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单词 doctor
释义

doctorn.

Brit. /ˈdɒktə/, U.S. /ˈdɑktər/
Forms: Middle English docteur, Middle English doktor, Middle English doktour, Middle English dottoure, Middle English dottys (plural, transmission error), Middle English–1500s doctowr, Middle English–1600s doctoure, Middle English–1600s doctur, Middle English–1700s doctour, Middle English– doctor, 1500s– docter (now nonstandard), 1500s–1600s doctore, 1900s– docther (Irish English (northern)); Scottish pre-1700 dochtour, pre-1700 docter, pre-1700 docteur, pre-1700 doctore, pre-1700 doctour, pre-1700 doctowr, pre-1700 doctur, pre-1700 doictur, pre-1700 1700s– doctor, 1900s– doactir, 1900s– doactor. See also Dr n.1
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French doctor; Latin doctor.
Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman doctor, doctur, doctour, Anglo-Norman and Middle French docteur (Old French doctor , doctour , docteur ; French docteur ) teacher, instructor, learned person, scholar, theologian (all 12th cent.), person who holds the highest degree awarded by a university, and hence is entitled to teach (14th cent. in Middle French), physician or medical practitioner (15th cent. in Middle French; 14th cent. in docteur en medecine , also 15th cent. in docteur medecine ); and its etymon (ii) < classical Latin doctor teacher, instructor, in post-classical Latin also teacher of the Jewish law (Vulgate), apostle (2nd or 3rd cent. in Tertullian), catechist (3rd cent.), bishop (4th cent.), preacher (5th cent.), scholar, theologian (6th cent.), medical doctor (7th cent.), person holding the highest degree at a university (frequently from late 13th cent. in British sources; also in continental sources) < doct- , past participial stem of docēre to teach (see docent adj.) + -or -or suffix.With use with reference to the four ‘Latin Doctors’ (see sense 3a) compare post-classical Latin quatuor doctores (14th cent.). With doctor of law (see quot. c1400 at sense 5a) compare post-classical Latin juris doctor , doctor juris (from 14th cent. in British sources), Anglo-Norman doctour de la lei (14th cent.), doctour de ley (15th cent.). With doctor of laws (see quots. 1791 at sense 4a, 1843 at sense 4a) compare post-classical Latin legum doctor (from 14th cent. in British sources), Anglo-Norman doctour des lois (14th cent.), Middle French docteur en lois (15th cent.). With doctor of both laws (i.e. civil and canon: see quot. a1475 at sense 5a) compare post-classical Latin doctor utriusque juris (from 14th cent. in British sources), Anglo-Norman doctur d’ambedeus leis (14th cent.), and also Middle French docteur en lois et en decret (15th cent.).
I. A teacher; a person qualified to teach, and related senses.
1.
a. A teacher, an instructor; a person who provides instruction in a particular area of knowledge; (also) an exponent or proponent of a particular belief, opinion, or principle. Obsolete.Sometimes difficult to distinguish from sense 2a.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > teaching > teacher > [noun]
larewc900
mastereOE
lorthewc1160
lore-fatherc1175
lerera1340
lister1377
loresman1377
doctora1382
learner1382
teacherc1384
readera1387
lore-mastera1400
former1401
informer?c1422
preceptorc1450
instructora1464
informator1483
doctrinal?1504
lear-father1533
usher1533
instructer1534
trainer1543
educator1609
instituter1670
institutorc1675
subpreceptor1696
Barbe1710
pundit1816
umfundisi1825
preception1882
guru1884
mwalimu1884
rabbi1917
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Isa. xxxiii. 18 Thin herte sweteli shal thenke drede; wher is the lettrid? Wher is the wrdus of the lawe chargende? wher is the doctour of litil childer [L. doctor parvulorum]?
1485 W. Caxton tr. Thystorye & Lyf Charles the Grete sig. aij/1 Saynt Poul doctour of veryte [Fr. docteur de verité] sayth to vs that al thynges that ben reduced by wrytyng, ben wryton to our doctryne.
1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Matt. i. f. 20 The heauenly doctour Christe Jesus [L. coelesti doctore Iesu Christo].
1557 Bible (Whittingham) Matt. xxiii. 10 Be not called Doctors, for ther is but one your Doctor [Gk. καθηγητὴς], and he is Christe.
1665 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 1 73 If this be truth, the Prohibitions of publishing this doctrine..will be laid aside, as one of the most zealous Doctors of the contrary Opinion hath given cause to hope.
1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 32 Do these new doctors of the rights of men assert, that King James the Second..was not to all intents and purposes a lawful king of England?
1864 J. H. Newman Apologia App. 77 St. Augustine..is the doctor of the great and common view that all untruths are lies.
b. spec. (Scottish). An assistant teacher in a school; = school doctor n. 2. Now rare (historical in later use).
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1565 Extracts Rec. in W. Chambers Charters Burgh Peebles (1872) 299 The counsaill ordanis the scuill master to gait ane doictur..to tech vnder him.
1640 in W. Steven Hist. High School Edinb. (1849) ii. 56 For the tryell of the maister and doctors in teatching.
1697 Burnett Family Papers in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Doctour Mr Andrew Milne, doctor at the school of Banchorie.
1793 J. Sinclair Statist. Acct. Scotl. VII. 179 Mr Cunningham..was then rector, and had always a doctor under him.
1985 R. A. Houston Sc. Literacy & Sc. Identity (2002) iii. 99 The employment of the doctor (assistant) from Brechin grammar school as reader at Menmuir in March 1637 was the result of this problem of maintaining continuity.
2.
a. A person whose learning or skill in a particular branch of knowledge entitles him or her to speak authoritatively on it; an eminently learned person. Obsolete.Sometimes difficult to distinguish from sense 1a.
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the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > scholarly knowledge, erudition > learned person, scholar > [noun] > great
doctora1382
Sorbonist1607
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1965) Job Prol. l. 30 I haue remembred me liddeum a maner doctor þat anentis þe ebruys þe firste was wened..to han hirid.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) l. 12577 (heading) How ihesus disputed wiþ þe doctours.
?1510 T. More tr. G. F. Pico della Mirandola Lyfe I. Picus sig. a.iii He scrupulously sought out all the famous doctours of his tyme.
1578 J. Rolland Seuin Seages Prol. 169 Of ane twme Twn, nane can draw out licour, Nor of ane fule to make a wise doctour.
1733 A. Pope Of Use of Riches 1 Who shall decide, when Doctors dis-agree?
1841 R. W. Emerson Intellect in Ess. 1st Ser. (London ed.) 327 The wisest doctor is gravelled by the inquisitiveness of a child.
b. Any person who possesses a particular talent or skill; an expert. Usually with of. Cf. master n.1 16a. Obsolete.
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the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > [noun] > skilful person > a master or mistress
masterc1430
mistressc1440
doctor1548
archemaster1570
graduate1582
pass-master1599
possessor1713
past master1840
past mistress1868
passed master1882
ustad1903
maestro1938
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry V f. lxxxii This kyng..in marcial affaires a very doctor.
1602 S. Rowlands Greenes Ghost 18 He indeed was a doctor in his arte [of Cutpurses].
1650 R. Elton Compl. Body Art Mil. To Author sig. †4 Mars doe's himself commense Doctor of War.
3. spec.
a. Usually with capital initial. Any of several early Christian theologians and church fathers regarded as especially authoritative in the Western Church, on whose work much later church doctrine and theology is based. In later use also: any person who has been proclaimed Doctor of the Church by the Roman Catholic Church. See also Doctor of the Church n. at Phrases 1e.
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society > faith > aspects of faith > patristics > Fathers of the Church > [noun]
doctorc1390
church father1654
Greek fathers1711
c1390 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Vernon) (1867) A. xi. l. 293 Þe douȝtiest doctour..Austyn þe olde & hiȝeste of þe foure.
c1440 Sir Degrevant (Thornton) (1949) l. 1463 (MED) Austyn and gregorius, Jerome and ambrosius, thir are þe foure doctours.
1552 Abp. J. Hamilton Catech. i. vii. f. 19 Autentyk doctours appreuit be ye auctorite of haly kirk..as Hierome, Ambrose..Chrisostome.
1677 Compend. Narration Lady Mary 13 As soon as possible, after her delivery, she caused the Hymn of those eminent Saints and Doctors St. Ambrose and St. Augustine called te Deum to be said by her.
1888 J. A. Birkhaeuser Hist. Church ii. 153 The greatest luminary among the Oriental Doctors was St. Athanasius, surnamed the Great.
1997 L. J. Elders in Reception Church Fathers in West I. ix. 346 Augustine, Ambrose, Gregory and other Doctors are assigned fields in which they have a special competence.
2019 O. M. Espin Women, Sainthood, & Power ix. 144 Being named as a Doctor implies ‘a seal of approval’ from the Church for this person's teachings.
b. One of the most prominent medieval scholastic theologians and philosophers. Also more fully scholastic doctor.Also as the second element of epithets of particular scholars, as in Angelic (or Angelical) Doctor, Irrefragable Doctor, Seraphic (or Seraphical) Doctor, Subtle (or Subtile) Doctor, etc.: see the first element.
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the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > scholasticism > [noun] > adherent of > collectively
doctora1513
schools1561
a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome (1965) II. 106 The doctour subtil [sc. John Duns Scotus] in his buk of the sentens in the prologe inducis viii maner of wais to preif and persuaid the faith.
1671 R. Bohun Disc. Wind 39 The Lord Verulam himself being averse to this Caprice of the Scholastic Doctors, declares the Repercussion of Winds, from the cold of the Middle Region, to be of all other the vainest and most Irrationall Hypothesis.
1774 T. Reid Brief Acct. Aristotle's Logic iv. §6, in Ld. Kames Sketches Hist. Man II. iii. 215 The Scholastic Doctors..tortured..the modal syllogisms.
1855 H. H. Milman Hist. Lat. Christianity VI. xiv. iii. 449 Doctors, who assumed the splendid titles of the Angelical, the Seraphic, the Irrefragable [sc. Aquinas, Bonaventura, Alexander Hales].
1925 Publ. Mod. Lang. Assoc. Amer. 40 237 It is hardly to be expected that the great doctors, Bonaventura and Aquinas, would indulge in the same realistic details as a subdean writing for a purely practical purpose.
2002 Renaissance Q. 55 482 Jerome, Erasmus claims, would have declared his contempt for scholastic doctors who were not interested in combining theology with eloquence.
4.
a. A person who holds the highest degree awarded by a university faculty, graduate school, or other approved academic institution. Now usually: the holder of a postgraduate degree above the level of master; a person who holds a doctorate.Frequently with of specifying the faculty awarding the degree, as e.g. Doctor of Divinity, Doctor of Civil Law, Doctor of Laws, Doctor of (also †in) Medicine, Doctor of Music, etc.
Recorded earliest in Doctor of Decrees n. See also Doctor of Philosophy n. at Phrases 1b.
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society > education > educational administration > university administration > taking degree or graduation > [noun] > degree holder
master1380
bachelorc1386
doctorc1400
magister1459
sir1557
Dra1593
doctorate1651
baccalaur1661
baccalaureate1696
formed bachelor1738
middle bachelor1759
Mus.B.1801
PhD1839
diplomate1879
maid1881
Mus. Bac.1889
postdoctoral1962
postdoc1964
B.A.-
B.L.-
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xv. l. 373 Doctoures of decres and of diuinite Maistres.
a1535 T. More Dialoge of Comfort (1553) ii. sig. F.iiiv You yt haue bene at learning so long, & are doctor.
1552 T. Wilson Rule of Reason (rev. ed.) sig. Kiij I harde ones a Doctor of Diuinitie, whiche was not so great in knowlege as he was in title.
1654 R. Whitlock Ζωοτομία 107 Many Medicasters, pretenders to Physick, buy the degree of Doctor abroad.
1684 London Gaz. No. 1945/4 Dr. Nic. Stagins..was..admitted to the Degree of Doctor of Musick.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1765 I. 272 Trinity College, Dublin, at this time surprized Johnson with a spontaneous compliment of the highest academical honours, by creating him Doctor of Laws.
1809 B. Parr London Med. Dict. I. 716/1 The highest medical honours, that is the degree of Doctor in Medicine, shall be conferred on him..as the reward of his diligence and study.
1843 E. Miall in Nonconformist 3 737 To make Prince Albert a doctor of laws.
1846 R. King Covenanters in North ii. 49 The University of Aberdeen withstood the siege of the more enlightened masses; and now at the dawn of a better day, its learned doctors..became the active antagonists of the new light.
1925 tr. J. Čapek in R. Eaton Best Continental Short Stories 1924–5 51 He obtained his doctorate while still very young; and, as soon as he had become a doctor, he immediately married a girl he loved.
1968 New Eng. Jrnl. Med. 15 Feb. 397/2 Langerhans's appearance before the faculty was..to ‘openly defend’ his ‘inaugural dissertation’ for the degree of Doctor of Medicine and Surgery.
1970 Presbyterian Herald Sept. 17 Citation by the Dean of the Faculty of Theology..on presenting John Herbert Withers for the degree of Doctor of Divinity.
2000 N. Henderson Old Friends & Mod. Instances (2001) xvi. 171 The University's Chancellor-elect would be proposing to the University that the Degree of Doctor of Civil Law, honoris causa, be conferred upon you at a special ceremony.
2019 R. Pistol in L. Allwork & R. Pistol Jews, Holocaust, & Public p. viii He sent me away with..a warning to remember that I could not just expect to walk into the viva, answer a few questions and walk out a doctor.
b. As a title prefixed to the surname or full name of a person who has been awarded a doctoral degree. Formerly also: †as a title prefixed to the name of a person without a doctorate who has attained a similar level of academic proficiency (obsolete). Also as a form of address to such a person (now rare).In use as a title now usually written in the abbreviated form Dr (see Dr n.1).
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1501 in S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds (1850) 90 Mastr Doctor Curteys, the pior of the Fryers Austyns in Norwysche.
1563 G. Hay Confut. Abbote of Crosraguels Masse f. 10 For I ask of you Doctor, that taketh vpon you continual reading and meditation of the Scriptures, where ye do euer find any ordinance of God, set furth, to the which the Spirit of God giueth not a certane name.
1641 Doctours Last Will & Test. (title page) Being a most pleasant Dialogue between Doctor Cousin and a Fellow of his owne Colledge, desiring him to resigne his Mastership.
1785 ‘P. O'Flattery’ Beauties of Mr. Orde's Bill 55 He had..taken pains to trace out the distinction. He had even turned to Doctor Johnson's Dictionary for that purpose.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1778 II. 234 [Edwards:] Why Doctor you look stout and hearty.
1818 Gentleman's Mag. May 465/1 Doctor Benjamin Buckler, Fellow of All Souls College, and Custos Archivorum in the University of Oxford.
1895 ‘I. Maclaren’ Days Auld Lang Syne ii. v. 113 Doctor Davidson motioned to the Free Church minister to take his place at the head.
1956 Virginia Mag. Hist. & Biogr. 64 263 The first, to be edited by Doctor Jane Carson and Mr. Francis L. Berkeley, will be especially valuable to those who are interested in economic and commercial history.
2018 O. Yalnazov Precedent & Statute ii. 38 The most recent development of the theory comes from a contribution by Doctor Friedman and Professor Wickelgren.
5. A person who is extremely proficient in any of certain specified branches of knowledge; sometimes indicating that the person holds a doctorate in the subject, but often simply as a title of respect.The first sense in branch II. is another (and the most prominent) example of this sense.
a. A learned authority on the law, esp. canon law or civil (Roman) law; (also) a lawyer qualified to practise civil law (civil law n. 1). Cf. Doctors' Commons n. Now rare.Until 1857, advocates practising in the Court of Arches were required to take the degree of doctor of law (cf. quot. 1588).
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society > law > jurisprudence > [noun] > legal knowledge or skill > one learned in the law
legisterc1300
man of lawc1390
doctorc1400
legist?c1425
jurisconsultorc1550
lawyer?1566
Bartolist1602
jurisconsult1605
jurista1626
jurisprudent1628
legalist1771
jurisprudist1793
jurisprudentialist1827
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xv. l. 238 Þat conscience and cryst hath yknitte faste, Þei vndon it vnworthily, þo doctours of lawe.
a1475 J. Russell Bk. Nurture (Harl. 4011) in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 187 Doctur of bothe lawes, beynge in science digne.
1588 J. Udall State Church of Eng. sig. C3 Why did you not rather take some doctour of the Arches?
1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice iv. i. 143 This letter from Bellario doth commend a young and learned Doctor to our Court. View more context for this quotation
1724 A. Duck in C. J. de Ferrière & A. Duck Hist. Rom. or Civil Law xxxiv When the Constable and Marshal are otherwise employ'd by the Publick, some Doctor, or other expert Civilian, is appointed to preside in this Court.
1845 M. Pattison in Christian Remembrancer Jan. 82 When the judges and the accused had taken their places, the king, with the gravity of a doctor expounding ecclesiastical law, began [etc.].
1890 R. F. Littledale in E. A. Towle A. H. Mackonochie 304 The majority of the judges always consisted of civilians and doctors who had specially studied canon and civil law.
a1978 J. P. Cooper Land, Men & Beliefs (1983) iii. 48 Upton..cites Bartolus's belief that a doctor who taught civil law for ten years ranked as a knight.
b. A person who is an authority on theology, a theologian; a learned clergyman, esp. one who holds the degree of Doctor of Divinity. Now rare.
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society > faith > aspects of faith > theology > theologian > [noun] > learned
doctorc1450
cherub1547
worthy1567
agonist1573
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 232 A clerke..diȝt as a Doctour in drabland wedis.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) l. 518 (MED) Dyuers estatys Off doctours and off prelatys.
?1550 J. Bale Apol. agaynste Papyst f. l Ye best of your doctours in expownynge the Scriptures.
1680 T. Otway Orphan ii. 12 Thanking a surly Doctor for his Sermon.
1752 G. Hamilton Disorders of Church 22 The Doctors amongst the Roman Catholics have been well appris'd of the importance of external forms to keep up in the minds of the people a veneration for their superstitious worship.
1872 J. Morley Voltaire v. 231 He..heard only the humming of the doctors, as they served forth to congregations of poor men hungering for spiritual sustenance the draff of theological superstition.
1911 R. Hughes Excuse Me! x. 85 ‘A reverend doctor?’ the little old lady repeated weakly. ‘Yes—a—a preacher?’.
1963 M. H. Black in S. G. Greenslade Cambr. Hist. Bible III. xii. 447 Eighteen doctors of the Sorbonne gave the text their unadvised approval.
II. A physician or medical practitioner, and related senses.
6.
a. Originally: an authority on medicine; a person who holds the highest class of degree awarded by the faculty of medicine of a university (cf. Doctor of Medicine at sense 4a, Doctor of Physic n. at Phrases 1c); a physician. In later use also: a person who is trained in other branches of medicine or surgery, esp. one holding a formal doctoral degree. Frequently with distinguishing word.The word doctor is less commonly used for medical professionals such as surgeons, veterinary surgeons, and dentists in places where bachelor's degrees are awarded in these fields, as in the United Kingdom.cancer doctor, cow doctor, eye doctor, etc.: see the first element.
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the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun]
physician?c1225
leecherc1374
practiserc1387
doctora1400
flesh-leecha1400
leechman14..
mediciner?a1425
miria1425
M.D.1425
medicine?c1450
practitioner?1543
minister1559
doc1563
artist1565
medicus1570
medicianera1578
Aesculapius1586
Dra1593
pisspot1592
medician1597
physicianer1598
medicinary1599
pisspot1600
velvet-cap1602
healer1611
Galena1616
physiner1616
clyster1621
clyster-pipe1622
hakim1623
medic1625
practicant1630
medico1647
physicker1649
physicster1689
Aesculapian1694
nim-gimmer1699
pill-monger1706
medical man1784
meester1812
medical1823
pill-gilder1824
therapeutist1830
pill1835
pill roller1843
med1851
pill-peddler1855
therapeutic1858
squirt1859
medicine man1866
pill pusher1879
therapist1886
doser1888
internist1894
pill-shooter1911
whitecoat1911
quack1919
vet1925
a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 73 (MED) Þe doctryne of rasis, auicen, & galion, & of oþere doctouris.
?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 383 (MED) In the curacioun..of þe lepre, the doctoures proposen communely [etc.].
1561 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1916) XI. 205 To [a] Franche dochtour, for spicis to oppin the Erle of Huntleis bodie.
1602 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor iii. i. 94 Shall I lose my doctor? No, he giues me the motions And the potions.
1652 Mercurius Democritus No. 38. 299 The Doctors Prescribed him to take for his Cure every morning three Spoon-fulls of Nigget-Water.
1700 J. Dryden To my Kinsman J. Driden in Fables 96 So liv'd our Sires, e'er Doctors learn'd to kill.
1725 D. Defoe New Voy. round World i. 200 Our Doctors themselves, so we call the Surgeons at Sea.
1783 Ainsworth's Thes. Linguæ Latinæ (new ed.) ii Veterinarius, a farrier, a horse doctor.
1872 ‘G. Eliot’ Middlemarch I. ii. xv. 252 A common country doctor.
1915 Times 10 Aug. 5/6 I was called away to take charge of a fast small ship that was going to Gallipoli to fetch the wounded, as the regular doctor was ill.
1993 Time Out 31 Mar. 140/4 A crisis looms in the wards when an overworked junior doctor starts dozing off on duty.
2021 MailOnline (Nexis) 19 Feb. Only basic masks are currently being worn by doctors and nurses outside of intensive care.
b. As a title of respect preceding the name of a person who is a physician or doctor of medicine or (esp. U.S. and in later use: see note at sense 6a) any other medical professional, such as a qualified dentist or veterinary surgeon. Also as a form of address to such a person.Frequently with capital initial. In use as a title now usually written in the abbreviated form Dr (see Dr n.1).
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?1537 T. Elyot Castell of Helthe ii. xxxii. f. 49 Rede the boke of Galene of the preseruation of helth..translated moste truely and eloquentely, oute of Greke into latine, by doctour Linacre, late phisition of moste worthy memory to our soueraygne lorde kynge Henry the eight.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) i. iv. 3 My Master, Master Docter Caius. View more context for this quotation
1769 I. Bickerstaff & S. Foote Doctor Last in Chariot xi. 17 Skel. How do you sleep, Sir? Ail. Very indifferently, doctor; chiefly broken slumbers.
