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单词 dreichly
释义

dreichlyadv.

Brit. /ˈdriːxli/, U.S. /ˈdrikli/, /ˈdrixli/, Scottish English /ˈdrixlɪ/
Forms: see dreich adj. and -ly suffix2; also English regional (northern and north midlands) 1700s– dreely Brit. /ˈdriːli/, U.S. /ˈdrili/.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: dreich adj., -ly suffix2.
Etymology: < dreich adj. + -ly suffix2.
Scottish and English regional (northern and north midlands) in later use.
1. With (appropriate) solemnity or seriousness. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
lOE St. Giles (Corpus Cambr. 303) (1980) 126 Ða on sume dæge ealswa he wæs dreolice on his gebedum innan Petres mynstre þa geseah he þærinne twa duren.
lOE St. Margaret (Corpus Cambr.) (1994) 168 Hire þa to leat Malcus swa dreohlice and hire georne bæd and þus cwæð: Gemune þu me.
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness l. 344 When hit [sc. þe ark] watz fettled & forged..Þenne con dryȝttyn hym dele dryȝly þyse wordez: ‘Now, Noe..art þou al redy?’.
2. With great force, decisiveness, conviction, etc.; to a great degree or extent; strongly, relentlessly, earnestly; spec. (with reference to drinking) heavily, deeply. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > violent action or operation > [adverb]
strongeOE
hotOE
unsoftOE
snellya1000
stitha1000
stronglyOE
woodlyc1000
hatelyOE
unridelyc1175
wood1297
mainlyc1300
dreec1330
spackly?c1335
brothelyc1340
bremelya1375
fiercelya1375
violentlya1387
throlyc1390
roughlya1400
snarplya1400
unrekenlya1400
dreichlyc1400
ranklyc1400
witherlyc1400
maliciouslya1450
fervently1480
roidlyc1480
thrafully1535
vehement?1541
toughly1589
sickerly1596
vengeously1599
virulently1599
rageously1600
ragefullya1631
churlishly1657
improbously1657
rampantly1698
fierce1771
savagerous1832
fulgurantly1873
franticly1883
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb]
stronglyeOE
felec950
strongeOE
highlyOE
highOE
greatlya1200
stourlya1225
greata1325
dreec1330
deeplya1400
mightya1400
dreichlyc1400
mighty?a1425
sorec1440
mainlyc1450
greatumly1456
madc1487
profoundly1489
stronglya1492
muchwhata1513
shrewlya1529
heapa1547
vengeance?1548
sorely1562
smartlyc1580
mightly1582
mightily1587
violently1601
intensively1604
almightily1612
violent1629
seriously1643
intensely1646
importunately1660
shrewdly1664
gey1686
sadly1738
plenty1775
vitally1787
substantively1795
badly1813
far1814
heavily1819
serious1825
measurably1834
dearly1843
bally1939
majorly1955
sizzlingly1956
majorly1978
fecking1983
c1400 (?c1380) Patience l. 235 Drof hem dryȝlych adoun þe depe.
c1400 (?c1380) Pearl 224 (MED) A mannez dom moȝt dryȝly demme Er mynde moȝt malte in hit mesure.
a1450 York Plays (1885) 257 Itt is licoure full delicious..Wherfore I rede drely A draughte þat ȝe drynke.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. xii. 116 And thou drynk drely, In thy poll wyll it synk.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr.Troy (Htrn 388) 2379 I drow into a dreme, & dreghly me thought That mercury..Thre goddes hade gotten goyng hym bye.
1572 (a1500) Taill of Rauf Coilȝear (1882) l. 217 ‘Lat the cop raik for my bennysoun, And gar our Gaist begin, and syne drink thow to me...’ They drank dreichlie about, thay wosche and thay rais.
3.
a. Continuously or continually; unceasingly, incessantly. In later use esp. (with reference to rainfall): persistently, in a sustained way. Now rare (cf. sense 3c).
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > continuing > [adverb] > in a continuous manner or without stopping
fastlyOE
anonOE
everOE
everylikec1225
continuallyc1305
atreet1340
unceasinglyc1340
perpetuallyc1385
incessably1398
desselya1400
ithandlya1400
dreichlyc1400
restlessc1400
contunely1447
all alongc1450
dessantlyc1460
incessantly1481
still opece1488
uncessantlya1500
continuinglya1513
in ane1513
away1526
incessant1558
restlessly1567
square1570
stintless1598
ceaselessly?1606
residently1609
unrestingly1621
indesinently1651
jugially1654
unintermissively1656
constantly1682
hand to fist1706
forever1753
unintermittingly1784
round the clock1816
continuously1826
unpausingly1831
sustainedly1842
pauselessly1845
remorselessly1845
around the clock1872
play-by-play1889
ball-by-ball1906
non-stop1920
solidly1937
the world > time > change > absence of change, changelessness > lasting quality, permanence > [adverb] > without cessation
fastlyOE
without ceasec1330
without ceasinga1340
unceasinglyc1340
incessably1398
dreichlyc1400
restlessc1400
perpetuallyc1475
incessantly1481
uncessantlya1500
incessant1558
ceaselessly?1606
indesinently1651
jugially1654
unintermissively1656
upon or on a stretch1689
at one or a stretch1774
unabatingly1793
at the stretch1867
never-ceasingly1869
c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 1026 Þay..þe wyn dronken, Daunsed ful dreȝly wyth dere caroleȝ.
