| 释义 | 
		dowfadj.n. Origin: Probably of multiple origins. Probably partly a borrowing from early Scandinavian. Probably partly a borrowing from Dutch. Etymon: Dutch doof. Etymology: Probably partly  <  early Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic daufr  deaf adj.: see note),  and partly  <  the related Middle Dutch, Dutch doof useless, (of a person) foolish, (of metal, colour, etc.) without lustre, (of wood) dead, dry, (of a sound) not clear (all in Middle Dutch), (of the sky) overcast, (of grain nuts) empty, decayed (all 17th cent.), transferred uses of doof  deaf adj.Compare also Dutch dof   in the same transferred senses (1608; reduced form of doof  ), which has now largely superseded doof   in senses not directly related to hearing. With reference to sound perhaps compare further Dutch dof  , †doef   dull blow, thud (of imitative origin: see doof n.2   and compare duff n.6). In Old Icelandic the simplex daufr   is apparently only attested in the sense ‘lacking the sense of hearing’, but compare the derivatives daufligr   dull, dismal, daufleika   deafness, sloth, daufingi   sluggard, which suggest the existence of the transferred sense in early Scandinavian; compare also Swedish döver   deaf, barren. Form history. The variety of modern Scots forms and pronunciations reflects the word's multiple origins. Forms indicating a diphthong, e.g. douf, dowf   /dʌʊf/ reflect the early Scandinavian word (the Older Scots form dolf   apparently showing a reverse spelling of ol   for ow  , by analogy with words with vocalized l  ; compare e.g. rolp at roup v.1 Forms   and nolt n.), while forms indicating a front rounded vowel or its reflex (e.g. doof, dufe, duif  /dyf/,  /dɪf/ (and also some, especially insular, instances of duff  /dʌf/) reflect Middle Dutch doof  . The south-western form doaf   (also Irish English (northern) dofe)  /dof/ may perhaps reflect a later reborrowing of the Dutch word; however, it is more likely that these forms, as also the form duff, show the influence of forms of dough n.   (compare forms at that entry) and related words (compare duff n.1, duff n.3, duff n.4). The form duff   in sense  B. 2   may also have been influenced by Dutch dof  , †doef   (see above), and imitative motivation may be an additional factor in respect of this sense. Notes on specific senses. With sense  A. 1   compare deaf adj. 3. With sense  A. 3   perhaps compare earlier deaf adj. 5. With sense  A. 6   compare earlier deaf adj. 6.  Scottish,  Irish English, and  English regional ( northern).  A. adj.the world > action or operation > inaction > disinclination to act or listlessness > 			[adjective]		 > lacking vigour or energy a1522    G. Douglas tr.  Virgil  		(1957)	  iii. iv. 97  				Dolf wolx thar spretis. 1575    J. Rolland   i. f. 8  				Thy dolf hart for dredour ay deuaillis. ?a1591    King James VI & I  		(1955)	 I. 128  				The Hen-bane blacke, and Ches-bow als, That cold-ryfe doth vs keepe, Doufe, yeuking flesh, and shuddring colde, And makes vs euer sleepe. 1721    A. Ramsay  x  				How dowf looks gentry with an empty purse! 1795     Mar. 223  				Now grown mauchless, dowf and sweer aye To look near his farm or wark. 1814    W. Scott  II.  xx. 314  				The lad can sometimes be as dowff as a sexagenary like  myself.       View more context for this quotation 1895    ‘S. Tytler’  viii.  				Her guests were compelled to come to the conclusion that the fine lady had been attacked by the vapours, so ‘dowf’ was she in her stateliness. 1927    E. S. Rae  14  				Lowsed fae the lanely ploo owre gloamin' rigs, A pair o' dowf broons jogs the hameward wye. 1985    A. Hutchison tr.  Catullus in   42 61  				Her man..thinks it's a richt gweed lauch. Douf eejit. 1999    D. Purves tr.  A. Chekhov  		(SCOTS)	 iv  				‘Thrie batteries ir leavin the-day bi road an thrie mair the-morn—syne the toun wul be fair deid.’ ‘Ay, an gey dowf, tae.’ 2000    M. Fitt  ii. 9  				Citizens visibly needit alcohol on the wey in tae lown their nerves an make dowf their senses. 1721    A. Ramsay  I. 19  				Now a' our Gamesters may sit dowff, Wi' Hearts like Lead. 1776     1 Aug. 177  				They're douff and dowie at the best. 1796    A. Wilson  3  				The College now, to Rab grew douff and dull. 1843    G. W. Gillespie  108  				For I am douf, and sad, and wae To leave the land sae lang I fondly cherish'd mony a day. 1847    in  F. Sheldon  217  				Lord Dacre fain would see the bride He sought her bower alone; And dowf and blunkit grew his looks, When Lady Jean was gone. 1887    J. Service  18  				Of a' the bodies whose chief pleasure in life seems to be to rant and howl and ring bells, and mak the first the dowffest day in a' the week, surely the Antiburghers are the drollest. 1913    H. P. Cameron tr.  Thomas à Kempis   i. xi. 15  				Whan a bit mishanter fa's, we're owre sune dowf, an' retour tae the warl' for consolement. 1991    R. C. Saunders in  T. Hubbard  29  				Och, God, sae dowf an langsum The days gang by for me! 2013     		(Nexis)	 6 Dec. (Features section) 20  				Scabbit rigs, cauldrife an dowf, the bleestert trees wytin fingers peyntin tae a God that wisna takin tent. the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > non-resonance > 			[adjective]		 1768    A. Ross   i. 4  				Your rough spun ware Sounds but right douff[printed douft] an' fowsome to my ear. 1790    D. Morison  7  				Till douf the twall-hours bell crys clink, Then aff a' wallop in a wink. 1818     Dec. 503/2  				A' the kye..gied a dowf an' eerisome crune. 1864    W. D. Latto  ix. 84  				The douff dull soond caused by the energetic steekin' o' the Beuk. 1988    R. Vettese  29  				Och, I canna see, winnocks greetin wi yoam, hear nae soond but yon dowf bell. the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > improbability, unlikeliness > 			[adjective]		 > unconvincing 1786    R. Burns  203  				Her dowf excuses pat me mad. 1839    W. McDowall  220  				Nae hostin' now an' dowf excuse. 1860    J. Young  166  				Tae cajole out ae dowff excuse. 1811    A. Scott  		(new ed.)	 133  				And on the douf days, whan loud hurricanes blaw. 1813    J. Hogg   i. 71  				The first leet night, quhan the new moon set, Quhan all was douffe and mirk, We saddled ouir naigis wi' the moon-fern leif, And rode fra Kilmerrin kirk. 1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl. at Dowf  				Dull to the eye, thick; as, ‘a dowf day’; a hazy day; a phrase used by old people, Loth. 1983    A. Scott in   Mar. 25  				A winter swan whas wings made siller wind I the iron air o a dowf December. 1988    R. Vettese  58  				In dowf season, dowie, deid still, abuin frozen braith, I hear it: the vieve cry nae daith-grupp thraws.  6. the world > existence and causation > creation > productiveness > unproductiveness > 			[adjective]		 1824    J. Mactaggart  174  				The earth of a garden is ‘doaf’ when, though it seems fat, nothing will grow on it but weeds. 1896    P. H. Hunter  		(new ed.)	 xix. 172  				It's unco dowf land, Happergaw. I couldna mak a livin oot o't. 1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl. at Dowf  				Wanting the kernel or substance; a douf nit, a rotten nut. 1924     14 Jan. 9/5  				Ulsterisms... Douf, dried-up or decayed. a1978    ‘H. MacDiarmid’  		(1994)	 II. 1234  				Ill-tethed like you, an' prone to tellyevies, Midst men like dowf nits or like fozie neeps, My trauchled hert, set free, to Eden flies.    B. n.the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > stupid, foolish, or inadequate person > stupid person, dolt, blockhead > 			[noun]		 the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > stupid, foolish, or inadequate person > foolish person, fool > 			[noun]		 the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > stupid, foolish, or inadequate person > stupid person, dolt, blockhead > lout, oaf, booby > 			[noun]		 1722    A. Ramsay   iii. 25  				Then let the Doof delight in drudging; What Cause have we to tent his grudging? a1779    D. Graham  		(1883)	 II. 9  				Your father was a fool for fashing wi' him, auld slavery dufe. 1788    J. Macaulay  151  				See how he gaunts an' rakes his een, As if he gat nae sleep thestreen; A bigger doof was never seen. 1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl.  				