1819 Northampton Mercury 12 June Doctor Charlotte Von Siebold, the celebrated female accoucheur, employed in delivering her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent.
1876 Vermont Watchman 20 Dec. 1/3 Doctor, I knew when I sent for you that I was very sick and quite unable to cure myself.
1895 Trans. Illinois State Dental Soc. 31st Ann. Meeting 94 Oh, Doctor, I want you to fix my teeth.
1976 E. Taylor Blaming (1992) xvi. 171 But, of course, doctor, you know more about that than I could ever learn in a month of Sundays.
2010 Orange County (Calif.) Register 26 Apr. (Life section) 2/2 Hello, doctor! I was reading the directions for the pills you prescribed.
2016 J. R. Brown Georgia Peaches & Other Forbidden Fruit xxvi. 282 Doctor Klein has prescribed strict bed rest through the end of the year, maybe longer.
c. colloquial. With the, in the genitive. A place or establishment where a doctor may be consulted.
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the world > health and disease > healing > places for the sick or injured > [noun] > surgery or consulting-room
examining room1775
doctor1808
doctor's office1809
doctor's surgery1842
consulting room1843
surgery1846
operatory1948
1808 Belfast Monthly Mag. Dec. 370/1 A friend who knew his situation, kindly offered to accompany him to the Doctor's, and give him his fee.
1897 Geelong Advertiser 29 May 6/7 At the Hairdresser's. I desire to be shaved... At the Doctor's. Good morning! I am not at all well.
1955 S. Plath Let. 4 Aug. (2017) I. 947 I am on my sweltering way to the doctor's to have both arms and a leg (perhaps) punctured for the second time.
2021 Sun (Nexis) 2 July I went to the doctor's and got put on antidepressants.
d. A traditional healer and diviner, esp. one who claims to guard against or cure afflictions thought to be caused by spirit possession or witchcraft.Also as the second element of compounds, as in conjure doctor n., rain doctor n., root doctor n., spirit doctor n., etc. Cf. also witch doctor n.
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the world > health and disease > healing > healer > alternative practitioner > [noun] > using magic
ophiogenes1601
piai1613
witch doctor1718
dukun1817
piaiman1825
wizard1845
doctor1846
mganga1860
1846 H. E. A. Meyer Manners & Customs Aborigines Encounter Bay 9 The doctor sits in front of the patient with two sticks, one in each hand, beating the air.
1851 H. R. Schoolcraft Hist. & Statist. Information Indian Tribes U.S. I. xiv. 310 As the doctor sings several songs, he watches closely the patient, and finds out which song pleased.
1858 Compend. Kaffir Laws & Customs 123 Doctors are not entitled to fees, except a cure is performed, or the patient relieved.
1902 C. Lumholtz Unknown Mexico I. xvii. 311 He keeps his doctor busy curing him, not only to make his body strong to resist illness, but chiefly to ward off sorcery.
2008 R. W. Walker in W. T. Allison & S. J. Matt Dreams, Myths, & Reality xii. 260 The shaman entered into a trance. It was thought that the doctor's soul might thereby track the fugitive spirit.
e. Chiefly North American. (The name of) a children's game in which the participants pretend to be doctors and patients and act out imagined medical scenarios; esp. such a game involving the participants exposing their genitals; hence in allusive use with reference to sexual role play between adults. Cf. doctors and nurses at Phrases 4.In quot. 1866, and some other uses with play, ‘doctor’ appears to refer to the role played rather than standing as a name for the game itself; cf. play v. 13d.
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society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > children's game > other children's games > [noun]
rosy apple1882
doctors and nurses (also patients)1906
doctor1918
knock down ginger1959
rat-a-tat ginger1959
riprap1959
rat-tat ginger1962
1866 Brooklyn Daily Eagle 11 June (advt.) This splendid gift plate is entitled Children Playing Doctor, as it vividly depicts the sports of juveniles..trying to simulate the actions of the invalid, the apothecary and the physician.]
1918 J. J. Putnam & M. Stevens tr. H. von Hug-Hellmuth in Psychoanalytic Rev. 5 216 The pronounced sexual note of the favorite game of ‘Doctor’, together with the erotic tinge..of early friendships between children, explain adequately the entrance of the memory-picture into consciousness.
1984 Wisconsin State Jrnl. 18 Mar. viii. 3/5 [Students] were told to write about their memories of sex games, from prepubescent curiosity games, (‘doctor’ or ‘show me’) to junior high school party games.
2003 Mirror (Nexis) 17 May 26 She took him to a rented apartment where they were joined by two other girls, dressed up as nurses for a game of doctor.
7. figurative. Applied to things believed to improve or preserve physical health.
a. Chiefly colloquial. Used of anything considered beneficial for a person's health or conducive to recovery from illness or injury. Often humorously prefixed to a noun as if it were a person's surname (cf. sense 6b).
ΚΠ
1558 W. Bullein Govt. Healthe f. li I should not staye my selfe vpon the opinion of any one phisicion, but rather vpon three... The first was called doctor diet, the seconde doctor quiet, the thirde doctor mery man.
1650 tr. Joannes de Mediolano Regimen Sanitatis Salerni (new ed.) 3 When Physick needs, let these thy Doctours be, Good dyet, quiet thoughts, heart mirthfull free.
1890 Deseret Weekly (Salt Lake City, Utah Territory) 22 Feb. 1/2 Oh! come Doctor Sunshine! We need something bright; Come, nature's grand cure-all, and set us all right.
1986 Yoga Jrnl. Mar.–Apr. 39/2 Nature, to the Taoist, is a reservoir of healing ch'i... The natural world itself is a great doctor.
2002 Financial Times 23 Nov. 42/6 Time is the best doctor.
b. A wind that blows regularly in a particular location and is considered to have health-giving, refreshing, or cleansing properties, spec. (a) (in the West Indies and Western Australia) a cool sea breeze which blows on hot summer days; (b) (in South Africa) a strong, blustery south-east wind prevailing in the vicinity of the Cape of Good Hope.Frequently with a modifying word or place name, forming the name of a particular wind of this type, as in Cape doctor n., Albany doctor, Fremantle doctor, Southerly doctor, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > [noun] > good health > state of being conducive to > that which is conducive to
virtuea1393
quarta1400
non-natural1696
doctor1740
the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wind > [noun] > wind with reference to direction > wind blowing from the sea > in the tropics
doctor1740
1740 Hist. Jamaica ii. 21 The People here give it [sc. the sea-breeze] the name of Doctor, and truly it deserves the Title.
1844 Knickerbocker 23 46 [In St Augustine, Florida] we were beginning the summer custom of gathering every morning to meet the ‘doctor’ (sea-breeze) on the square.
1856 F. Fleming Southern Afr. iv. 62 The South-easter, from blowing all pestilent vapours and effluvia out to sea..has obtained the local epithet of ‘the Doctor’.
1946 D. C. Peattie Road of Naturalist (U.K. ed.) ii. 28 That early breeze, sweet and cool, bestirs the heavy drowse like the trade wind in the tropics, that they call ‘the doctor’.
1992 D. Birkett Jella: Woman at Sea ii. 30 The wind evaporated the moisture and brought the temperature down with such beneficient effects that it was nicknamed ‘the Doctor’.
2015 C. Ace Corpse with Sapphire Eyes ii. 10 Christmas Day this year it was over thirty degrees in the morning—we couldn't wait for the Fremantle Doctor to blow in.
c. An alcoholic drink taken for its medicinal, invigorating, or restorative properties, esp. rum and milk taken as a pick-me-up or to cure a hangover. Also: a drink of this. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1820 National Advocate (N.Y.) 25 Dec. Doctor, rum and milk, diffusible and permanent stimuli.
1824 Spirit of Public Jrnls. for 1823 55 The Daffy bottles were recruited for the march, and each horseman gulped down a doctor, to counteract the effects of the raw morning air.
1861 Hills & Plains I. iii. 37 ‘I feel rather seedy still, indeed.’.. ‘Have one of my “doctors” now; it will do you no end of good.’
1895 G. Chamier South-Sea Siren 206 Let's have a doctor. Joe! Fetch that rum and milk.
1965 Country Life 14 Oct. 951/3 This is better than what is called a ‘doctor’ (rum and milk) because you then dispense with taking spirit in the morning.
8. slang. A false or loaded die. to put the doctor upon (a person): to cheat (a person) using false or loaded dice; (hence sometimes more generally) to trick or dupe (a person). Obsolete (historical in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > dice-playing > [noun] > die or dice > false or loaded
stop-dice1540
bar1545
flat1545
gourd1545
barred dicec1555
bristle-dicec1555
fulhamc1555
graviersc1555
high manc1555
langretc1555
low manc1555
cheat1567
dice of vantage?1577
demy1591
forger1591
squarier1592
tallmen?1592
stop cater trey1605
demi-bar1606
downhill1664
high runner1670
low runner1670
doctor1688
tat1688
uphill1699
cut1711
loaded dice1771
dispatcher1798
dispatch1819
miss-out1928
1688 T. Shadwell Squire of Alsatia i. i. 6 Hack... Pox o' the Tatts for me: I believe they put the Doctor upon me. Belf. Sen. Tatts, and Doctor! what's that? Sham. The Tools of Sharpers, false Dice.
1697 C. Cibber Womans Wit i. 8 The old Rogue..wou'd ha' put the Doctor upon me..(unknown to him) I flung away the Doctor, and clapt into the Box a Pair of True Mathematicks.
1699 T. Brown tr. Erasmus Seven New Colloquies v. 56 But did not this Physician put the Doctor upon you, as the saying is? Do you think this Account he gave of himself was true?
1722 Freeholder's Jrnl. 28 Sept. 230/1 And whether Jack Pudding did not put the Doctor upon a certain Person, when he cry'd out, Z——ds, l am catch'd?
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones III. viii. xii. 260 Here are the Implements; here are the little Doctors which cure the Distempers of the Purse. View more context for this quotation
1801 Sporting Mag. 18 7 Loaded a couple of the Doctors for throwing a seven and nine.
1899 Pall Mall Mag. May 25 ‘I have my “doctors” here...’ With an attempt at laughter he pulled out the dice he had used so lately.
9. slang. Any of various substances used to ‘doctor’, improve, or adulterate food or drink, esp. in order to pass it off as a superior product; a drink which has been adulterated in this way. Also: (a name for) brown sherry. Obsolete. [Apparently applied to brown sherry with allusion to the fact that it was formerly made by adding a dark grape spirit to an inexpensive base wine to improve its flavour and increase its alcohol content.]
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > substances for food preparation > [noun] > improver or adulterant
doctor1770
stuff1812
improver1835
rough1855
agene1921
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > wine > fortified wine, Madeira wine, and sack > [noun] > sherry > types of sherry
doctor1770
antimonial wine1771
Montilla1793
Paxarete1802
pale sherry1803
amontillado1804
golden sherry1830
manzanilla1843
fino1846
Bristol milk1848
brown sherry1849
solera1851
amoroso1859
brown1862
oloroso1876
Bristol cream1886
Tio Pepe1886
cream sherry1964
1770 C. Jenner Placid Man I. 84 The governor was as happy if he drank his Doctor next to a man who talked to him upon any thing.
1779 W. A. Smyth Publican's Guide 19 Reduce it again, and make use of the doctor. [Footnote] A chymical preparation, known also by the name of false-proof; which, by raising a bead, gives liquors an appearance of strength, that in reality they have not.
