单词 | file |
释义 | filen.1 1. a. A metal (usually steel) instrument, having one or more of its surfaces covered with numerous small raised cutting edges or teeth, for abrading, reducing, or smoothing surfaces. to bite file, gnaw a file: figurative to make an attempt that can result only in vexatious failure (in allusion to the fable); similarly to lick a file (see quot. 1647). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > shaping tools or equipment > file > [noun] filea800 the world > action or operation > endeavour > make an attempt or endeavour [verb (intransitive)] > attempt the impossible to hunt for or catch a hare with a tabor1399 gnaw a file1484 to take hares with foxes1577 to seek a hare in a hen's nest1599 to wash a Negro (white)1611 to milk the bull (also he-goat, ram)1616 to lick a file1647 to set the tortoise to catch the hare1803 to look for a needle in a haystack1855 to bite file1880 a800 Corpus Gloss. (Sweet) 1234 Lima, fiil. OE Riddle 71 4 Nu eom wraþra laf, fyres ond feole, fæste genearwad, wire geweorþad. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Isa. xliv. 12 The yren smyth with the file wroȝte. 1432 in F. J. Furnivall Fifty Earliest Eng. Wills (1882) 91 A vyle, and a forser with loke and kye. 1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope iii. xii She [the serpent] fond a fyle whiche she beganne to gnawe with her teethe. c1550 Complaynt Scotl. (1979) iii. 22 Ane file is ane instrument to file doune yrn. 1647 H. More Philos. Poems i. 11. cxii Like the mistaken Cat that lick'd the file. 1649 Bp. J. Hall Humble Motion to Parl. 26 As soone as they have done licking of this file. 1697 J. Evelyn Numismata vi. 214 The File..which they..use for the better smoothing of the Edges. 1774 J. Beattie Minstrel: 2nd Bk. xiv. 8 So gnaw'd the viper the corroding file. 1824 T. Tredgold Pract. Ess. Strength of Cast Iron 90 These bars yielded freely to the file. 1880 W. Cory Guide Mod. Eng. Hist. i. 105 He bit at the file of English obstinacy, and broke his teeth. b. figurative esp. with reference to the polish imparted by a file. (Cf. the use of Latin lima.) ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > shaping tools or equipment > file > [noun] > polish imparted by filec1230 c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 147 He is þi file. þe misseið oðer misdeð þe. a1637 B. Jonson Masque of Gypsies 98 in tr. Horace Art of Poetry (1640) From a tongue without a file, Heapes of Phrases, and no Stile. a1639 H. Wotton Let. in Reliquiæ Wottonianæ (1685) 341 If it shall pass the file of your Judgment. 1749 M. Akenside Odes ii. i The nice touches of the critic's file. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Pelecypoda or Conchifera > [noun] > section Siphonida > sinu-pallialia > family Pholadidae > member of Teredo1398 tree-worm1398 broma1555 worm1621 pholas1661 pirot1686 piddock1696 file1705 pholad1708 pileworm1733 file-shell1752 file-fish1774 ship-worm1778 rock-piercer1783 borer1789 pholadean1842 1705 J. Petiver in Philos. Trans. 1704–05 (Royal Soc.) 24 1955 The fine blush Jamaica File. 3. slang. An artful, cunning, or shrewd person. Also, a man, ‘fellow’, ‘cove’.[Cf. French slang lime sourde, lit. ‘a silent file’, in similar sense.] ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > cunning > [noun] > astuteness > person Yorker1599 ferret1629 Yorkshire bite1801 file1819 gnostic1819 shrewdc1858 shrewd-head1916 shrewdie1916 piss-cutter1935 1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. 173 File, a person who has had a long course of experience in the arts of fraud..is termed an old file upon the town;..a man who is extremely cunning..is a deep file. 1819 Metropolis (ed. 2) I. 61 You're an old file. I know you well; you're as deep as Garrick. 1838 C. Dickens Oliver Twist III. xlii. 132 The Dodger..desired the jailer to communicate ‘the names of them two old files as was on the bench’. 1848 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair lv. 494 All the old files of the Ring were in it. 1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. iv. 94 Old Blow-hard..was a dry old file. 1877 F. Ross et al. Gloss. Words Holderness ‘A deep awd file.’ Compounds C1. General attributive. a. Simple attributive. file-chisel n. ΚΠ 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. File-chisel. file-cut n. ΚΠ 1888 P. N. Hasluck Mech. Workshop Handybk. 86 This method of crossing the file-cuts..is recommended. file-dust n. ΚΠ 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. 519 The file dust which commeth of lead. 1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) at File Little shavings or shreds..called file dust. file-handle n. ΚΠ 1888 Lockwood's Dict. Mech. Engin. File-Handle. file-mark n. ΚΠ 1889 P. N. Hasluck Model Engineer's Handybk. 131 File marks running in straight parallel lines. file-smith n. ΚΠ 1865 Pall Mall Gaz. 19 Oct. 4 A meeting of the File~smiths' Union. file-stroke n. ΚΠ 1678 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. i. 15 The Smooth file is to take out those cuts or file-stroaks that the fine file made. 1888 P. N. Hasluck Mech. Workshop Handybk. 