Dufe,..a soft silly fellow, S[cotia] O[ccidentalis]. the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > non-resonance > 			[noun]		 > non-resonant impact sound > soft impact 1818    J. Hogg  I. vii. 135  				They had gotten some sair doofs—They had been terribly paikit and daddit wi' something. 1821    J. Hogg  		(ed. 2)	 II. 41  				I had seendil watherit a selwyn raddour, but boddin that I wad coup, that I muchtna gie a dooffe, I hurklit litherlye down, and craup forret alang on myne looffiss and myne schynes. 1834     187  				I hear the douf o' Geordie Barnet's drum beatin' to airms. 1846     Aug. 230/2  				If ye pit saut in ma mooth, I'll hit ye a duff in the muns! 1850     9 Apr.  				But mak a flail they'll gart play dowf Upo' your biggin'. 1890     1 160  				He insisted that he had often..heard the ‘douf, douf’ of the flails as they [sc. the fairies] struck the sheaf on the earthen floor. 1923    G. Watson  118  				Duiff, 1. A blow with a softish substance, as peat. 2. A dull- or hollow-sounding blow. 1953    M. Traynor  90/2  				Duff, a dull, heavy blow. 2008    D. C. Purdie  31  				The rain's dribbling dowf on the ruif o the howff, Ootbye, the biggin site's glabber.   Compoundsa1522    G. Douglas tr.  Virgil  		(1959)	  ix. ii. 50  				The dolf hartit Troianys. Derivatives a1522    G. Douglas tr.  Virgil  		(1960)	  xi. xiv. 21  				Huge dolfnes and schaymful cowardice. 1818    J. Hogg  II. 38  				There was a kind o' doufness and mellancholly in his looks. 1837    J. Baillie in  Ld. Northampton  342  				But Willie now has cross'd the main, And he has been o'erlang awa'; Ah, would he were returned again To drive the doufness frae us a'! 1891    G. Wallace in  D. H. Edwards  14th Ser. 356  				He, through fondness, bashfu' grows, She mistakes love's silent vows For doufness. 1999    D. Purves tr.  A. Chekhov  		(SCOTS)	  i  				A mukkil blatter is on its road for ti freshen us up..an it's gaun ti blaw awa aw this idleset an dowfness, an prejudice agin wark.  This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022). dowfv. Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: dowf adj.; dowf n. Etymology: Partly (in sense  1)  <  dowf adj., and partly (in sense  2)  <  dowf n. With sense  2   perhaps compare Dutch regional (Flemish) doffen   to strike (19th cent. or earlier); compare later duff v.4  Scottish. Now  rare. the world > action or operation > inaction > disinclination to act or listlessness > be listless or lethargic			[verb (intransitive)]		 > become 1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl.  				Douf, to become dull. To douf and stupe, to be in a state of languor and partial stupor. 1838    J. Struthers  77  				Auld age douffs down the spirit.  2.  transitive. Cf.  dowf n. 2. the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific degree of force > strike with specific degree of force			[verb (transitive)]		 > strike heavily > with dull sound 1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl.  				Dufe, to give a blow with a softish substance, Clydes., Loth., Roxb.; synon. Baff. 1865    W. H. L. Tester  175  				The clods are dowfin' doo'some on her little coffin lid. 1873    J. Wood  78  				She doofs and birses Fluter doon, Wha rows an' whumles i' the poke. 1925    E. C. Smith  10  				The Auld Cross—sair duifft an neiteet an nickeet wui Teime an the weather. 2015    M. Fitt tr.  ‘D. Walliams’  iv. 56  				Mither left the room, graundly doofin the door ahint her shut. society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > play ball in specific way 1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl.  				Douff, to strike forcibly, as Ye've douff't your ba' o'er the dike. You have driven your ball over the wall. 1898    J. Baillie  64  				Others were trying for ‘skinned ba's doufed’. They had a ball with a long string attached, which was thrown up until it rested beside another ball lying in the rhone; then with a sharp twitch they perhaps chanced to bring down the doufed ball. 1906    C. B. Gunn  65  				Several players struggled after the one ball whose aim was to ‘dowf’ it upon the leads.   Derivatives 1825    J. Jamieson  Suppl. 353/2  				Duffingbout, a thumping or beating.  This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  adj.n.a1522 v.1825 |