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单词 dogfight
释义

dogfightn.

Brit. /ˈdɒɡfʌɪt/, U.S. /ˈdɔɡˌfaɪt/, /ˈdɑɡˌfaɪt/
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: dog n.1, fight n.
Etymology: < dog n.1 + fight n. Compare earlier dogfighting n.
1. A fight between dogs, spec. as a spectacle or entertainment.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > [noun] > between specific animals
dogfighting?a1500
dogfighta1656
bear-fighting1812
catfight1824
horse-fight1897
a1656 Bp. J. Hall Shaking of Olive-tree (1660) i. 61 To clap their hands, as boys are wont to do in dog-fights.
1716–20 Lett. from Mist's Jrnl. (1722) I. 205 It [sc. a looking glass] sometimes helps him to the View of a Dog-fight.
1776 Middlesex Jrnl. & Evening Advertiser 18 July There was a dog-fight, and a cock-fight [at St George's Fields].
1813 Sporting Mag. 42 24 To appear at a mill, a hanck, or a dog-fight.
a1849 E. Elliott Poet. Wks. (1876) II. 115 He's at the ‘Sportsman's Arms’; The dog-fight's o'er the way.
1879 H. Spencer Data of Ethics xii. §80. 215 It needs but to ask whether men who delight in dog-fights may be expected to appreciate Beethoven's Adelaida.
1908 E. Higginson Alaska xlv. 487 Eskimo dogs..haunt steamer-landings and..stewards..can thus muster a dog fight for the pleasure of heartless passengers at a moment's notice.
1948 P. White Let. 27 Oct. (1994) iii. 74 We have had a series of disasters lately—..pups with distemper,..myself bitten through the wrist in a dog fight.
1988 E. W. Brown Interval in Afr. iii. 150 Didn't hear the on-going dog fights and yipping and tearing around under the windows.
2006 C. Frazier Thirteen Moons iv. iii. 307 Each small town had its pit of bloody sawdust wherein chicken fights and dog fights and man fights were played out for wagerers.
2. In extended use.
a. A disturbance or mêlée; a ferocious struggle for supremacy.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > [noun] > a fight
bicker1297
fightc1300
tirpeilc1330
ragea1393
stradec1400
intermell1489
cockfighta1513
skirm1534
bustle1579
pell-mellc1586
brabble1587
jostle1607
scufflea1616
counterbuff1632
mêléea1648
roil1690
tussle1749
scrimmage1780
turn-up1810
scrape1812
pounding match1815
mellay1819
struggle1840
mix-up1841
scrap1846
rough-up1891
turn-to1893
push and shove1895
bagarre1897
stoush1908
dogfight1910
bundle1936
sort-out1937
yike1940
bassa-bassa1956
punch-up1958
thump-up1967
1910 J. F. Newton Lincoln & Herndon 139 Anxiously the two men watched the political ‘dog-fight’ between Douglas and Buchanan, hoping for a disruption in the Democratic party.
1917 R. Kipling Diversity of Creatures 208 The pitiless Whips were even then at the telephones to herd 'em up to another dog-fight.
1928 F. E. Baily Golden Vanity xiv. 201 No dividend, reserve fund wiped out, and a dog-fight at the annual general meeting.
1958 Economist 13 Dec. 967/1 Both employers and unions are to blame for the dogfight that at present passes for industrial relations at BOAC.
1970 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 26 Sept. 35/6 On our performance so far, we're in a dogfight for fourth.
2004 Racing Ahead June 38/2 The industry is split in two in an acrimonious dogfight. Nothing new there then.
b. An aerial battle between military aircraft at close quarters.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities in the air > [noun] > fight between aircraft
dogfight1918
rat race1931
1918 Pop. Sci. Monthly Dec. 27/3 Now a general combat ensues, in which each man must fight independently. All semblance of formation is lost; the mêlée is called a ‘dog fight’.
1928 C. F. S. Gamble Story N. Sea Air Station xxii. 400 All flying-boats should have their hulls ‘dazzle-painted’..so that a pilot could, in a ‘dog-fight’, know at a glance who was in a particular machine.
1937 C. Boff Boys' Bk. of Flying xvii. 190 Inevitably occasions arise in aerial warfare—as in a ‘dog-fight’, where several machines are milling together in whirling confusion.
1999 Sun 27 Mar. i. 2/5 Two Serb jets were shot down in a dogfight yesterday as they prepared to attack Nato troops.
2008 C. McNab & H. Keeter Tools of Violence v. 182 These [aerial] battles were quite properly called ‘dog fights’, because the apparent chaos of battling aircraft resembled a pack of pit dogs tearing into each other.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

dogfightv.

Brit. /ˈdɒɡfʌɪt/, U.S. /ˈdɔɡˌfaɪt/, /ˈdɑɡˌfaɪt/
Inflections: Past tense and past participle dogfought, (rare) dogfighted;
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: dogfight n.
Etymology: < dogfight n. Compare earlier dogfighting n.
1. intransitive. To fight or ‘scrap’.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > fight [verb (intransitive)]
fightc900
deal993
wraxlec1000
skirm?c1225
makec1275
mellc1300
to fight togethera1400
meddlec1400
match1440
wring1470
cobc1540
toilc1540
strike1579
beat1586
scuffle1590
exchange blows1594
to bang it out or aboutc1600
buffeta1616
tussle1638
dimicate1657
to try a friskin1675
to battle it1821
muss1851
scrap1874
to mix it1905
dogfight1929
yike1940
to go upside (someone's) head1970
1929 T. E. Lawrence Let. 1 Apr. (1938) v. 648 I live in barracks (i.e. we dog-fight promiscuously).
1989 R. M. Wilson Ripley Bogle 135 We're the..lads from Cancer Alley, We dogfight with the cellular And add them to our tally. We laugh at radiation Chemotherapy leaves us cold.
1995 T. Linskey Race Winning Strategies iii. 111 Groups almost always do the wrong thing: they sail too high, they dogfight, they slow each other down.
2.
a. transitive. To fight (an enemy aircraft) at close quarters.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities in the air > attack with aircraft [verb (transitive)] > fight other aircraft
dogfight1934
1934 V. M. Yeates Winged Victory vi. 51 They would dive and zoom..but they would never dogfight Camels.
1995 R. J. Cressman Magnificent Fight 275 Live-action shots of..open-cockpit, fixed-gear planes dogfighting the Wildcats.
2006 N.Y. Times 21 May (T: Style Mag.) 44/3 You can..take the kids to see the Sopwith Camels dogfight the Fokkers at the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome.
b. intransitive. Of a military aircraft: to engage in a fight at close quarters with an enemy aircraft.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities in the air > attack with aircraft [verb (intransitive)] > fight with other aircraft
dogfight1941
1941 E. C. Shepherd Mil. Aeroplane 14 If the formation [of bombers] gets broken, the single machine may have to ‘take evasive action’, but it will not attempt to dogfight.
1957 M. Caidin Air Force 138 P-38 pilots made sure not to commit the error of trying to dogfight with the maneuverable Zeros.
1977 Sci. Amer. Oct. 13 (advt.) The best fighter pilots in the world couldn't down the F–15 Eagle... They tried to dogfight, they tried radar-guided missiles.
2001 N. Franks & G. VanWyngarden Fokker Dr I Aces World War I i. 9 Von Richthofen liked to dogfight and to get in close, and he could do this with a triplane.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.a1656v.1929
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