84 Without stopping the file-strokes. file-trade n. ΚΠ 1887 Daily News 20 June 2/6 In the file trade there is apparently a slight change. b. Objective. file-cleaner n. ΚΠ 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. File-cleaner. file-cutter n. ΚΠ 1678 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. iii. 55 File-Cutters also use it to make their Chissels. 1890 Pall Mall Gaz. 2 Sept. 4/2 The knife-grinders and file-cutters in Sheffield. file-grinder n. ΚΠ 1883 Daily News 25 June 2/8 The file-grinders still stand out. file-maker n. ΚΠ 1842 Bk. Trades 230 Some File-makers are in the habit of using the coal of burnt leather. file-cutting n. ΚΠ 1819 A. Rees Cycl. XIV. at File The most likely machine for file-cutting. file-finishing n. file-grinding adj. ΚΠ 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. File-grinding Machine, a machine for surfacing forged or rolled file-blanks to bring them to form previous to cutting. file-nibbling n. ΚΠ 1869 Times 1 Jan. 4 Mighty little will be done by such file-nibbling or tinkering over law of entail. file-tempering n. ΚΠ 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. File-tempering. C2. Special combinations. Also file-fish n. file-blank n. a piece of soft steel, shaped and ground ready for cutting, to form a file; also attributive. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > steel > [noun] > other pieces of steel file-blank1874 tit1896 mesh1904 rebar1955 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. File-blank. 1892 P. L. Simmonds Commerc. Dict. Trade Products (rev. ed.) Suppl. File-blank Forger, a workman who prepares the crude material for the file-cutter. file-card n. a card used for cleaning files. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > other cleaning methods, devices, or substances > [noun] > devices comb-brush1611 pickler1758 pegwood1822 bottle washer1826 knife-board1829 riper1880 file-card1884 iron cloth1889 bottle-cleaner1896 soot-blower1930 1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. File Card. 1888 P. N. Hasluck Mech. Workshop Handybk. 86 These file cards are used in the same way as the scratch brushes. file-carrier n. (see quot): ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > shaping tools or equipment > file > [noun] > handle or holder for file-carrier1874 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. File-carrier, a tool-holder like the stock of a frame-saw. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > condition of being fast bound or firmly fixed > [adverb] fasteOE fastlyeOE hardOE hetefastea1225 file-fasta1250 sickerlyc1275 stiff1525 tighta1625 soundly1632 starkly1819 tightlya1865 bracingly1874 a1250 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Nero) (1952) 109 Đe ueond..wearð i bunden uileueste [?c1225 Cleo. heteueste] mid te holie monnes beoden. file-shell n. a species of Pholas, so called from the roughness of its shell. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Pelecypoda or Conchifera > [noun] > section Siphonida > sinu-pallialia > family Pholadidae > member of Teredo1398 tree-worm1398 broma1555 worm1621 pholas1661 pirot1686 piddock1696 file1705 pholad1708 pileworm1733 file-shell1752 file-fish1774 ship-worm1778 rock-piercer1783 borer1789 pholadean1842 1752 J. Hill Gen. Nat. Hist. III. 177 The West Indian File-shell. file snake n. a non-poisonous colubrid snake of the genus Mehelya, found in South Africa. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > reptiles > order Squamata (lizards and snakes) > suborder Ophidia (snakes) > types of snake > [noun] > family Colubridae > miscellaneous types of grey snake1703 garter-snake1775 boomslang1793 scarlet snake1842 blunt head1869 tiger-snake1869 house snake1870 ground-snake1885 lycodont1887 mole snake1893 sling-snake1895 file snake1912 mussurana1914 1908 Ann. Transvaal Mus. 1 23 Simocephalus capensis (Smith). Three-cornered Snake. Vijlslang.] 1912 F. W. Fitzsimons Snakes S. Afr. iv. 96 Three-cornered or File Snakes..although found in most parts of South Africa, seem to be rather rare everywhere. 1931 Discovery Mar. 74/2 A file snake captured a frog. 1962 R. M. Isemonger Snakes Afr. 98 The file snake is generally feared by Africans, who associate its entry to their house with the death of a relative or friend. file-stripper n. (see quot.). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > shaping tools or equipment > file > [noun] > machine for recutting file-stripper1874 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. File-stripper, a machine in which a worn-out file after being softened by heat, and slow cooling, is smoothed to prepare it for being re-cut. Draft additions October 2011 file snake n. each of three large fish-eating aquatic snakes constituting the genus Acrochordus and family Acrochordidae , native to South-East Asia and Australia and having loose skin and coarse-textured tricuspid scales which give them a file-like appearance; also called wart snake.Formerly placed in the family Colubridae. ΚΠ 1918 Queenslander 23 Feb. 29/2 The so-called ‘file’ snake of the Gulf of Van Diemen, Northern Territory, is one of the favourite foods of the aboriginal natives of the neighbourhood. 1936 Amer. Anthropologist 38 378 No pregnant woman may eat the large water snake popularly known as the Javan file snake (Acrochordus javanicus). 2004 Oceanogr. & Marine Biol. 42 120 Sharp teeth are one such mechanism, as are the rows of extended ventral scales of marine file snakes (Acrochordidae) that enable the limbless reptiles to hold their slippery prey as they coil around them. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online June 2022). filen.2 I. Senses chiefly representing French fil. a. figurative. The thread of life. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > [noun] > expectation of life > thread of life line of lifec1580 filleta1592 file1606 1606 N. Baxter Sir Philip Sydneys Ouránia sig. Nijv The fatall Sisters would not cut her file. b. transferred. Of the nerves: A nerve-cord. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > nervous system > substance of nervous system > [noun] > nerve fibre > band or collection of file1607 funiculus1824 nerve filament1839 fillet1840 nerve fibril1851 lemniscus1857 nerve cord1864 nerve bundle1865 nerve branch1874 nerve plexus1877 nerve tract1877 neuropilema1891 neuropil1894 fibre tract1904 1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 284 A dubble file or thred to the toppe of the taile. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > meaning > meaning of linguistic unit > drift, tenor, purport > [noun] sentence?c1225 intent1303 tenora1387 intendment1390 strengthc1390 porta1393 meaningc1395 process1395 continencea1398 purposec1400 substance1415 purport1422 matterc1450 storyc1450 containing1477 contenu1477 retinue1484 fecka1500 content1513 drift1526 intention1532 vein1543 importing1548 scope1549 importance1552 course1553 force1555 sense?1556 file1560 intelliment?1562 proporta1578 preport1583 import1588 importment1602 carriage1604 morala1616 significancy1641 amount1678 purview1688 sentiment1713 capacity1720 spirit1742 message1828 thrust1968 messaging1977 1560 J. Knox et al. Buke Discipline in J. Knox Wks. (1848) II. 244 Following the fyle and dependence of the text. a1599 E. Spenser Canto Mutabilitie vi. xxxvii, in Faerie Queene (1609) sig. Hh5v Ill fitting for this file, To sing of hilles & woods, mongst warres & Knights. 1612 T. Shelton tr. M. de Cervantes Don-Quixote: Pt. 1 x. 209 You must promise me that you will not interrupt the File of my doleful Narration. a1639 H. Wotton View Life & Death Duke of Buckingham in Reliquiæ Wottonianæ (1685) 223 Let me resume the File of my Relation. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. 116 If the file of his purposes be rightly considered. 3. a. A string or wire, on which papers and documents are strung for preservation and reference. Later extended to various other appliances for holding papers so that they can be easily referred to. ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > written record > arrangement and storage of written records > [noun] > filing > file filace1434 file1525 box file1885 case file1904 accordion folder1913 1525 in Vicary's Anat. Bodie of Man (1888) App. viii. 214 Thapothecaries shall kepe the billis that they serue, vpon a fyle. 1649 Lanc. Tracts (Chetham Soc.) 233 Their examinations remaining still upon fyle in Manchester. 1666 S. Pepys Diary 9 Dec. (1972) VII. 402 Burning all the unnecessary letters which I have had upon my File for four or five years backward. 1732 Acc. Workhouses 175 Keep the tradesmen's notes upon a file. a1777 S. Foote Devil upon Two Sticks (1778) ii. 29 There are some of their names, I am sure, that I never desire to see on my file. 1866 W. Collins Armadale II. iv. iii. 277 Some place in the City where all the papers are kept, as he calls it, in file. 1882 W. Black Shandon Bells vi A printed slip which the latter pulled off a file. b. esp. one in a court of law to hold proceedings or documents in a cause, etc.; the list of documents, etc., in a cause.In the Court of Chancery the pleadings themselves were filed; in the Common Law Courts the pleadings and judgements were enrolled, and only affidavits and collateral documents were filed. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal document > [noun] > wire on which strung file1607 society > communication > record > written record > arrangement and storage of written records > [noun] > filing > file > in court of law file1607 1607 J. Cowell Interpreter sig. Ff2/2 File..is a threed or wyer, whereon writs [etc.]. 1631 in S. R. Gardiner Rep. Cases Star Chamber & High Comm. (1886) 42 The sentence of the court was..that the bill should be taken off the fyle, that [etc.]. 1718 M. Prior Solomon on Vanity ii, in Poems Several Occasions (new ed.) 458 Causes unjudg'd disgrace the loaded file. 1805 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. V. 230 They will not, however, order the fine to be taken off the file. 1833 J. M. Mylne & B. Keen Rep. Cases Chancery II. 247 This was the only bill upon the file relative to the testator's estate. 1885 Law Times Rep. 52 681/2 A motion was made to take the affidavits off the file. ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > list > [noun] tableOE scorec1325 billa1340 calendar?a1400 legendc1400 librarya1450 Ragmanc1450 Ragman rollc1450 cataloguea1464 repertory1542 scrowa1545 bedroll?1552 roll1565 file1566 state1582 inventory1589 brief1600 series1601 counter-roll1603 list1604 muster roll1605 cense1615 pinax1625 repertoirec1626 diagram1631 recensiona1638 repertorium1667 vocabulary1694 albe1697 enumeration1725 screed1748 album1753 tableau1792 roll-call1833 shopping list1923 laundry list1958 remainder list1977 1566 J. Partridge Worthie Hystorie Plasidas D iij Thus ended they their mortall race, their file was at an ende. 1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 i. iii. 10 Our present musters grow vpon the file, To fiue and twenty thousand men of choise. 1620 T. Dekker Dreame sig. C1v With Pens of Steele, Eternall Files to keepe Of euery Nation, since the Earth began. 1697 J. Dryden Disc. Epick Poetry in Prose Wks. (1800) III. 441 The file of heroick poets is very short. 1702 C. Mather Magnalia Christi iii. iii. i. 183/2 It would not be improper, under this File to lodge the singular and surprizing Successes of his Prayers. 1795 E. Burke Lett. Peace Regic. France iv, in Wks. (1818) IX. 335 Catalogued files of murders. 4. a. A collection of papers placed on a file, or merely arranged in order of date or subject for ready reference. ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > written record > arrangement and storage of written records > [noun] > collection of papers filea1626 a1626 F. Bacon Advice to G. Villiers in Wks. (1740) III. 566 After you have ranked them into several files, according to the subject matter. 1699 S. Garth Dispensary iii. 30 Then from the Compter he takes down the File, And with Prescriptions lights the solemn Pyle. 1806 Naval Chron. 15 113 Files of newspapers. 1806 Wilberforce in G. Rose Diaries (1860) II. 212 Having just this moment got a file of letters. 1847 Ld. Houghton Let. 30 Nov. in T. W. Reid Life Ld. Houghton (1890) I. ix. 401 You can get at..the news-room a file of the Times. 1851 D. Jerrold St. Giles & St. James (new ed.) xii, in Writings I. 121 A man who has a file of receipts to show for everything. 1857 E. C. Gaskell Life C. Brontë II. iv. 114 She sent to Leeds for a file of the ‘Mercuries’ of 1812, '13, and '14. b. Computing. A collection of related records stored for use by a computer and able to be processed by it. Also attributive and in other combinations. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file data file1895 file1954 audio file1956 disc file1957 computer file1964 doc1986 1954 Jrnl. Assoc. Computing Machinery 1 8/2 A ‘master’ tape..contains the file of unit records as at the last date of processing. 1967 N. S. M. Cox & M. W. Grose Organization Bibliogr. Rec. by Computer 19 A file sequence may contain only one file, and this is generally the case when updating procedures are being carried out. 1969 Computers & Humanities 3 132 This search (once through the file), whether for a single interrogation or for several, is called a file-pass. 5. Heraldry. = label n.1 2 (but sometimes distinguished: cf. quot. 1727). [So in French.] ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > insignia > heraldic devices collective > charge: device on shield > [noun] > less honourable charge > horizontal line across upper part labela1400 file1562 1562 G. Legh Accedens of Armory f. 183 He beareth Argent, a fyle withe iii. Lambeaux Azure. For a difference some will call this a Labell of .iii. pointes. a1641 J. Smyth Berkeley MSS (1883) I. 120 The Cheveron..distinguished by a file with five labels to shew that he was a fifth brother. 1710 T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. 5 May A Shield with a Cross Saltire and a File of 3 Points. 1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) at File Some distinguish File and Label, calling the File the upper horizontal Line, and the Label the Point that issues from it. 1889 C. N. Elvin Dict. Heraldry 61/1 File, or Label. 6. A disease, ? from its producing an appearance of lines or threads: ΘΚΠ the world > plants > disease or injury > [noun] > associated with particular type of plant > trees wind-shake1545 file1600 joint-ache1601 wind-shock1664 measles1674 hidebound1678 carcinoma1832 knot1845 cup-defect1875 cup-shake1875 beech disease1905 1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique iii. xlvii. 520 The file is a disease in trees that fretteth their barkes. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. v. 86/1 File in Trees, is a Disease that frets and corrupts the Bark. b. In cattle. dialect. ΚΠ 1892 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words ‘File in the foot’ is a disease peculiar to cattle and sheep. II. Senses representing French file. 7. Military. a. The number of men constituting the depth from front to rear of a formation in line, etc. in file: one behind the other. For Indian file n., single file n. see those adjectives. rank and file: see rank and file n.The front of a file is one man (the file-leader), the depth may be any number; but in the modern English formation of infantry it is only two, consisting of the front and the rear rank men. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > [adverb] in rank1581 in file1598 in rank and file1598 the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > arrangement in (a) row(s) or line(s > in (a) row(s) or line(s [phrase] > one behind the other in file1598 society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > [noun] > line > file file1598 string1627 rot1632 rat1646 counter-file1653 1598 R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres iii. 37 By file, I vnderstand all the line..of all the souldiers standing consequently one after another, from front to the traine. 1625 G. Markham Souldiers Accidence 6 A File..ought neuer to be aboue ten persons deepe. 1633 T. Stafford Pacata Hibernia iii. ii. 291 It was impossible for men to march but in file. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vi. 339 His Chariot..stood retir'd From off the files of warr. View more context for this quotation 1735 tr. C. Rollin Anc. Hist. IV. 338 Each platoon had..eight in depth, for that was the usual depth of the files. 1790 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) II. 535 Great Argyle led on his files. 1796 Instr. & Regulations Cavalry 47 The others..will first cover in file with precision. 1810 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1838) VI. 208 The 16th are very strong; when I saw them the other day they were 59 file a squadron. 1816 Ld. Byron Siege of Corinth xxiii. 39 Even as they fell, in files they lay. 1838 W. H. Prescott Hist. Reign Ferdinand & Isabella I. i. x. 345 Riding along their broken files. 1864 W. W. Skeat tr. J. L. Uhland Songs & Ballads 243 The brave Fernando, Searching through the files of war. b. Phrases: †to accept the files, to open one's own ranks for a charging enemy to enter. to double the files: to put two files in one and so make the ranks smaller; also figurative. to close their files, see close v. 10b to take the right-hand file, to take precedence. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > importance > [verb (intransitive)] > other to take the right-hand file1616 first1635 to speak in capitals?1694 to take the (or a) lead1761 to play first (or second) fiddle1778 to play first violin1780 to be no great (some great, considerable, etc.) shakes1819 to pitch it strong1823 to come out strong1825 violin1895 repeat1923 the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > reputation > honour > be honoured [verb (intransitive)] > take precedence to take the right-hand file1616 precede1654 society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > form or reform [verb (intransitive)] > put two files in one to double the files1616 society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > form or reform [verb (intransitive)] > open or close ranks to close ranks or files1797 to accept the files1868 1616 J. Bingham in tr. Ælian Tactiks xxix. 137 Double your files to the right or left hand. 1630 P. Massinger Picture sig. H3 There are Many..who may take..the right hand file of you. 1642 T. Fuller Holy State i. i. 3 In her husbands absence she is wife and deputy-husband, which makes her double the files of her diligence. 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) at File To Double the Files. 1868 A. W. Kinglake Invasion of Crimea (ed. 4) IV. v. 163 It used to be said of the foreigners that they ‘accepted the files’. c. A small body of men, formerly varying in number from two to twelve or more, but now usually two. Also, when ‘marching in files’ (see file-marching n. at Compounds 2), the two soldiers walking abreast. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > [noun] > other formations herse1523 shears1562 snail1579 rendy1581 saw battle1598 shear-battle1598 file1616 horn battle1635 sconce-battle1635 potence1760 echelon1796 marching order1819 harrow1876 zariba1887 society > armed hostility > armed forces > the Army > unit of army > [noun] > squad, platoon, section, etc. glub1382 scalec1400 platoon?a1547 maniple1574 squadron1579 squader1590 squadrant1614 file1616 squada1657 peloton1702 section1913 1616 J. Bingham in tr. Ælian Tactiks xxix. 136 When 16 men (that is a file) are so extended, that they possesse as much length as 32 should doe (that is, as 2 files). 1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia vi. 239 They met with a file of Saluages that let fly their Arrowes. 1647 J. Sprigge Anglia Rediviva ii. iv. 94 12 files of men with fire-arms and Pikes. 1702 R. Steele Funeral v. 65 A File of Men, Bumpkin, is six Men. 1769 ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra (1772) II. xxxi. 13 The General was escorted by a file of musqueteers. 1832 Proposed Regulations Cavalry iii. 45 A File—Two Soldiers placed one behind the other when formed in ranks, but abreast when marching in file. 1836 F. Marryat Mr. Midshipman Easy I. viii. 100 I shall send a sergeant and a file of marines, to fetch you. 1844 Queen's Regulations & Orders Army 262 A Non-commissioned Officer, with a file of men. d. An individual soldier. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > [noun] thanec893 knightc1175 soldiera1300 osteyoura1450 servitor?1570 marshalman1575 soldado1577 soldat1591 manat1610 camper1631 soldade1634 buff coata1670 swad1708 militaire1746 red herring1789 coolie1803 swaddy1819 swad-gill1819 scarlet runnerc1864 guffy1882 leatherneck1890 pongo1890 hoster1892 swatty1901 file1903 squaddie1933 brown job1943 1903 Med. Record 7 Feb. 227 (Cent. Dict. Suppl.) The poor file who has to carry it, as well as his gun and various other accoutrements. 1916 ‘B. Cable’ Action Front 105 ‘Dusty Miller’, the next file on his left,..spoke to him. 8. A row of persons, animals, or things placed one behind the other. the common file = ‘the common herd’ (obsolete or archaic) in file: one after another, in succession. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social class > the common people > [noun] folkc888 peoplea1325 frapec1330 commona1350 common peoplea1382 commonsa1382 commontya1387 communityc1400 meiniec1400 commonaltya1425 commonsa1500 vulgarsa1513 many1526 meinie1532 multitude1535 the many-headed beast (also monster)1537 number1542 ignobility1546 commonitya1550 popular1554 populace1572 popularya1578 vulgarity?1577 populacya1583 rout1589 the vulgar1590 plebs1591 mobile vulgusc1599 popularity1599 ignoble1603 the million1604 plebe1612 plebeity1614 the common filea1616 the herda1616 civils1644 commonality1649 democracy1656 menu1658 mobile1676 crowd1683 vulgusa1687 mob1691 Pimlico parliament?1774 citizenry1795 polloi1803 demos1831 many-headed1836 hoi polloi1837 the masses1837 citizenhood1843 John Q.1922 wimble-wamble1937 the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > arrangement in (a) row(s) or line(s > [noun] > a line or row > of people or things one behind the other tracec1385 filea1616 string1686 the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > in order, sequence, or succession [phrase] a-row?c1225 by rowc1230 on (also upon) a rowc1300 by and by1330 in a rowc1330 on rowc1330 in routc1390 in successionc1449 by succession(s)?a1475 in sequencea1575 in (also by) progression1660 member by member1726 in file1744 a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) iii. i. 399 The greater file of the subiect held the Duke to be wise. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Coriolanus (1623) i. vii. 43 The common file..did budge From Rascals worse then they. View more context for this quotation 1656 tr. T. Hobbes Elements Philos. iv. xxix. 364 This Hoarse Sound..seemeth to be nothing but the dividing of the Aire into innumerable and very small Files. 1714 A. Pope Rape of Lock (new ed.) i. 9 Here Files of Pins extend their shining Rows. 1740 W. Somervile Hobbinol iii. 230 Before him march in Files The rural Minstralsy. 1744 R. North & M. North Life Sir D. North & Rev. J. North 163 He furnished..one State-apartment of diverse Rooms in File. 1826 B. Disraeli Vivian Grey II. iii. viii. 118 I push my way into court through files of attorneys. 1827 B. Disraeli Vivian Grey IV. vi. i. 24 A double file of wine-glasses and goblets. 1835 H. Miller Scenes & Legends N. Scotl. xvii. 289 An endless file of bare gloomy cliffs. 1838 W. H. Prescott Hist. Reign Ferdinand & Isabella I. i. xi. 374 Whose military prowess had raised him from the common file. 1839 C. Darwin in R. Fitzroy & C. Darwin Narr. Surv. Voy. H.M.S. Adventure & Beagle III. ii. 40 When the ants came to the road they changed their course, and in narrow files reascended the wall. 1842 W. Wordsworth Guilt & Sorrow iv, in Poems Early & Late Years 7 Long files of corn-stacks. 1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xvi. 192 The men were standing in silent file on each side of it. 1867 M. E. Herbert Cradle Lands iv. 121 A file of camels. 9. Chess. One of the eight lines of squares extending across the board from player to player. an open file: one on which no piece or pawn of either colour is standing. to seize the open file: to place a rook or the queen on the first square. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [noun] > chessboard > rank or file > file file1614 1614 A. Saul Famous Game Chesse-play i. sig. A7v Imagine that the blacke King for his first draught playeth his owne Pawne into the third house in his owne file. 1680 C. Cotton Compl. Gamester (ed. 2) iv. 39 The Rook goes backward and forward in any file. 1860 G. F. Pardon Handbk. Chess 15 The horizontal rows of squares are termed ranks and the vertical squares files. 10. The run or track of a hare; also, to run her file (see quot. 1838). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > thing hunted or game > [noun] > track righta1425 view?1516 persue1530 abature1575 blemish1575 foil1575 marks1575 entry1627 gate1677 file1815 stain1832 1815 Sporting Mag. 45 109 It is strictly necessary to look into the hares' files for wires. 1838 W. Holloway Gen. Dict. Provincialisms When sportsmen say the hare runs her File, that is runs round the same track continually to foil or deceive the dogs. Compounds C1. General attributive. a. file-closer n. ΚΠ 1836 J. Hildreth Dragoon Campaigns Rocky Mts. i. vi. 48 Next in order of inspection came the adjutant, and, commencing at the right of the line, ‘told off’ the battalion by equal troops, the subalterns taking their stations in the rank of file-closers. 1888 Harper's Mag. Apr. 788/1 The..officers hidden as file-closers behind their companies. ΚΠ 1775 J. Ash New Dict. Eng. Lang. File-lead..the foremost man in the file. file-leader n. ΚΠ 1616 J. Bingham tr. Ælian Tactiks v. 42 Hee, that leadeth the file, who is also called the file-leader. 1796 Instr. & Regulations Cavalry 26 The file leaders preserve such distances as they ought from which ever hand they are to dress to. 1848 W. Irving Hist. N.Y. (rev. ed.) iv. viii. 233 Most people require a..file-leader. file-mark n. b. (In sense 4.) file card n. ΚΠ 1966 Eng. Stud. 47 200 It is as though a scholar..were to decide to re-arrange a mountainous stack of file-cards. file copy n. ΘΚΠ society > communication > book > copy > [noun] > other types of copy fine paper copy1789 review book1796 advance copy1837 reading copy1847 manifold1852 review copy1859 press copy1891 working copy1897 file copy1899 binding copy1936 desk copy1942 ideal copy1949 society > communication > writing > written text > [noun] > transcript or copy > filed for reference, editor's copy file copy1899 1899 Daily News 23 Jan. 4/7 Prudent swains might find a file copy extremely useful in general emergencies. 1909 Daily Chron. 2 Sept. 4/7 The file copy of ‘The Daily Chronicle’ of the same date. 1930 D. L. Sayers Strong Poison vi. 77 I don't think you could get a first edition in London for love or money. We have nothing here but our own file copies. 1968 V. C. Clinton-Baddeley My Foe Outstretch'd ii. 27 I don't know why Miss Cragg couldn't give you a tape... I suppose..she's only got a file copy. file cover n. ΚΠ 1925 J. G. Bruce in E. F. Norton et al. Fight for Everest: 1924 vi. 349 A few file covers are useful to keep the correspondence on various subjects separate. file signal n. ΚΠ 1961 Lebende Sprachen 6 69/2 Office furniture, machines and supplies. File signal. C2. file-fire n. firing by files, now called independent firing (opposed to volley-firing). ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > [noun] > type of firing point and blank1590 false fire1602 potting1613 point-blank1614 running fire1629 pounding1633 bulleting1635 platooning1706 sharp-shot1725 street firing1727 ricochet1740 fire curtain1744 plunging fire1747 reverse fire1758 sniping1773 enfilade1796 rapid fire1800 line-firing1802 concentric1804 sharpshooting1806 rake1810 sniping fire1821 cross-firing1837 file-firing1837 curved fire1854 night firing1856 file-fire1857 volley-firing1859 cross-fire1860 joy-firing1864 snap-shooting1872 stringing1873 pot-shooting1874 indirect fire1879 sweeping1907 rapid1913 curtain of fire1916 ripple1939 ripple-firing1940 ripple fire1961 1857 New Boy at Styles's in Househ. Words 9 May 436 The usual file-fire of glances was exchanged. file-firing n. = file-fire n. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > [noun] > type of firing point and blank1590 false fire1602 potting1613 point-blank1614 running fire1629 pounding1633 bulleting1635 platooning1706 sharp-shot1725 street firing1727 ricochet1740 fire curtain1744 plunging fire1747 reverse fire1758 sniping1773 enfilade1796 rapid fire1800 line-firing1802 concentric1804 sharpshooting1806 rake1810 sniping fire1821 cross-firing1837 file-firing1837 curved fire1854 night firing1856 file-fire1857 volley-firing1859 cross-fire1860 joy-firing1864 snap-shooting1872 stringing1873 pot-shooting1874 indirect fire1879 sweeping1907 rapid1913 curtain of fire1916 ripple1939 ripple-firing1940 ripple fire1961 1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. III. vi. iii. 362 His Jurymen are charged to make feu de file, file-firing till the ground be clear. 1847 Infantry Man. (1854) 40 Independent or file firing may commence. file-marching n. marching in files, by turning from a formation in line to the right or left, so that the line becomes a series of files facing to the right or left flank. ΚΠ 1824 H. W. Torrens Field Exercise Army (rev. ed.) ii. 45 File marching may be adopted. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Compositae (composite plants) > [noun] > cudweeds horewortc1400 chafeweed1548 chafewort1548 cudweed1548 cudwort1548 cartafilago1551 cottonweed1562 downweed1562 petty cotton1578 small cotton1578 file-wort1597 live forever1597 livelong1597 life-everlasting1629 white plantain1687 petty coy1736 cat's-foot1739 owl's crown1787 1597 J. Gerard Herball App. Filewort is Filago minor. Draft additions 1993 file directory n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > organization > directory or sub-directory directory1962 file directory1968 subdirectory1971 1968 IEEE Internat. Convention Digest 94/2 A code word or name for the file should be returned to the individual's local computer system and an entry made in his own individual file directory. 1983 WordStar Ref. Manual (Release 3.3) ix. 7 Use F at the Opening Menu to switch the File directory for your currently logged disk drive on or off. Draft additions 1993 file handling n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > working with files file handling1958 file management1967 1958 Communications Assoc. Computing Machinery 1 31 The file handling commands have been designed to facilitate the addition of new requests. 1980 C. S. French Computer Sci. xxxi. 265 The techniques apply mainly to sequential and Index Sequential file handling. Draft additions 1993 file maintenance n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > maintaining files file maintenance1959 1959 Business Computer Symposium iv. 157 (heading) Large scale file maintenance. 1986 Byte May 270/3 You..have access to file maintenance, textfont controls, and screen-element editing. Draft additions 1993 file management n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > working with files file handling1958 file management1967 1967 Proc. 21st Nat. Conf. Assoc. Computing Machinery 75 (heading) Design of a multi-level file management system. 1985 Personal Computer World Feb. 13 (advt.) 1-2-3 from Lotus, most popular spreadsheet, file management and business graphics program, is permanently built into the Portable. Draft additions 1993 file-name n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > filename file-name1971 1971 Communications ACM 14 409/1 It is assumed that there is a similarity of function between the data names of a programming language and the file names of an operating system. 1985 Personal Computer World Feb. 140/3 It does also display the filename along with a cursor which you can use to edit the filename. Draft additions 1993 file organization n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > organization file organization1959 1959 Proc. Western Joint Computer Conf. 1958 194 (heading) Methods of file organization for efficient use of IBM RAMAC Files. 1985 Byte Dec. 221/2 You can't just say, ‘Well, with version 4 we'll go to a totally new file organization,’ because then conversion programs will need writing. Draft additions 1993 file transfer n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > transferring files file transfer1971 1971 Rev. Electr. Communication Lab. (Tokyo) Mar. 246 An addition of file transfer function made possible wide applications. 1986 Byte Oct. 300/1 Unless you absolutely need the ability to perform file transfers as a background task, there is no reason to purchase a high-priced commercial telecommunications program. Draft additions 1993 file server n. Computing in a network or other multi-user system: a device which manages access to one or more separately stored files of data; cf. server n. 11b. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > network > [noun] > server mainframe1957 host computer1966 server1969 file server1979 portal1990 1979 Computer Networks III. 396/1 When the file server gets a read or write request, it translates the logical file access request into one or more physical storage access requests. 1989 H. Alshawi et al. in B. Boguraev & T. Briscoe Computational Lexicogr. (new ed.) ii. 62 The Remote Procedure Call Protocol..provided the necessary functionality to incorporate the manager into a dictionary server node..—this bypassed the need for costly fileservers and proved the integrity of the design. Draft additions February 2005 file extension n. Computing a string of characters affixed to a file name, usually preceded by a point and serving to indicate the type of file. ΚΠ 1975 R. Clements Request for Comments (Network Working Group) (Electronic text) No. 683 The pathname is specified in the RETR or STOR verb. It includes the directory name, file name, file name extension, and version number.] 1981 Proc. 8th Symp. Operating Syst. Princ. (Assoc. Computing Machinery) 96/2 In the TOPS-10 operating system, every file has a 6-character file name and a 3-character file extension... The file extension indicates the nature of the contents of a file. 1988 Computers & Libraries Dec. 5 An MS-DOS filename can consist of up to eight characters;..then up to three more characters which are the file extension, sometimes called the filetype. 2004 Christchurch (N.Z.) Press (Nexis) 20 May c6 Safe file extensions include: .jpg, .gif, .bmp, .txt, .rtf, and .doc—although viruses can be contained in the code of .doc (Microsoft Word) files. Draft additions March 2006 file space n. (a) the storage space available for paper files; (b) Computing (usually in form filespace) the memory space available (esp. to a particular user) for storing electronic files. ΚΠ 1885 Washington Post 6 Nov. 1/7 The Treasury Department building..will have about 150,000 cubic feet additional of file space. 1959 Managem. Sci. 6 102 When the entry counter reaches the upper limit of the file space, the file contents are compacted to the bottom of the file space. 1986 R. L. Ward in J. A. Burden & R. A. Wright Teaching in Small College vi. 81 Aggregate demand, measured in terminal hours per student per week, file space per user, or some other appropriate metric, should be compared to usage levels reported by other colleges. 1999 P. E. Kneale Study Skills for Geogr. Students iv. 37 Mark items of interest as you search, to download via e-mail to your own filespace. Draft additions August 2001 file transfer protocol n. Computing = FTP n. ΚