfect function, the two merge imperceptibly one into the other. 1968 New Eng. Jrnl. Med. 11 Jan. 101/2 The patient presented the picture of the advanced stage of malignant disease. 2021 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 19 July a1 Fully vaccinated people are extraordinarily protected from severe disease, hospitalization and death from COVID-19. b. A sickness or instance of sickness (in a person, animal, or plant); a condition in which the function, and often also the structure, of the body or part of the body is disturbed or impaired; (also) a condition of disturbed or impaired mental function (now somewhat rare); esp. such a condition in which characteristic symptoms, typical physiological and anatomical changes, and (often) a specific causative agent or factor can be identified.Frequently with modifying word or words, indicating the nature, site, or cause of a disease, the name of the physician who first described it, etc. For more established formations of this type, see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > [noun] soreOE cothec1000 sicknessc1000 evilc1275 maladyc1275 grievance1377 passiona1382 infirmityc1384 mischiefa1387 affectiona1398 grievinga1398 grief1398 sicka1400 case?a1425 plaguec1425 diseasea1475 alteration1533 craze1534 uncome1538 impediment1542 affliction?1555 ailment1606 disaster1614 garget1615 morbus1630 ail1648 disaffect1683 disorder1690 illness1692 trouble1726 complaint1727 skookum1838 claim1898 itis1909 bug1918 wog1925 crud1932 bot1937 lurgy1947 Korean haemorrhagic fever1951 nadger1956 a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. vi. xxi. 328 He þat haþ þat disese oþir yuel þat hatte strangurya pissiþ ofte and litil. ?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Hunterian) f. 72v (MED) Blodelesse of þe veyne þat is cleped Renalis oþer venalis, þe whiche is atwixe þe litel too and þe too nexte him, is good for cancrene, malum mortuum, and varices & for Sausfleume & for alle oþere melancolious passiouns oþer diseses of þe legges. a1475 Bk. Quinte Essence (1889) 18 Oure quinte essence auri et perelarum heelith þese disesis. 1528 T. Paynell tr. Arnaldus de Villa Nova in Joannes de Mediolano Regimen Sanitatis Salerni sig. f That lettyng of blud shulde nat be moche vsed: for by oft vsyng thereof, one waxyng olde, falleth in to dyuers diseases, as epilencie, apoplexie, and palsey. a1555 H. Latimer 27 Serm. (1562) ii. f. 140 It is an vnwholsome thing to bury within ye city,..the occasion of much sicknes & diseases. 1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iv. iii. 9 Diseases desperat growne, By desperat applyance are relieued. View more context for this quotation 1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan ii. xxix. 173 A Disease, which resembleth the Pleurisie. 1725 N. St. André in London Gaz. No. 6349/1 The..Woman had the Foul Disease. 1762 A. Dickson Treat. Agric. i. viii. 77 The diseases of plants we may possibly do something to prevent, but we can do little to remove. 1799 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 2 183 The diseases of human teeth and bones. 1836 Penny Cycl. VI. 93/2 Cabbages are subject to a peculiar disease..called clubbing. 1885 Law Times 79 161/2 The mare was suffering from no catching disease. 1912 Twin Falls (Idaho) Times 12 Oct. Is it not important that they also be taught how..to avoid the deferrable and preventable diseases which are now..destroying so many precious lives? 1963 Times 17 May 5/7 (advt.) Today the vet can control mortality from diseases like white scours. 2009 Sci. Amer. (U.K. ed.) Sept. 69/2 Among diseases of man and beast, anthrax stands as one of the oldest known and certainly one of the most storied. c. figurative. A particular quality or disposition regarded as adversely affecting a person or group of people in a manner analogous to an illness. ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > moral or spiritual degeneration > [noun] > corruption > a morbid moral condition rusteOE maladyc1385 disease1509 lepry1526 boil1537 leprosy?1555 imposthume1565 gangrene1588 ulcer1592 diseasedness1614 lesion1640 unwholesomeness1881 1517 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure (1928) xvi. 70 A a sayde counseyle, doubte ye neuer a dele But your dysease I shall by wysdome hele. 1609 S. Rowlands Famous Hist. Guy Earle of Warwick 57 Ambitious pride hath been my youths disease. a1661 T. Fuller Hist. Worthies Eng. (1662) Warw. 124 Bad Latin was a catching disease in that age. 1785 B. Franklin Let. 28 Aug. in Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. (1786) 2 20 The common causes of the smoking of chimneys..the principles on which both the disease and the remedy depend. 1844 R. W. Emerson New Eng. Reformers in Wks. (1906) I. 266 The disease with which the human mind now labours is want of faith. 1945 N.Y. Herald-Tribune 16 Dec. (Books) 3 ‘The French flu’ (Francophilia), a disease which ravages the mind. 2011 Church Times 15 July 29/1 The history of reading and of the book is very vulnerable to the academic disease of jargon-laden, self-referential introspection. d. Deterioration or decomposition resulting from a biological, chemical, or physical process, affecting a product, substance, or object; an instance or type of this.Cf. earlier diseased adj. 1c.tin disease: see the first element. Π 1733 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. (ed. 2) at Wine In those Diseases of Wine, wherein they become viscous and ropy. 1818 R. McWilliam Ess. on Dry Rot xv. 165 It is a custom there [sc. Genoa], as a preventive against the diseases of timber, to steep it about three years in fresh water immediately after it is felled. 1921 W. Jago & W. C. Jago Technol. Bread-making xvii. 345 During hot weather bread is liable to an outbreak of the disease called ‘rope’. 1986 J. C. T. Hollander & R. W. Lanting in T. Schneider Acidification & Policy Implications 243 There is much concern about a type of damage to reinforced concrete that is commonly referred to as concrete disease. 2009 J. H. Stubbs Time Honored vii. 101 Systematic operations like those now undertaken to clean and maintain the historic buildings of Paris help guard against unkempt appearance and future ‘stone disease’. Compounds C1. General use as a modifier, with the sense ‘of or relating to disease’. Π 1855 A. Haviland Climate, Weather, & Dis. 39 It is the combination of conditions well blended together that gives an impulse to the disease-germ. 1883 Chem. News 24 Aug. 90/2 A mere citation of cases of disease-outbreak..would avail but little. 1938 S. M. Buchanan Doctr. Signatures iv. 97 Initial disturbance, complication, coction, crisis, and abscession..serve to mark the stages in disease histories even when they are not mentioned. 2021 N.Y. Times Mag. 28 Mar. 39/1 They might gain insights into the health or disease markers of entire population groups or countries. C2. With participles, forming compounds in which disease expresses the object of the underlying verb, as in disease-causing, disease-producing, etc. Also similarly with agent nouns, as in disease-maker, etc. ΚΠ 1649 T. Diconson in J. Bulwer Pathomyotomia sig. a2 Whence subtilely thou 'rt wont to ken & trace The Critciall [sic] Disease-discovering Face. 1865 E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind vi. 128 In the New Hebrides, there was a colony of disease-makers. 1886 Athenæum 7 Aug. 178/1 The coffee tree is the patient, the fungus..is the disease-causing agent. 1906 Westm. Gaz. 27 Aug. 5/1 The invasion of the body by disease-producing organisms. 1943 Life 20 Sept. 79/2 Running a close second to Anopheles as a disease-spreader is Aëdes aegypti. 