1824 J. Maton & J. Garrett Tricks of Bakers Unmasked 5/1 The Doctor, is what is vulgarly styled alum..the same quantity of alum is not always worked in a given proportion of flour, it varying according to the age and quality of the mixture for the manufacture of bread.
1863 T. G. Shaw Wine, Vine & Cellar iv. 136 Large quantities of this product [sc. fermented must reduced by boiling]..are used to colour and cover the harsh thinness of poor qualities. It is for this reason that it is called the Doctor.
1889 A. Barrère & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang I. 315/1 To ‘keep the doctor’ is said of a publican who retails adulterated drinks.
10. Any of various tropical marine fishes which comprise the genus Acanthurus (family Acanthuridae) and have a sharp pointed spine on either side of the base of the tail, esp. A. chirurgus; = doctor fish n. (a) at Compounds 3.Also called surgeonfish, tang.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > [noun] > suborder Acanthuroidei > member of family Acanthuridae (surgeon-fish)
tang1735
doctor1775
unicorn acanthurus1803
lancet-fish1840
surgeon1855
surgeonfish1871
shoemaker1891
medico1902
1775 J. Rymer Sentiments on Reviewers ii, in Descr. Island of Nevis 41 Our steward dropt his fish-pots last night; they were hauled up this morning, and found to contain, doctors, old-wives, coblers, welsh-men, yellow bellies, balla hoos, parrot fish, and balloch-biters.
1844 C. Knight Pict. Museum Animated Nature II. 143/2 There is a group of fishes commonly termed ‘doctors’, in consequence of being provided with two very sharp and movable spines, like lancets.
1992 P. Constant Marine Life Galapagos ii. 39 Surgeonfishes (Acanthuridae). Get their name from scalpel like spines, located on each side of the caudal peduncle. They are also known as ‘doctors’ or ‘tang’.
11. Any of various fittings, devices, or substances used in industrial processes, typically to provide some kind of corrective or regulatory treatment or function.
a. In machines used in various printing processes, papermaking, etc.: a knife, blade, scraper, or other component used to remove superfluous colour, fibre, etc., from a cylinder or other part of the machine. Often as a modifier, in doctor blade, doctor knife, etc.colour doctor, lint-doctor, etc.: see the first element.
ΚΠ
1796 A. Wilde & J. Ridge Brit. Patent 2134 (1856) 1 Manufacturing..steel doctors for printers.
1837 N. Whittock et al. Compl. Bk. Trades (1842) 96 The polished surface is cleared by the scraper called the ‘doctor’.
1866 Illustr. & Descriptive Catal. Dublin Internat. Exhib. 1865 202/2 The roller is capable of adjustment in a lateral, and the breast beam, together with the doctor knife, in a vertical direction.
1940 U.S. Patent 2,185,859 1/2 The action is facilitated by supplying a controlled excess of the liquid suspension to the transfer surface and then removing the excess by means of a doctor.
1995 J. A. Hill et al. in Pigment Printing Handbk (Amer. Assoc. Textile Chemists & Colorists) ii. ii. 21 A metal doctor blade is used for removing excess print paste adhering to the surface of the roller.
2012 S. Kuwabara U.S. Patent Applic. Publ. 2012/0241203 1/1 In fig. 13, ‘12’ represents a doctor for scraping off excess catalyst ink.
b. A heated soldering iron or bit used in applying a thin coating of silver, gold, etc., to an object. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1833 J. Holland Treat. Manuf. Metal II. 316 A heated doctor, or soldering bit.
1893 Saddlery & Harness June 233/2 After this process of soldering (or rubbing the doctor all over the buckle), it is passed on to the rubber-in or tester.
c. Chiefly U.S. More fully doctor engine. A small or auxiliary steam engine, esp. one for supplying water to a steamboat's boiler; a donkey engine. Now historical.
ΚΠ
1849 Madison (Indiana) Weekly Courier 18 Apr. They put doctor engines in steamboats to make them run faster.
1875 ‘M. Twain’ Old Times Mississippi vii, in Atlantic Monthly Aug. 191/1 The engineers drowsed around and allowed chips to get into the ‘doctor’ and shut off the water supply from the boilers.
2018 S. T. Bisbee Engines of Rebellion i. 24 Doctor engines were equipped with at least one feedwater heater that used recirculated steam.
d. A pad, sponge, or the like used in electroplating to apply a solution of metal to the piece to be plated. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1886 A. Watt Electro-deposition xiv. 184 The pad, or ‘doctor’, as it is sometimes called, is dipped in the gold solution and applied to the part to be gilt.
1946 S. Field & A. D. Weill Electro-plating (ed. 5) xiii. 250 The solution in the ‘doctor’ can be replenished from time to time, and the defective area thus corrected.
e. More fully doctor solution. Any of various liquids applied in industrial processes; esp. (in electroplating) a solution of metal applied to the piece to be plated (cf. sense 11d).
ΚΠ
1911 Inland Printer May 264/1 In England it is customary for the photoengraver..to gum up the print well and then treat it with what they call a ‘doctor’. This doctor is a syrupy solution made of turpentine with as much beeswax added as it will soak up.
1948 Electroplating Sept. 561/2 5-6 seconds immersion of doctor is ample to secure a beautiful clean colour.
2004 R. E. Painter Troubleshooting Zinc Electroplating Baths 1 Feb. in pfonline.com (accessed 7 Sept. 2021) Is your bath low on carrier, high in brightener, out of balance, etc? Many suppliers have ‘doctor’ solutions.
12. slang (originally Nautical). Originally: a ship's cook. In later use also: a person employed to cook for gangs of outdoor workers, esp. (Australian and New Zealand) at a cattle or sheep station or (U.S.) a logging camp. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > cooking > cook > [noun] > ship's cook
cook1466
sea-cook1707
doctor1803
slushy1859
potwalloper1890
society > travel > travel by water > one who travels by water or sea > sailor > sailors involved in specific duties or activities > [noun] > ship's cooks and assistants
shifter1704
sea-cook1707
doctor1803
slushy1859
cook's mate1865
potwalloper1890
1803 J. Davis Trav. U.S.A. 430 Mr. Adams.—The steward and the doctor are quarrelling... Black-cook.—Who you call doctor?
1868 C. W. Browne Overlanding in Austral. v. 71 A good cook, or ‘doctor’, as he is called, is a necessary individual in camp.
1872 W. H. Thomes Whaleman's Adventures iv. 62 About that time the doctor was called to start a fire in his galley.
1893 I. K. Funk et al. Standard Dict. Eng. Lang. I Doctor..6. (Local, U.S.) The cook in a logging-camp.
1910 S. E. White Rules of Game xii. 70 ‘Where's the drive, doctor?’ asked the lumberman. ‘This is the jam camp,’ replied the cook.
1953 ‘Main Royal’ Not in Log 129 There was no sign of ‘the doctor’, as a sailing-ship's cook is usually called.
13. colloquial. A person who is employed or may be engaged to give specialist advice or help. Chiefly as the second element of compounds, forming nouns with the sense ‘a person who repairs, maintains, advises on, or improves the thing specified in the first element’, as bike doctor, car doctor, golf doctor, etc.play-doctor, saw-doctor, script doctor, spin doctor: see the first element.
ΚΠ
1857 S. Smiles Life George Stephenson vi. 44 Stephenson's skill as an engine-doctor soon became noised abroad, and he was called upon to prescribe remedies for all the old, wheezy, and ineffective pumping-machines in the neighbourhood.
1899 Daily News 2 Mar. 9/1 Shipping ‘Doctors’..The owner, nervous about a vessel, wants a further insurance, and the ‘doctor’ procures it for him... The ‘doctor’ is a broker who deals particularly with the overdue vessels.
1933 Tweed Daily (Murwillumbah, New S. Wales) 4 July (6/4 advt.) That cycle you want for the season can do with an overhaul—bring it to Bob John, the Bike Doctor.
1957 Country Life 7 Feb. 244/1 I never had much opinion of myself as even the most amateurish golf doctor.
2003 Maximum PC June 24/3 We end our primer with a FAQ that addresses the videocard-related questions most often received by our resident PC doctor.
2013 L. Freedman Encycl. Stock Car Racing ii. 701 His car had been prepared by the superior mechanic Red Vogt, the finest early-days car doctor around.
14. Angling. A type of artificial fishing fly.Chiefly with modifying word specifying the predominant colour of the fly, as in blue doctor, silver doctor n., black doctor n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > means of attracting fish > [noun] > artificial fly > types of
moor flylOE
drake-flya1450
dub-flya1450
dun cut1496
dun fly1496
louper1496
red fly1616
moorish fly1635
palmer1653
palmer fly1653
red hackle1653
red palmer1653
shell-fly1653
orange fly1662
blackfly1669
dun1676
dun hackle1676
hackle1676
mayfly1676
peacock fly1676
thorn-tree fly1676
turkey-fly1676
violet-fly1676
whirling dun1676
badger fly1681
greenfly1686
moorish brown1689
prime dun1696
sandfly1700
grey midge1724
whirling blue1747
dun drake?1758
death drake1766
hackle fly1786
badger1787
blue1787
brown-fly1787
camel-brown1787
spinner1787
midge1799
night-fly1799
thorn-fly1799
turkey1799
withy-fly1799
grayling fly1811
sun fly1820
cock-a-bondy1835
brown moth1837
bunting-lark fly1837
governor1837
water-hen hackle1837
Waterloo fly1837
coachman1839
soldier palmer1839
blue jay1843
red tag1850
canary1855
white-tip1856
spider1857
bumble1859
doctor1860
ibis1863
Jock Scott1866
eagle1867
highlander1867
jay1867
John Scott1867
judge1867
parson1867
priest1867
snow-fly1867
Jack Scott1874
Alexandra1875
silver doctor1875
Alexandra fly1882
grackle1894
grizzly queen1894
heckle-fly1897
Zulu1898
thunder and lightning1910
streamer1919
Devon1924
peacock1950
1860 C. M. Yonge Hopes & Fears in Constit. Press Feb. 352 Lucilla..was soon eloquent on the merits of the doctor, the butcher, the duchess, and all her other radiant fabrications of gold pheasant's feathers, parrot plumes, jay's wings, and the like.
1895 Daily News 22 Aug. 6/2 With fine tackle and a very small Blue Doctor.
1935 North Devon Jrnl. 31 Mar. 6/3 On a rising water the ‘doctor’ fly should be called in.
1947 Sports Afield Jan. 18/3 Will we try 'im on a Doctor or a Jock Scott?
2010 M. D. Radencich 20 Salmon Flies vi. 99 The Silver Wilkinson..falls into a subclass of silver-bodied salmon flies that includes the Helmsdale Doctor, Silver Doctor, and Blue Doctor.

Phrases

P1. Noun phrases with of.
a.
Doctor of Decrees n. a person who holds a higher degree in canon law; a Doctor of Canon Law (now historical). [Compare post-classical Latin doctor decretorum (14th cent. in a British source; also in continental sources), also doctor in decretis (14th cent. in British and continental sources), Anglo-Norman doctour de decrees (14th cent.), Middle French docteur en decret (15th cent.).]
ΚΠ
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xv. l. 373 Doctoures of decres and of diuinite Maistres.
?1585 W. Phiston tr. S. de Voyon Testimonie True Church of God 112 Thirdly, the doctors of decrees and decretals.