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure l. 2028 (MED) [They] Drawen dreghely the wyne and drynkyn thareaftyre.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 141 He driet vp the dropes & [perh. read þat] dreghly can syle.
a1649 G. Abbott Brief Notes Psalms (1651) cxix. 611 I have waited long and dreely looked even to the weakning of my sight, and impairing of my senses, for thee to deliver me.
a1796 S. Pegge Two Coll. Derbicisms (1896) ii. 99 Dreely, ‘It rains dreely’, i.e. hard and steadily.
1802 G. Culley Let. 3 June in M. Culley & G. Culley Farming Lett. (2006) 295 It has spitt on all the forenoon, but since one it has rained pretty drealy now 3 o'clock and past.
1844 Preston Chron. 12 Oct. Un it reint meety dreely, un i'r feeort os heaw we r'n beown t' heh o weet dey on't, un ot aw'r plezzur'd be farely bluzzt.
1899 I. Wilkinson in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1900) II. 166/2 [West Yorkshire] It rains dreely away.
2012 @janismackay 31 May in twitter.com (accessed 25 Oct. 2019) Easier, isn't it, to apply the bum glue and get down to the task of writing another chapter, when it gently, dreichly rains outside.
b. Slowly; tediously. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > [adverb]
slowlyc1384
slowa1398
tortoise-like1645
lently1655
snail-like1825
loiteringly1836
dreichly1844
oozily1871
leadenly1879
snailishly1889
glacially1975
1844 Leeds Times 9 Nov. 2/5 More than 400 head of cattle and about 3,000 sheep..were dreely disposed of, not being of a very choice description.
1868 J. C. Atkinson Gloss. Cleveland Dial. Dreely, slowly, tediously. ‘He talks very dreely’.
1880 J. E. Watt Poet. Sketches 44 I've toiled, while dreichly dragged the years.
1907 Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald 5 Apr. 8/6 The competition of the Consolation billiards tournament at the Liberal Club is ‘driechly’ drawing to a close. The premier competition was played off in record time. Why the laxity in the minor event?
1942 Sunday Post 5 Apr. 6/3 From there the film, like the acting and presentation, rolls ‘dreichly’ to its final, feeble flicker.
c. Sadly; gloomily, in a dreary or depressing way; bleakly. Now often with reference to wet, cold, or overcast weather (cf. sense 3a).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > dejection > [adverb]
ungladly?c1225
wanlyc1275
dolefullyc1290
ruefullya1300
elengelyc1305
heavisomelya1382
lumpishlyc1450
tristily?c1450
dowlyc1540
unjoyfully1553
tragically1567
dully1600
tragicly1604
heartlessly1606
unjovially1607
dejectedly1611
dejectly1611
disconsolately1614
dumpishly1621
uncheerfullya1628
dolorously1638
mopishly1651
despondingly1656
despondentlya1677
unhappily1688
dismally1709
gloomily1727
grumly1727
joylessly1766
mopingly1788
sombrously1796
glumly1805
malagrugrously1818
funerally1829
broodingly1834
unenjoyingly1844
downheartedly1847
unblissfully1849
droopingly1852
dreichly1853
sombrely1860
dispiritedly1864
glumpily1865
pleasurelessly1873
depressedly1880
chapfallenly1883
sighfully1900
bleakly1938
1853 J. Grant Jane Seton I. xvi. 169 I hear the cries of a woman; eh, sirs, but she scraighs dreichly and eerilie!
1861 All the Best III. vii. 111 Twilight began to creep over the sky, and the Marbrook hills grew dim, and the wind eddied dreely through the tall old elm trees outside the window.
1880 A. Lyell Our New Candidate (ed. 5) p. vi I had barely closed my een when a michty shade passed before me. It had the gran' Imperial air o' the ault warld about it. I thocht o' puir Mary Stuart smilin' dreechly on the scaffold.
1927 Forfar Disp. 10 Mar. The orchestra's ‘Representation of Chaos’ was ‘dreichly’ realistic, and in striking contrast with the beautiful harmonies which heralded the creation of light.
1949 W. Midgley in W. J. Halliday & A. S. Umpleby White Rose Garland Yorks. Dial. Verse 93 Thi tail that once cocked up sa peart Hangs dreely down behind.
2016 @LynieT 26 July in twitter.com (accessed 25 Oct. 2019) Supposedly running day for me, but dreichly yucky outside.
d. English regional (Lancashire). With fixed attention; intently; closely. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1862 Let. 1 Apr. in Rochdale Observer 5 Apr. 6/2 Critics sometimes strain at gnats and analyse them ‘dreely’.
1867 Bury Times 16 Nov. 5/4 I cannot say whether it was dead. I did not look so ‘dreely’ at it.
1872 Manch. Times 6 July 1/3 His owd woman donned her spectacles on, an' look't at th' hare very dreely; an' they booath watch't it o th' while it wur loppin' th' milk up.
1904 ‘J. Ackworth’ Old Wenyon's Will xi. 171 Still playing with her bacon, holding it out and inspecting it dreely.., she smiled a smile that raised a very devil of passion within him.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2020; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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更新时间:2024/9/21 8:29:49