2015 Atlantic Mar. 36/2 By inserting human genes into plants, scientists have been able to create disease-fighting proteins called ‘plantibodies,’ which work just like the antibodies that the human immune system makes. C3. disease-free n. not affected by disease or containing causative agents of disease; (also) free from recurrent disease, esp. malignant disease, after treatment. ΘΠ the world > health and disease > [adjective] > of health: good > free from disease soundc1175 hailc1275 unfect?1504 unsick?1536 sicklessa1547 unafflicted1599 uninfected1625 diseaseless1653 hale1684 undiseased1745 unaffected1793 undisordereda1807 afflictionless1874 symptom-free1962 1876 Jrnl. Hort., Cottage Gardener, & Country Gentleman 23 Mar. 236/2 I require Potatoes for seed, and by taking-up every fourth row for this purpose I gain two important advantages—namely, space for the Celery, and a disease-free—aye, and almost disease-proof—stock of tubers. 1913 Misc. Papers (Circular U.S. Dept. Agric., Bureau Plant Industry, No. 126) 5 The yellow Bourbon cane which came from infected districts gave diseased shoots, while the same variety obtained from disease-free regions and grown adjacent to the former plants produced healthy shoots. 1977 Ann. Internal Med. 86 155/1 Advances in combination chemotherapy and in the ‘prophylaxis’ and therapy of meningeal leukemia have helped to prolong both survival and disease-free survival. 2018 P. Kimani Dance of Jakaranda iv. 72 As a dog's collar attests him to be disease-free through a raft of vaccinations, a kipande around a man's neck was his proof that he had been cleared by the colonial powers and did not pose a threat to his fellow man. disease management n. (a) the treatment of disease; (b) (U.S.) a system that seeks to manage the chronic conditions of high-risk, high-cost patients as a group, aimed at improving the quality and reducing the cost of professional care, as well as encouraging patients to engage proactively in following a healthy lifestyle; frequently as a modifier, as in disease management program, disease management strategy, etc. Π 1918 A. Caillé Postgraduate Med. p. v. The presentation here..embraces all modern methods of disease management of proven therapeutic value. 1974 Washington Post 15 Oct. a21/5 Most prominent surgeons do not limit their attack on disease to one narrowed area such as the breast... Telescopic approaches to disease management..has [sic] led to unfortunate conclusions. 1986 Ann. Rep. Rockefeller Found. 34 Health of Populations is creating a worldwide network in clinical epidemiology..using population-based research methods to identify the most cost-effective disease management strategies and health-care policies for their countries. 2004 Wall St. Jrnl. 9 Aug. (Central ed.) r5/2 The thinking behind disease management is that aggressive efforts to educate and monitor individuals with chronic illnesses—by means of frequent telephone calls from nurses, for instance—will make for healthier patients. 2015 C. P. McLaughlin & C. D. McLaughlin Health Policy Anal. (ed. 2) v. 123 The federal government..has encouraged state efforts to move more and more Medicaid recipients..into managed care programs and adopt disease management programs. disease mongering n. depreciative †(a) the action or practice of causing or spreading disease (obsolete); (b) the unnecessary or inappropriate labelling of a physical condition or behaviour as a disorder requiring medical treatment, typically considered to be done for the purpose of selling drugs or other treatments.In earliest use in the context of inoculation or vaccination being viewed with suspicion or hostility. Π 1878 National Anti-compulsory-vaccination Reporter June 170/1 The..experiment of Dr. Reiss..who vaccinated..children from an ‘exquisitely scrofulous vaccinifer’, and saw scrofula develop itself in every one of them!.. The moral degradation of the modern medical school could scarcely be better exemplified... Away with its filthy disease-mongering. 1901 A. Westland Tocol. for Mothers iii. xvii. 207 All this playing with poxes or ‘disease mongering’ will be some day entirely done away with, and looked back upon with shame. 1992 Kirkus Rev. (Nexis) 1 Aug. Disease-mongering—convincing the healthy that they are sick or the slightly ill that they are very sick—is big business. 2011 N. M. Hadler Rethinking Aging v. 111 I have long pointed to osteoporosis as one of the best examples of disease mongering by the pharmaceutical industry... The thinning of our bones is a risk factor that has been turned into a horrifying disease. disease-resistant n. and adj. (a) n. a (variety or breed of) plant or animal that has some ability to withstand disease or infection (somewhat rare); (b) adj. having some ability to withstand disease or infection. ΚΠ 1880 Jrnl. Hort., Cottage Gardener, & Home Farmer 25 Mar. 231/2 Scotch Champion has recently come to the front [of potato varieties] with two strong recommendations—excellent quality and a disease-resistant. 1893 N. A. Cobb Plant Dis. & Remedies (New S. Wales Dept. Agric.) 18 Selection of disease-resistant sorts [of sugar-cane]. 1926 Gleanings Bee Culture Mar. 189/1 He says to me to breed disease-resistants onto your winter-hunger resistants. 1946 E. Hoffmann & H. A. Johnson Successful Broiler Growing ii. 17 The demands of broiler growers in this area for a strong, disease resistant, rapidly growing, rapid feathering chick. 2013 S. Williams Creating Prairie Xeriscape (new ed.) vi. 92/2 ‘Golden Nugget’..is dense, dwarf, medium-dark green, has excellent wear tolerance and is disease resistant. disease-ridden adj. affected by disease; harbouring disease or disease-causing agents. ΘΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > [adjective] > in state of ill health or diseased untrumc825 sickc888 unwholec888 slackc897 unstronga900 sicklea1000 sam-halea1023 worseOE attaint1303 languishinga1325 heallessc1374 sicklyc1374 sicklewa1387 bada1393 mishalea1400 languoring?c1425 distempered1440 unwell?c1450 detent?a1475 poora1475 languorousc1475 maladif1481 illa1500 maladiousc1500 wanthriven1508 attainted1509 unsound1513 acrazed1521 cracked1527 unsoundya1529 visited1537 infirmed1552 crazed1555 healthless1568 ill-liking1572 afflicted1574 crazy1576 unhealthful1580 sickish1581 valetudinary1581 not well1587 fainty1590 ill-disposed1596 unhealthsome1598 tainted1600 ill-affected1604 peaking1611 unhealthy1611 infirmited1616 disaffected1626 physical1633 illish1637 pimping1640 invalid1642 misaffected1645 valetudinarious1648 unhale1653 badly1654 unwholesome1655 valetudinous1655 morbulent1656 off the hooksa1658 mawkish1668 morbid1668 unthriven1680 unsane1690 ailing1716 not wellish1737 underlya1742 poorly1750 indifferent1753 comical1755 maladized1790 sober1808 sickened1815 broken-down1816 peaky1821 poorlyish1827 souffrante1827 run-down1831 sicklied1835 addle1844 shaky1844 mean1845 dauncy1846 stricken1846 peakyish1853 po'ly1860 pindling1861 rough1882 rocky1883 suffering1885 wabbit1895 icky-boo1920 like death warmed up1924 icky1938 ropy1945 crappy1956 hanging1971 sick as a parrot1982 shite1987 1857 J. C. Chambers Serm. preached at Perth & Other Parts Scotl. 1846–53 xlix. 433 It is this same forecasting—this same looking onward which sustains the widow and her fatherless children, the beggared merchant or tradesman.., the convicted criminal and the pain-worn, disease-ridden sufferer. 1923 F. J. Moberly Hist. Great War: Campaign in Mesopotamia I. 129 The total absence of any sanitary system or method and the presence of numerous disease-ridden brothels rendered both towns unsuitable for the billeting of troops. 2018 W. Davies Nerv. States (2019) iv. 98 A typical life has become longer and less disease-ridden. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2022). diseasev. a. transitive. To deprive (a person) of ease, make (a person) uneasy; to inflict discomfort or inconvenience upon; to trouble, to distress; to annoy, to vex. In early use also intransitive: to cause trouble or distress. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > state of being upset or perturbed > upset or perturb [verb (transitive)] to-wendc893 mingeOE dreveOE angerc1175 sturb?c1225 worec1225 troublec1230 sturble1303 disturbc1305 movea1325 disturblec1330 drubblea1340 drovec1350 distroublec1369 tempestc1374 outsturba1382 unresta1382 stroublec1384 unquietc1384 conturb1393 mismaya1400 unquemea1400 uneasec1400 discomfita1425 smite?a1425 perturbc1425 pertrouble?1435 inquiet1486 toss1526 alter1529 disquiet1530 turmoil1530 perturbate1533 broil1548 mis-set?1553 shake1567 parbruilyiec1586 agitate1587 roil1590 transpose1594 discompose1603 harrow1609 hurry1611 obturb1623 shog1636 untune1638 alarm1649 disorder1655 begruntlea1670 pother1692 disconcert1695 ruffle1701 tempestuate1702 rough1777 caddle1781 to put out1796 upset1805 discomfort1806 start1821 faze1830 bother1832 to put aback1833 to put about1843 raft1844 queer1845 rattle1865 to turn over1865 untranquillize1874 hack1881 rock1881 to shake up1884 to put off1909 to go (also pass) through a phase1913 to weird out1970 the mind > emotion > fear > nervousness or uneasiness > be nervous or uneasy (about) [verb (transitive)] > cause to be uneasy diseasec1384 the mind > emotion > suffering > state of annoyance or vexation > be annoyed or vexed by [verb (transitive)] > annoy or vex gremec893 dretchc900 awhenec1000 teenOE fretc1290 annoyc1300 atrayc1320 encumberc1330 diseasec1340 grindc1350 distemperc1386 offenda1387 arra1400 avexa1400 derea1400 miscomforta1400 angerc1400 engrievec1400 vex1418 molesta1425 entrouble?1435 destroublea1450 poina1450 rubc1450 to wring (a person) on the mailsc1450 disprofit1483 agrea1492 trouble1515 grig1553 mis-set?1553 nip?1553 grate1555 gripe1559 spitec1563 fike?1572 gall1573 corsie1574 corrosive1581 touch1581 disaccommodate1586 macerate1588 perplex1590 thorn1592 exulcerate1593 plague1595 incommode1598 affret1600 brier1601 to gall or tread on (one's) kibes1603 discommodate1606 incommodate1611 to grate on or upon1631 disincommodate1635 shog1636 ulcerate1647 incommodiate1650 to put (a person) out of his (her, etc.) way1653 discommodiate1654 discommode1657 ruffle1659 regrate1661 disoblige1668 torment1718 pesta1729 chagrin1734 pingle1740 bothera1745 potter1747 wherrit1762 to tweak the nose of1784 to play up1803 tout1808 rasp1810 outrage1818 worrit1818 werrit1825 buggerlug1850 taigle1865 get1867 to give a person the pip1881 to get across ——1888 nark1888 eat1893 to twist the tail1895 dudgeon1906 to tweak the tail of1909 sore1929 to put up1930 wouldn't it rip you!1941 sheg1943 to dick around1944 cheese1946 to pee off1946 to honk off1970 to fuck off1973 to tweak (a person's or thing's) tail1977 to tweak (a person's or thing's) nose1983 to wind up1984 to dick about1996 to-teen- c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Deeds xv. 19 For which thing I deme hem..for to be not vnquyetid, or disesid [L. inquietari]. c1390 in F. J. Furnivall Minor Poems Vernon MS (1901) ii. 725 Ȝif þou knowe ouȝt þat disese may, ffonde euur more to sey þe beste! ?c1425 (c1412) T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum (Royal 17 D.vi) (1860) 28 It ruethe me, yf I have you disesede. 1526 Bible (Tyndale) Mark v. f. lv Thy doughter is deed: why deseasest thou the master eny further? 1554 J. Knox Godly Let. sig. A viij He wold not disease hymself to heare a sermon. 1638 W. Chillingworth Relig. Protestants i. iv. §19. 200 That I should disease myself or my Reader with a punctual examination of it, may seem superfluous. 1724 R. Welton 18 Disc. 274 A short skin-deep affliction, which can but disease him for a few moments. b. transitive. To disturb or startle (a person) from sleep, rest, etc. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > state of being awake > wake or rouse [verb (transitive)] > specific disturb or startle diseasec1374 affraya1393 a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1882) iii. l. 1468 And suffrest here [sc. þe Dawyng] so soone vp..ryse For to disesen [c1430 Cambr. Gg.4.27 disese] loueres yn þis wyse. 1483 tr. Adam of Eynsham Reuelation xiii Sum what troubulde & disesyd by the noyse of the couent when they went oute of the chirche. 1568 Newe Comedie Iacob & Esau i. i. sig. A.ijv We disease our tent and neighbours all With rising ouer early. ?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads x. 45 Brother, hie thee to thy ships, and Idomen dis-ease, With warlike Ajax. 1655 T. Bayly Life J. Fisher xxii. 202 He was loath to disease him of his rest. a. transitive. To harm (a person); to affect adversely. Cf. to do disease to at disease n. 1a. Obsolete. Π a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1876) VI. 299 Þis Lowys, for he was so mylde, was ofte disesed [L. perpessus est difficultates] boþe of his owne men and of oþere. a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) ii. l. 3010 Thou..hast desesed The Court of France be thi wrong. c1429 Mirour Mans Saluacioune (1986) l. 465 Sometymes diseses man a migge or els a flee. c1440 W. Hilton Mixed Life (Thornton) in G. G. Perry Eng. Prose Treat. (1921) 43 Ouþer for to put þe fra thi mete or thi slepe..or for to disesse any oþer mane vnskilfully. a1450 ( tr. Vegetius De Re Militari (Douce) (1988) 131 Sodeyn onfallynge of enemyes..ne schulde neuere haue noyed ne disesed none oostes. b. transitive. To hurt, inflict pain or physical suffering on (a person). Cf. disease n. 1b Obsolete. Π c1410 tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1879) VII. 147 By þe space of þo þre dayes he was dissesed [L. infestatum] of þe develes. a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Wisd. xix. 20 Flawmes of corruptible beestis disesiden [E.V. a1382 Douce 369(1) trauaileden; L. vexaverunt] not the fleischis of Ebreis. ?a1430 T. Hoccleve Inuocacio ad Patrem l. 32 in Minor Poems (1970) ii. 276 They..were in prison, In yren bondes greuously disesid. a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (BL Add. 9066) (1879) 368 Then the crowe..disesed the Egle with many betynges. 3. a. transitive. To cause illness or disease in (a person, animal, plant, part of the body, etc.); to make ill. Also (and in earliest use) in passive: to suffer from or be afflicted by illness or disease.In passive use often not clearly distinguishable from predicative use of diseased adj. 1a. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > affect with disease [verb (transitive)] a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. v. ii. 171 Somtyme þe heed is desesed [L. patitur] wiþ an inward cause. 1493 (c1410) Dives & Pauper (Pynson) ix. vi. sig. Giv/1 He hurte his foote and diseasyd al his body. 1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry iv. f. 191 Little children diseased with the dry cough. a1670 S. Collins Systeme Anat. (1685) i. ii. xxv. 296 Salt recrements diseasing the ventricle..are corrected by Lime-Drinks, which are advised with good success in Diseases arising from gross, and salt humours. 1714 J. Quincy tr. R. Carr Medicinal Epist. iv. 33 Drinking in a Morning will disease and kill a person sooner. 1887 J. Ellis New Christianity iv. 116 No other poison..so perverts, diseases, pollutes and degrades a man,..as does alcohol. 1979 Plant Dis. Reporter 63 365 Some Redhaven [peach] trees..were diseased by natural infections of bacterial canker. 2012 Times 24 Mar. (Mag.) 15/4 Modern washing machines are also quietly diseasing you. Doing the laundry at low temperatures means that bugs such as E. coli aren't killed. b. transitive. figurative. To have an adverse effect on (a person or thing) in a manner analogous to an illness. Π a1637 B. Jonson Eng. Gram. Pref., in Wks. (1640) III Wee free our Language from the opinion of Rudenesse, and Barbarisme, wherewith it is mistaken to be diseas'd. c1680 E. Hickeringill Hist. Whiggism in Wks. (1716) I. 143 Evil Ministers Disease the Common-wealth. 1798 Oracle & Public Advertiser 29 May An universal phrenzy has diseased the human mind. 1865 W. E. H. Lecky Hist. Rationalism II. vi. 408 Those ghastly notions..which..diseased the imaginations..of men. 1960 Chicago Defender 23 Jan. 23/1 The run and shoot developments that have diseased the sport [sc. basketball]. 2014 O. Frawley Flight v. 142 There are already many small children in second-hand prams with rust diseasing the chrome handlebars. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2022). < n.c1384v.c1384 |
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