1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses I. 548 Tho. Langton Doctor of Decrees succeeded him, as I shall anon tell you.
1888 Scot. Rev. 11 404 In the oldest Faculties—those of Law—we have the degrees of Doctor of Laws in the Faculty of the Civil Law, and Doctor of Decrees in the Faculty of the Canon Law.
1914 Aberdeen Jrnl. 29 July 5/1 He had studied in Paris and there taken the degree of Doctor of Decrees.
2013 P. Heath Eng. Parish Clergy iv. 54 One who probably saw little of his parishioners was Thomas Martyn, Doctor of Decrees, in 1510 official of the archdeacon of Salisbury.
b.
Doctor of Philosophy n. (also with lower-case initials) a person who has been awarded the highest class of degree for original academic research, now typically involving three or more years of postgraduate study at a university or other academic institution culminating in the writing of a dissertation or thesis, which is defended before experts in the field; (also) a degree qualification or course of this type, a doctorate. Often abbreviated as PhD n. or (less commonly) D.Phil.In the medieval universities of continental Europe, the title given to holders of the highest degree in the Faculty of Arts was Magister Artium (Master of Arts), while holders of the highest degree in the other faculties (Theology, Medicine, and Law) were styled Doctor. This inconsistency was addressed in the mid 17th cent. with the introduction of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Philosophiae Doctor) in place of Magister Artium in German universities (in which the Faculty of Arts was known as the philosophische Fakultät); like other doctoral degrees at this time, it was awarded for advanced scholarship rather than original research. By the early 19th cent. the Faculty of Philosophy in German universities had come to house all subjects now commonly known as sciences and humanities, and began to demand original contributions to research, attested by a dissertation, for the award of Doctor of Philosophy (or PhD) in any of these fields. The research-based PhD on the German model was subsequently adopted in various parts of the English-speaking world: the degree was first awarded in the United States by Yale University in 1861 and was adopted by U.K. universities in 1917. [Compare post-classical Latin doctor philosophiae (16th cent., as an equivalent term to magister).]
ΚΠ
1651 T. Fuller et al. Abel Redevivus 236 He was in this University [sc. Heidelberg] advanced unto the degree of Master of Arts or Doctor of Philosophy in the yeer 1513.
1732 London Evening-Post 23–25 May The great Hall of Hercules being magnificently hung and adorn'd on Purpose, she [sc. Italian physicist Laura Bassi] was promoted to the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, with the usual Formalities.
1861 Trumansburg (N.Y.) News 2 Aug. At the commencement of Yale College, New Haven, July 25th, the degree of Ph.D. (Doctor of Philosophy) was conferred on three graduates only.
1949 Gen. Reg. (Univ. Michigan) ix. 194 They must pass the same qualifying examination as applicants for the Doctor of Philosophy in History.
2021 @Clare_Brock 28 Aug. in twitter.com (accessed 1 Sept. 2021) I'm not a medical doctor, I'm a doctor of philosophy.
c.
Doctor of Physic n. (also with lower-case initials) now historical a person who holds the highest class of degree awarded by the faculty of medicine of a university; = Doctor of Medicine at sense 4a.
ΚΠ
c1405 (c1387–95) G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 413 With vs ther was a Doctour of Phisyk.
1421 Petition in Rotuli Parl. (1767–77) IV. 158/1 That no man..practyse in Fisyk..but he be Bacheler or Doctour of Fisyk, havynge Lettres testimonyalx sufficeantz of on of those degrees of the Universite.
1547 A. Borde Breuiary of Helthe ii. f. xxiiiv I do saye that an vrine is a strumpet, or an harlot, for it wyll lye & the best doctor of phisicke of them all: maye be deceiued in an vrine.
1627 Articles enquired Diocesse of Carlile sig. B3 What Physician or Chyrurgion is in your parish vnlicensed, and beeing not a Doctor of Physicke in either of the Vniuersities, doth practise physike?
1849 T. Carlyle Reminisc. Irish Journey (1882) 44 An aged, rather vain, and not very deep-looking doctor of physic..came personally to ‘drive me out’.
2009 I. Mortimer Dying & Doctors (2015) 205 In the past this would be characterised as the rich employing doctors of physic and the less well-off employing ‘quacks’.
d.
Doctor of the Chair n. (also with lower-case initials) Obsolete a professor; the holder of a university chair in a specified faculty or subject. Cf. chair n.1 6b.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > teaching > teacher > university or college teacher > [noun] > professor
professorc1400
Doctor of the Chair1528
professoress1744
associate professor1812
adjoint professor1828
full professor1852
1528 J. Skelton Honorificatissimo: Replycacion agaynst Yong Scolers sig. A.ii. They tumble so in Theology Drowned in dregges of Diuinite That they iuge them selfe able to be Doctours of the Chayre in the Vyntre.
a1635 T. Randolph Muses Looking-glasse ii. iv. 37 in Poems (1638) Thou shalt be Doctor o' th' chaire.
1659 J. Rushworth Hist. Coll. 62 A Sermon preached by Robert Abbot, Doctor of the Chair in Oxford.
1700 S. Scattergood Twelve Serm. ix. 133 An extraordinary Respect and Veneration from the common People, who looked upon them as infallible Doctors of the Chair.
1809 E. Christian in Blackstone's Comm. Laws Eng. (ed. 15) I. i. xi. 392 The chancellor, vice-chancellor, commissary, doctors of the chair..and readers of lectures.
1847 C. Roger Collation of Principal Engl. Transl. Sacred Script. 57 Soon after being installed Doctor in Divinity, he was appointed Regius Professor, or Doctor of the Chair.
e.
Doctor of the Church n. (a title given to) any of a number of Christian theologians and church fathers whose writings and teachings are recognized to have had a significant influence on Christian theology and doctrine.Originally and chiefly used of the four ‘Latin Doctors’ of the Western Church, St Augustine of Hippo, St Jerome, St Ambrose, and St Gregory the Great (as named in Roman Catholic canon law). In 1568 the title was also given by Pope Pius V to St Athanasius of Alexandria, St Basil of Caesarea, St Gregory of Nazianzus, and St John Chrysostom, the four ‘Greek Doctors’ of the Orthodox Churches (although these churches do not use the title). Since the 16th cent. many more individuals have acquired the designation by formal proclamation of the Roman Catholic Church in recognition of their contribution to the development of its doctrine, including Thomas Aquinas, Teresa of Ávila, and the Venerable Bede. [After post-classical Latin doctores ecclesiae (5th or 6th cent.). Compare also Middle French docteurs de sainte eglise, docteurs de l'eglise (both 14th cent.).]
ΚΠ
1565 J. Calfhill Aunswere Treat. Crosse f. 121v Hierome a doctor of the Church writeth [etc.].
1686 tr. J. B. Bossuet Disc. Hist. Whole World 118 He hearkened to St. Ambrose, the famous Doctor of the Church, who reproved him for his passion.
1730 Lit. Jrnl. Apr.–June 283 He grounded this opinion upon the authority of the antient Doctors of the Church, and particularly upon that of St. Jerom.
1842 Essex Standard 6 May These men have deserted the teaching of those early Doctors of the Church, by which they profess to be guided.
1970 Times 5 Oct. 5/3 The Pope today proclaimed St. Catherine of Siena, the patron saint of Italy, a Doctor of the Church.
2000 in D. S. Armentrout & R. B. Slocum Episcopal Dic. of Church 390/1 The patristic period was the time of many of the great Doctors of the Church, who have been recognized for their theological significance and personal holiness.
2020 G. Quicke Spiritual Discov. Christians Middle East iii. 36 The group of 36 Doctors of the Church includes four women and two Oriental Christians.
f.
doctor of the law n. (also with capital initials) an authority on religious law, spec. (in the New Testament) a teacher and interpreter of the Mosaic Law (cf. lawyer n. 1b). Chiefly in plural. [In specific use after post-classical Latin legis doctor (New Testament, translating Hellenistic Greek νομοδιδάσκαλος).]
ΚΠ
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Luke v. 17 There were Pharisees sittinge, and doctours of the lawe [L. legis doctores], that camen of ech castel of Galilee, and of Judee.
1565 T. Harding Confut. Apol. Church of Eng. ii. vii. f. Miiijv What Keie had the Doctours of the Lawe, sauinge the Exposition of the Lawe?
1645 H. Hammond Pract. Catech. ii. i 158 The Pharisees as the most exact sect among the Jewes,..and the Scribes, as the Doctors of the law, and those that knew better what belonged to it then other men.
1888 B. Pick in Library Mag. Mar. 247 The last Doctors of the Law in the chain of Rabbinistic succession.
1936 Eccl. Rev. Aug. 136 The gospel speaks frequently of Scribes and Doctors of the Law.
2013 C. B. Gray & M. Tebbitt Philos. of Law 452 The doctors of the law were not members of a bureaucratic order.
P2. colloquial (originally and chiefly U.S.). you're (also you are) the doctor: used to indicate that the speaker defers to the judgement of the person addressed; ‘you're the expert’, ‘it's your decision’.
ΚΠ
1836 N.Y. Herald 29 July M. I think a month's incarceration would do you good. F. Well, you're the doctor; but I should like to hint an honest difference of opinion.
1896 Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago) 2 Feb. 31/2 Very well, Jack, you're the doctor.
1912 Outlook 13 Apr. 829/1 But you know you're the doctor. What you say goes.
1969 C. Young Todd Dossier 120 The thing to do now was relax..and forget about it. ‘Okay, you're the doctor,’ Charlie said.
2003 N.Y. Times 29 Apr. d4/1 He told me he had a good one from Panama and I said: ‘Bob, you're the doctor. I'll take him.’
P3. colloquial what the doctor ordered: something which meets a particular need, esp. one which has been previously expressed, or (more generally) which is very beneficial or desirable. Often as just what the doctor ordered.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > advantage > [noun] > an advantage, benefit, or favourable circumstance > a benefit > that makes happy or prosperous > a beneficial or desirable thing
good thing1745
what the doctor ordered1873
just the job1943
1873 Sporting Gaz. 22 Mar. 196/1 The race proved to be exactly what ‘the doctor ordered’.
1882 Globe (Atchison, Kansas) 14 Oct. Everybody knows what patience and self control is required..when the operator must go into the cellar for one piece of pipe, to the barn for another, and then hunt the premises over for an elbow or two, and after all is together in nice shape, and you think you have just what the doctor ordered, find that it is about a foot short.
1903 ‘T. Collins’ Such is Life 209 Physically, not one in ten of us is what the doctor ordered.
1948 G. Vidal City & Pillar i. i. 16 The waiter brought her a drink. ‘Just what the doctor ordered,’ she said, smiling at him.
1950 P. G. Wodehouse Nothing Serious 61 ‘You admired my little friend?’ ‘She is what the doctor ordered.’
2016 Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, Illinois) 16 Mar. 6/1 Sometimes cake is just what the doctor ordered.
P4. doctors and nurses (also patients) and variants: (the name of) a children's game in which the participants pretend to be doctors and nurses (or patients) and act out imagined medical scenarios; esp. such a game involving the participants exposing their genitals; hence in allusive use with reference to sexual role play between adults. Cf. sense 6e.In quot. 1863, and some other uses with play, the reference appears to be to the roles played rather than the name of a game; cf. play v. 13d.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > children's game > other children's games > [noun]
rosy apple1882
doctors and nurses (also patients)1906
doctor1918
knock down ginger1959
rat-a-tat ginger1959
riprap1959
rat-tat ginger1962
1863 Evening Mail 20 May 3/6 A group of little urchins, playing at doctor and patient.]
1906 F. P. Stearns Life & Genius N. Hawthorne x. 218 His two children playing a serio-comic game of doctor and patient, in the adjoining room.
2000 I. Pattison Stranger here Myself (2001) ii. 66 Boys at school made reference to their sexual experimentation with their sisters, Doctors and Nurses and such.
2006 Guardian 17 June (Guide Suppl.) 50/4 (advt.) F profess,..complementary health therapist..WLTM warm & sensual F to play ‘doctors & nurses’ with.
P5. Australian and New Zealand colloquial. to go for the doctor: to go at full speed; to apply or commit oneself wholeheartedly to something.In quot. 1907, perhaps more literally in the sense ‘to fetch a doctor’ (cf. to go for —— 1a at go v. Phrasal verbs 2).
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > rate of motion > swiftness > move swiftly [verb (intransitive)] > go at full speed
to burn the earth or windc1275
streekc1380
career1647
streak1768
streak1834
score1858
to go eyes out1863
to go for the doctor1907
the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > act or do vigorously [verb (intransitive)] > act in thoroughgoing manner
to go the whole hog1825
to go the whole figure1831
to go the whole (also entire, etc.) animal1833
to go for the doctor1907
1907 Daily Tel. (Sydney) 29 July 5/1 The riders of Anatroff and Set Free appeared to think they had special orders ‘to go for the doctor’, and after the pace they set in front it was not surprising that their mounts knocked up at the end of seven furlongs.
1913 Truth (Brisbane) 14 Dec. 3/3 This is not Page's usual way of riding, for he is inclined to go for the doctor, and make every post a winning post.
1971 P. Newton Ten Thousand Dogs 112 Anyway Jim knew what he had to beat and ‘he went for the doctor’ and turned in a winning run.
2018 Austral. Financial Rev. (Nexis) 19 Jan. (Life & Leisure section) 14 If you want to go for the doctor, and perhaps chase down a Porsche 911 or two, it's the RS model you'll be looking at.

Compounds

(Chiefly in sense 6a.)
C1.
a. General use as a modifier, as in doctor fees, doctor jargon, doctor training, etc.
ΚΠ
1833 D. H. Whitney Family Physician ii. 149 It was essential to understand these in order to practice successfully, and in doctor style.
1922 Rep. Divisional Land Settlement State Calif. 30 Serious illness for several months and doctor fees.
1933 Soviet Union Rev. 11 187/2 The Moscow Institute has become an all-Union center for supplementary doctor training.
1962 Sunday Times 10 June 6/2 The Minister of Health, Mr Enoch Powell, has been challenged..on the statistics he produced to show ‘that there is no growing doctor shortage.’
2011 S. Maloney Twenty Six 166 The only thing left to keep him from being discredited was his use of the right doctor jargon.
2013 K. Murrow Busting Loose vii. 83 None of that illegible doctor scrawl crap she always heard jokes about.
b. With other nouns, with the sense ‘that is both a doctor and a ——’, as in doctor-barber, doctor-farrier, doctor-surgeon, etc.
ΚΠ
1638 J. Ford Fancies v. 70 Some Doctor-Farriers are of opinion that the Mare may cast a Foale.
a1785 J. Hall-Stevenson Wks. (1795) II. 185 Here end the bleedings and purgings Of the ghastliest of doctor surgeons.
1856 Home Friend Mar. 288 The head is then covered with ointment and bandaged, and the doctor-barber visits his patient No. 3.
1875 Chem. News 29 Jan. 52/1 Emile Budde, doctor chemist, Auteuil, Paris.
1972 R. H. Woolsey Flying Doctor of Philippines i. 15 Bill had also followed the fortunes and misfortunes of David Livingstone, doctor-explorer of the African continent.
2010 E. W. Lovrien Doctor Guilt? 55 In 1964, Dr. Judith Pool, a doctor-scientist at Stanford University discovered cryoprecipitate (cryo), which was effective in treating bleeds in hemophilia.
c. With past participles with the sense ‘by or by means of a doctor or doctors’, as in doctor-approved, doctor-prescribed, doctor-recommended, etc.
ΚΠ
1928 Bull. Amer. Libr. Assoc. Sept. 424/1 The doctor-prescribed diets aid in the patients' physical welfare.
1952 Washington Post 25 May 6 l/5 The second annual summer youth program features individual instruction, balanced nutrition and doctor-supervised health care.
1990 Internat. Jrnl. Epidemiol. 19 834/2 Although the hypertension is self-reported it is ‘doctor-diagnosed’ in a well-educated population intensely interested in health.
2014 Atlanta Jrnl.-Constit. (Nexis) 3 Aug. 16 e The most common doctor-recommended supplements for seniors are calcium and vitamins D and B-12.
C2. As a modifier or (more usually) in the genitive, designating a formal certificate signed by a doctor, stating the results of a medical examination; now often spec. designating such a certificate as prepared for submission to an employer, confirming that an employee is unable to work due to illness or injury, as in doctor's certificate, doctor's line, doctor's note, etc.
ΚΠ
1711 Evening Post 21 June Her Majesty upon their humble Petition, and the Doctor's Certificate of their ill State of Health, was graciously pleas'd to order the Attorney General to consent to their being bailed.
1818 Rules & Regulations to be observed by Members of United Brotherly Soc. 8 If any member be sick or lame, so as to be disabled from following his employment.., he shall..make verbal declaration thereof to the stewards... The stewards may request a doctor's certificate when necessary.
1838 Woolmer's Exeter & Plymouth Gaz. 28 Apr. The..men..are also deprived of the privilege of..a doctor's note when sick.
1855 Lamp 15 Dec. 806/2 ‘Has he been long sick?’ I asked. ‘He'll be sax weeks, Sabbath coming.’ ‘Have you a “doctor's line”?’
1973 Times 16 Apr. 1/4 The child,..who has eczema and cannot be vaccinated, had a doctor's letter instead [of a smallpox vaccination certificate].
1994 Bangor (Maine) Daily News (Nexis) 10 Sept. The chief's most recent doctor note indicates that he will be out of work until the first week of October.
2019 Irish Times (Nexis) 16 July (Health section) 4 While employers may still ask for a doctor's certificate to cover an absence, the ongoing shortage of GPs means workers can struggle to get an appointment.
C3.
doctor-assisted suicide n. the process by which a person who is terminally ill or suffering from an incurable condition voluntarily ends his or her life with the assistance of a doctor (whose role is typically to provide a lethal dose of a drug at the explicit request of the mentally competent patient); = physician-assisted suicide n. at physician n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > suicide > [noun] > types of
sati1806
satiism1828
hara-kiri1856
junshi1871
seppuku1871
ritual suicide1903
murder-suicide1904
autocide1923
mass suicide1937
doctor-assisted suicide1975
self-deliverance1975
self-deliveration1975
assisted suicide1976
suicide by cop1986
bullycide2001
1975 Lebanon (Pa.) Daily News 16 Sept. 17/5 He clarifies comprehensively and point by point your right to refuse lifesaving treatment and, in special circumstances, even your right to doctor-assisted suicide.
1998 D. C. Thomasma et al. Asking to Die iii. i. 487 Oregon became the first state in the U.S. (in November, 1994) to legalize doctor-assisted suicide by providing that mentally competent adults with fewer than six months to live can request from their doctors lethal doses of oral medication.
2015 Sunday Times 7 June 14/2 She decided on a pre-emptive doctor-assisted suicide in order to avoid any further irreversible suffering.
doctor box n. a box in a printing machine or similar apparatus which contains a supply of ink, pigment, etc., and of which a doctor (sense 11a) forms part.
ΚΠ
1860 R. Hunt Ure's Dict. Arts (ed. 5) I. 512 This doctor box takes but little room, and wastes but little colour, but is only used for the uppermost rollers.
1981 Brit. Patent 1,584,698 4/1 The printing station is a driven screen printing stencil with a dye pipe and an inner colour doctor box.
2019 U.S. Patent 2019/0176375 A1 1/1 The fiber reinforced polymer material is made as a continuous sheet wherein a resin paste is transferred to a doctor box where it is deposited onto a moving carrier film passing directly beneath.
doctor fish n. (a) any of various tropical marine fishes which comprise the genus Acanthurus (family Acanthuridae) and have a sharp pointed spine on either side of the base of the tail, esp. A. chirurgus; = sense 10; (b) either of two small cyprinid fishes, Garra rufa and Cyprinion macrostomum, which can feed on the outermost layer of human skin and are widely used in pedicure and the treatment of skin diseases.
ΚΠ
1815 M. G. Lewis Jrnl. 1815–16 31 Dec. in Jrnl. W. India Proprietor (1834) 50 Its name is the ‘Doctor Fish’.
1907 A. E. Verrill Bermuda Islands I. (Suppl. ed. 2) 574 (caption) Blue Doctor-fish, Blue Tang (Teuthis cœruleus).
1989 Lancet 4 Nov. 1093/2 The pools contain three types of fish, known locally as strikers, jabbers, and lickers... All the bathers we spoke to were enthusiastic about the doctor fish.
2011 Observer 1 May 13/4 The practice of using Garra rufa fish—often called ‘doctor fish’—to heal skin dates back over 400 years.
2017 Marine Ecol. Progress Ser. 580 41/1 A number of fisheries regulations have been put in place across Belize to protect exploited species. These include..a complete ban on the harvest of..acanthurids (tang/surgeonfish/doctorfish).
doctor gum n. any of several tropical trees, esp. the poisonwood Metobium toxiferum, having gum resin formerly used as a purgative and emetic; (also) the gum itself; cf. hog gum n.
ΚΠ
1825 A. P. de Candolle Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis II. 67 R[hus] Metopium... Doctor-gum.
1912 T. E. Thorpe Dict. Appl. Chem. (rev. ed.) III. 23/2 The result is that the gum may differ considerably in properties. Hog or Doctor gum consists of reddish tears.
1995 T. E. Anderson Poison Ivy, Oak & Sumac Bk. vii. 89 The Florida Poisonwood Tree (Metopium toxiferum—native to Central America and the Caribbean—has colonized Florida as far north as Daytona Beach... Also known as Coral Sumac, Hog Gum, and Doctor Gum, its resinous gum is emetic, purgative, and diuretic.
doctor-monger n. Obsolete rare (a nickname for) a member of a sect of the Lollards.
ΚΠ
c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 87 Summe of ȝou ben clepid Doctour-mongers.
doctor–patient adj. designating or relating to the relationship between a doctor and a patient, or doctors and patients generally; cf. patient–doctor adj. at patient adj. and n. Compounds 2.
ΚΠ
1928 New Eng. Jrnl. Med. 19 July 161/2 The doctor-patient relation can be regarded as a fiduciary relationship.
1983 L. Thomas Youngest Sci. vi. 59 The doctor-patient relationship was, for better or worse, a long conversation in which the patient was at the epicenter of concern and knew it.
2019 Times of India (Nexis) 24 Sept. Effective doctor-patient communication gives patients a sense of being heard and allowed to express their concerns.
doctor's curse n. Obsolete rare (a nickname for) a dose of calomel (see calomel n.).
ΚΠ
1821 P. Hawker Diary (1893) I. 226 I..took the doctor's curse, or, in other words, a dose of calomel.
doctor's gum n. now rare any of several tropical trees having gum resin formerly used medicinally; (also) the gum itself; = doctor gum n.
ΚΠ
1847 R. E. Griffith Med. Bot. 186 The R [hus] metopium, a West India species, furnishes a gum known as ‘Doctor's gum,’ which, in large doses, is emeto-cathartic, and is said in smaller ones, to be a useful remedy in disorders of the bowels and respiratory organs.
1887 C. A. Moloney Sketch Forestry W. Afr. 279 Hog or Doctor's gum, Gamboge tree (Symphonia globulifera).
1946 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 31 Aug. 298/1 Flourishing throughout the open spaces of the Bahama Islands and in southernmost Florida (where it is also known as ‘doctor's gum’), has attracted little attention outside the immediate vicinity.
doctor's mandate n. British Politics a mandate given by an electorate authorizing a government to take whatever measures are necessary to deal with some extreme or critical situation.Originally with reference to appeals for a government of national unity in the General Election of 1931. [With allusion to the idea that a government must respond urgently and autonomously in a crisis, as a doctor does in a medical emergency.]
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > deliberative, legislative, or administrative assembly > governing or legislative body of a nation or community > [noun] > a representative assembly > fact of representing or being represented > mandate > type of
doctor's mandate1931
1931 Evening Tel. (Dundee) 28 Sept. 4/4 What Mr MacDonald will ask for can be described as a ‘doctor's mandate’.
1973 Times 17 Dec. 15/1 Some of the substantial voices that now call for a doctor's mandate from the people who stand close enough to the Prime Minister for him to feel the full cogency of their persuasions.
1991 20th Cent. Brit. Hist. (BNC) 20 There is some evidence that it was Snowden who suggested the formula of the ‘doctor's mandate’..under which the component parts of the National Government were each to issue their own manifestos.
doctor's office n. chiefly North American a room or establishment where a doctor treats or advises patients; cf. doctor's surgery n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > places for the sick or injured > [noun] > surgery or consulting-room
examining room1775
doctor1808
doctor's office1809
doctor's surgery1842
consulting room1843
surgery1846
operatory1948
1809 Balance & N.Y. State Jrnl. 14 Nov. (advt.) An upper-room..suitable for a Lawyer's or a Doctor's Office.
1827 Ariel (Philadelphia) 14 Apr. I lived..near the Doctor's office.., where I had an opportunity of witnessing many of his wonderful cures.
1931 Amer. Mercury Feb. 194/1 One of the boys fell beneath the trucks..and would perhaps have died from loss of blood had not a member of the train crew corded the limb until the boy could be taken to a doctor's office.
2011 D. Richards Real Girl Next Door x. 231 My parents..took me to the doctor's office on the morning of the surgery.
doctorspeak n. somewhat depreciative a style of writing and speaking considered characteristic of doctors and other medical professionals, esp. in containing technical jargon or being obfuscatory.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > a language > register > [noun] > jargon > used by other groups
indenture Englisha1568
water language1702
jockeyism1802
slum1812
Polari1846
stable-language1856
scientificism1860
water-slang1860
Oxfordish1863
galley-slang1867
pitmatic1885
commercialese1910
legalese1911
academese1917
Hollywoodese1920
businessese1921
Hollywoodism1925
trade unionese1927
advertisingese1929
officese1935
sociologese1940
Whitehallese1940
Newspeak1949
patter1949
Pentagonese1950
educationese1958
computerese1960
managementese1961
spacespeak1963
computer-speak1968
techno-jargon1972
business-speak1973
Eurospeak1975
Euro-jargon1976
technospeak1976
doctorspeak1977
corporate-speak1978
medspeak1979
mellowspeak1979
technobabble1981
teenspeak1982
management-speak1986
codespeak1987
1977 Cullman (Alabama) Times 5 Oct. 5/3 Doctorspeak is that peculiar language spoken by hospital personnel and doctors which carefully conceals a patient's true condition.
1996 J. Graedon & T. Graedon People's Pharmacy (new rev. ed.) ii. 32 Most of these medications actually cause more dangerous heart rhythms than they cure. In doctorspeak, they are ‘pro-arrhythmic’.
2019 Sunday Times (Nexis) 14 July (Mag.) There's no treatment [for measles]. Management is basically ‘supportive’, which is doctorspeak for helping you with your breathing while your body attempts to fight off this virus.
doctor's stuff n. (also doctor-stuff) colloquial (now rare) medicine, medication.
ΚΠ
1773 R. Graves Spiritual Quixote III. x. xvii. 131 The man said, ‘..he could not take Doctor's stuff, if he died for it’.
a1774 R. Fergusson Poems (1785) 171 Ye lowns that troke in doctor's stuff, You'll now hae unco slaisters.
1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xv. 171 Like doctor-stuff generally, it is not as appetizing as desirable.
1924 J. C. Lincoln Rugged Water xviii. 354 I don't know what this doctor stuff is, but it generally soothes him down and gets him to sleep again. Some kind of morphine or such dratted trash, I presume likely.
1945 Strand Mag. Nov. 36/1 Mr. Chislehurst..was a chemist... He didn't work at a shop, making up doctor's stuff. He was very clever, and exercised his cleverness in a place which Mrs. Pigeon called a lab-oratory.
doctor's surgery n. chiefly British a room or establishment where a doctor treats or advises patients (cf. doctor's office n.); (sometimes also) an occasion on which medical treatment or consultation occurs.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > places for the sick or injured > [noun] > surgery or consulting-room
examining room1775
doctor1808
doctor's office1809
doctor's surgery1842
consulting room1843
surgery1846
operatory1948
the world > health and disease > healing > art or science of medicine > practice of healing art > [noun] > consultation session
surgery1938
doctor's surgery1993
1842 Punch 2 236/2 The Excise-office is a noble building, with an extensive parlour window, nearly as large as the Doctor's surgery next door.
1963 N. Hilliard Piece of Land 82 The milking shed was a sight to see: as spick and span as a doctor's surgery.
1993 J. Everton in K. Fisher & J. Collins Homelessness, Health Care & Welfare Provision i. 25 Housing projects arrange for a doctor's surgery to be held in the project or for a nurse's services to be available.
2013 N. Solomons Gallery Vanished Husbands 175 The doctor's surgery was filled with fretting babies and tired, grey-looking mothers.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2022).

doctorv.

Brit. /ˈdɒktə/, U.S. /ˈdɑktər/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: doctor n.
Etymology: < doctor n.
1. transitive. To confer the title or degree of Doctor on (a person); to award a doctorate to.In early use with reference to scholars qualified to teach theology (cf. doctor n. 5b).
ΘΚΠ
society > education > educational administration > university administration > taking degree or graduation > take degree [verb (transitive)] > confer degree on > specific degree
doctorate1591
doctor1594
doctorize1600
bedoctor1806
1594 A. Hume Reioynder Dr. Hil 92 Why M. Doctor, haue you (now you are Doctored) forgot the olde speach of the Schooles, when you were a generall?
1599 E. Sandys Europæ Speculum (1632) 117 Which Church hath now fully..delivered her mind in the late Councell of Trent; whereto all that are solemnly doctored in Italy must subscribe.
a1634 R. Chapman Hallelu-jah (1635) 55 Being as truely Doctored in the acting of sinnes, as the Iesuites in the art of poysoning.
1741 A. Pope Corr. 12 Aug. (1956) IV. 357 I will be Doctor'd with you, or not at all.
1868 G. V. Cox Recoll. Oxf. xx. 371 Dr. Newman (once of us as Mr. Newman, but doctored by the Pope) was tried and found guilty of publishing ‘a defamatory paper’.
1873 J. R. Lowell Lett. (1894) II. 108 I have been over to Oxford to be doctored, and had a very pleasant time of it.
1891 Sat. Rev. 20 June 730/1 Cambridge on Tuesday ‘doctored’ among others her new High Steward.
1993 A. L. Rowse All Souls vii. 178 Lionel Robbins and I were doctored together at Exeter.
2.
a. transitive. (a) To adulterate or dilute (alcoholic drink). Now rare. (b) To add alcohol, a drug, or another harmful substance to (food or drink), typically surreptitiously; to spike.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > mix or blend [verb (transitive)] > add as ingredient to a mixture > qualify by admixture > adulterate
adulterc1384
feigna1398
sophisticatec1400
infect?1440
counterfeit1495
adulterate?1526
dash1548
falsify1562
elay1573
abuse1574
base1581
corrupt1581
debase1591
adulterize1593
compass1594
sophisticate1604
allay1634
huckster1642
hucksterize1646
cauponize1652
alloy1661
balderdash1674
impurify1693
doctor1726
vitiate1728
sand1851
dope1898
1726 Tavern Scuffle 12 It seems of late, they have learn'd the Art of doctoring their own Wines, so that we may have it imported here, yet adulterated there.
1794 G. Turner Gen. View Agric. Gloucester 53 The method that has, I fear, too much prevailed in Devonshire, Gloucestershire, and Herefordshire, of doctoring the cyder.
1847 Remarks Colonial Policy Brit. N. Amer. 37 Not sherry at all, but doctored with an enormous proportion of brandy, to suit the British market.
1898 Manch. Weekly Times 14 Jan. 4/4 He was not very well pleased, saying that his food had been doctored.
1971 Soviet Weekly 12 June 16 It is..almost too pure, and has to be doctored to make it palatable for drinking.
1982 B. Beaumont Thanks to Rugby xiii. 176 Jeff Squire was doctoring each drink with..vodka. By the end Noel was plastered and legless.
2012 G. Manville Flight into Reality (e-book, accessed 9 Sept. 2021) xi. 80 Could Kyle have doctored her drink? Now, here she was in his bed.
b. transitive. To make alterations to (something) in order to deceive; (in later use) spec. to change the content or appearance of (a document, picture, or other source of information) so as to give a misleading or false impression; to falsify, fabricate.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > forgery, falsification > forge, falsify [verb (transitive)]
forgec1330
counterfeitc1386
feign1484
flamc1500
adulterate?1526
mint1593
fashion1600
fudge1674
sham1699
doctor1750
fake1884
to fake up1885
phoney1940
bodgie1969
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > forgery, falsification > faking of documents > forge, falsify [verb (transitive)]
false1303
forgec1330
counterfeitc1386
deceit1484
falsify1502
forge1535
sophisticate1605
doctor1750
fabricate1779
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > duping, making a fool of > befool, cheat, dupe [verb (transitive)] > alter or manipulate something for the purpose of deception
cook1636
doctor1750
fake1819
rig1826
ready2004
1750 Conversat. between Blacksmith & Merchant 5 The Circumference of a broad Half-Guinea, and a whole Guinea well sweated, and doctored by these Artists, being so nearly equal, that without observing the Thickness..you could hardly judge of the Difference.
a1777 S. Foote Cozeners (1778) iii. ii. 77 I wish we had time though to doctor his face.
1847 T. De Quincey Spanish Mil. Nun (1853) xxi. 66 Modes of doctoring dice.
1883 Amer. Counting-room Sept. 160/1 Jones invests his money; in due time he sorrowfully learns that the accounts were doctored for the occasion, and that things are very different from what they were represented to him.
1958 Vogue 15 Jan. 96 Remaking your age has nothing to do with doctoring the dates on your birth certificate.
2008 Wall St. Jrnl. 11 July a7/1 Iran apparently doctored a photograph of missile test-firings and exaggerated the capabilities of the weapons.
c. transitive. Cricket. To tamper with (the pitch) in order to gain an unfair advantage, typically by creating conditions which benefit the bowlers from one's own team. Also (Cricket, Baseball, and other games): to tamper with (the ball) so as to affect its flight. Cf. ball doctoring n. at ball n.1 Compounds 2.In quot. 1887 perhaps an ironic use of sense 4b.
ΚΠ
1887 S. Austral. Advertiser 28 Dec. 7/3 The person or persons who had ‘doctored’ the wicket had no doubt been actuated by the best of intentions as regarded our team.
1895 T. Hughes Vacation Rambles 324 An English lower-school boy would have brought down a bonhomme at that distance with every ball, unless the balls were somehow doctored.
1956 Life 10 Sept. 67/1 ‘Wet ones’—i.e., baseballs doctored illegally with spit or perspiration.
1985 Times 19 July 23/8 After doctoring the pitch for their home tie with Middlesex in the last round, justice would have been done had Essex been drawn away.
1992 N.Y. Times 23 June b11/5 Both Leary and Yankee Manager Buck Showalter denied that the pitcher doctored the baseball, but the replays during the nationally televised game were quite revealing.
2006 Financial Times 22 Aug. 4/2 Doctoring the ball to make it swing more is one of the oldest tricks.
3.
a. transitive. To give medical care or attention to (a person or animal, or a part of the body); to treat (a disease or medical condition). Now chiefly U.S. colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > [verb (transitive)]
curea1398
dighta1400
doctor1738
to doctor up1741
treat1781
vet1900
1738 J. Swift Treat. Polite Conversat. 87 I hear he's weary of doctoring it [sc. the gout], and now makes Use of nothing but Patience, and Flannel.
1740 H. Bracken Farriery Improv'd (ed. 2) II. i. 47 Rather than suffer a good serviceable Creature to be doctor'd out of his Life by the common Farriers.
1773 Let. 5 May in F. Mason John Norton & Sons (1968) 320 I had him..not only to feed but to Doctor and take care off or he must have died.
1832 P. Hawker Diary (1893) II. 38 Brodie..prescribed for me and sent me off to doctor myself.
1845 C. Dickens Let. 17 Feb. (1977) IV. 268 An Englishman, who has lived here many years..is well acquainted with the people, whom he doctored in the bad time of cholera.
1916 M. S. Croy Putnam's Househ. Handbk. 227 In doctoring a cold, care should be taken to keep the bowels moving freely.
1936 M. Mitchell Gone with Wind (1962) i. ii. 39 The black leather bag in which Ellen O'Hara always carried the bandages and medicines she used in doctoring the slaves.
2013 B. Williamson Dawn's Shadow (e-book, accessed 10 Sept. 2021) viii. 336 The desired tears never came; instead, after she finished doctoring his wounds, she too admonished him.
b. intransitive. colloquial. To work as a doctor or physician; to practise medicine. Also with on: to treat (someone) medically; = sense 3a. Cf. earlier doctoring n. 2.
ΚΠ
1838 E. L. Joseph Warner Arundell II. ii. 41 Our young friend, who saved our eldest boy, has paid us a visit to try his hand at doctoring on me.
1897 People State N.Y. vs. Howard C. Benham: Appeal Papers: Jurors (Supreme Court County of Genesee) (1898) I. §4701 Q. He has doctored in your family? A. Not in mine; he has in my father's family.
1977 Salina (Kansas) Jrnl. 17 Apr. 32/2 He doctored all around the countryside and at Fort Riley.
2017 J. Ward Sing, Unburied, Sing 120 When they untied him, his back was full of blood..and sergeant told me to doctor on him.
2021 @Dr_Ayan 1 Apr. in twitter.com (accessed 22 Nov. 2021) Been doctoring for 22 years now and been a GP for 18 of them.
c. intransitive. colloquial (chiefly U.S.). To receive medical treatment; to take medicine.
ΚΠ
1838 Botanico-Med. Recorder 7 Apr. 211/2 I doctored with Shimer two and a half weeks; but he did me more harm than good.
1899 Jrnl. Educ. Jan. 44/3 I doctored with our family physician without any good result, so my husband urged me to try Dr. Pierce's medicines.
1911 Watchman-Warder (Lindsay, Ont.) 6 Apr. 5/4 [She] has been doctoring with Toronto specialists for cancer in the throat since last fall.
2006 Gettysburg (Pa.) Times 8 June b5/1 My husband has emphysema. He has been doctoring for this for years.
4.
a. transitive. To make changes to or edit (a text or manuscript), originally so as to emend or improve the text, but later sometimes with the implication of an intention to mislead or deceive.Later use sometimes merges into sense 2b.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > literary and textual criticism > textual criticism > practise textual criticism [verb (transitive)] > emend
amend?c1225
correctc1374
reformc1425
emaculate1623
mend1631–2
castigate1666
rectify1730
emend1769
doctor?c1775
redress1796
emendate1876
?c1775 G. Steevens Let. in D. Garrick Private Corr. (1832) (modernized text) II. 122 Surely Troilus and Cressida would do more, if it were well clipped and doctored.
1833 R. H. Froude Remains (1838) I. 317 Can these [verses] be doctored into any thing available?
1902 Hibbert Jrnl. Oct. 101 In the Paris and Vatican codices the text has been doctored in two subsequent passages... But in neither case has the corrector availed himself of either of the forms found in the Greek MSS. of Matthew.
1983 Angelicum 60 318 By doctoring the manuscript in a few ways—adding a preface and appending a note at the end—Galileo was able to get Riccardi's approval and his book was printed at Florence in 1632.
2015 H. W. Basser & M. B. Cohen Gospel of Matthew & Judaic Trad. xix. 489 Many modern commentators assume that the words..were appended by Matthew onto a pre-existent Jesus tradition, that his text has been doctored, and that originally divorce per se was a real issue.
b. transitive. To mend or repair (something); to patch up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > amending > put right [verb (transitive)]
helpc950
amendc1230
bootc1330
correctc1374
menda1375
recovera1398
dighta1400
restorea1400
redressa1402
recurec1425
remedyc1425
remeidc1480
emendc1485
richa1500
rightena1500
chastisea1513
rectifya1529
redeem1575
salve1575
remed1590
reclaim1593
renew1608
retrieve1625
recruit1673
raccommode1754
splice1803
doctor1829
remediate1837
right-side1847
sort1948
society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > mending or repairing > [verb (transitive)]
beetc975
menda1200
amenda1250
rightc1275
botcha1382
reparela1382
cure1382
repaira1387
dighta1400
emend1411
to mend up1479
restablishc1500
help1518
trimc1520
redub1522
reparate1548
accommodate1552
reinstaure1609
reconcinnate1623
to do up1647
righta1656
fixa1762
doctor1829
vamp1837
service1916
rejig1976
1829 H. Alford Jrnl. 23 Nov. in Life, Jrnls. & Lett. (1873) 50 Wasted most of the morning in doctoring a clock.
1913 A. E. Bergh How Bk. iii. 164 Dilapidated bags and worn-out gripsacks may be doctored in the same way.
1951 Sport 30 Mar. 9/2 The Griffin Park field was doctored last summer at a cost of £2,500.
2010 @JonathanKWeaver 12 May in twitter.com (accessed 7 Sept. 2021) My car has been doctored. Hopefully it will last.
5. transitive. Scottish and English regional (East Anglian). To injure (a person or animal) fatally; to kill; (now only) to finish off, ‘do for’. Now rare. Sc. National Dict. (at Doctor v.) records this sense as still in use in Shetland and Lanarkshire in the 1940s.
ΚΠ
1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. at Doctor v. To doctor one, to kill one..Clydes[dale].
1900 F. Hall in Eng. Dial. Dict. II. at Doctor [Suffolk] My dawg's a wonder to doctor a rat.
1928 in Sc. National Dict. at Doctor When two boys had a fight one would say of the winner, ‘He fairly doctored Jock this time.’
6. transitive. To remove the sexual organs of (an animal) so that it cannot reproduce; (in early use) spec. to castrate (a male animal, esp. a working ram, stallion, etc.). Cf. neuter v. 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > animal keeping practices general > [verb (transitive)] > castrate
geldc1225
lib1396
stone1584
caponize1654
alter1821
twitchel1826
doctor1834
neuter1903
fix1930
capon-
1834 Hobart Town Courier 14 Nov. 1/4 (advt.) This fine young horse..will cover a few mares this season, never having been ‘doctored’ he will be found a sure foal getter.
1902 F. Simpson Cats ii. 30 It is necessary..to have your male cat doctored when he arrives at years of discretion.
1954 L. M. Barker Pears Cycl. (ed. 62) 957/2 Many cats of both sexes are castrated or spayed (the popular expression for this is ‘doctored’).
1970 C. Kersh Aggravations of Minnie Ashe v. 63 He had been paid ‘good English money’ to doctor our cat.
2012 A. Tootill Cole & Cat Woman (2015) (e-book, accessed 7 Sept. 2021) vii. 94 Presumably the cats are doctored, so no particular problem with male or female.

Phrasal verbs

to doctor up
1. transitive. To change the appearance or composition of (something) in order to achieve a particular result, typically either for the purposes of deception or to make an improvement. Cf. sense 2.
ΚΠ
1725 Applebee's Orig. Weekly Jrnl. 27 Nov. Have not you and I..as much right to doctor up a Journal, and take three half-pence for the rectifying the Brains of Mankind, as this dres'd up Gew Gaw of a Mountebank has to give his Packets out, with his good for nothing Plaisters.
1822 C. Lillie Brit. Perfumer ix. 330 This imitation consists of very base and dangerous materials. These are doctored up and coloured.
1891 C. M. Clay Railway Issue 14 He alleges that President Breyfogle has doctored up the records of the directory and packed the boad with his personal friends.
1939 Consumers' Guide 10 Oct. 5/1 Dealers should stop doctoring up samples and misrepresenting quality.
1987 Associated Press (Nexis) 14 Dec. The alcohol was in a juice can that ‘had been doctored up’.
2020 Tampa Bay (Florida) Times (Nexis) 9 Jan. Doctor up the bowls to your liking with chili flakes, fish sauce, sliced and pickled jalapenos and sweet red chili paste.
2. transitive. To give medical care or attention to (a person or animal); to dose up with something. Cf. sense 3a. Now chiefly U.S. colloquial.
ΚΠ
1741 Trials S. Goodere, M. Mahony, & C. White 25 The Captain said to the Doctor, Doctor, I have got an old mad Fellow here, you must doctor him up as well as you can.
1842 C. Whitehead Richard Savage (1845) I. xi. 156 We'll doctor him up while you're gone.
1895 House Furnishing Rev. Dec. 216/2 I nursed her and doctored her up, and she finally got well.
1954 Harder Coll. in Dict. Amer. Regional Eng. (1991) II. at Doctor I doctored him up with white linament [sic].
1996 J. H. Hallas Killing Ground on Okinawa iii. 45 Chaisson and the corpsman doused the holes [in his legs] with sulfa powder, applied some bandages, and doctored him up.
2014 S. Choquette Walking Home 208 They doctored him up with some strange natural remedies that surprisingly worked.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2022).
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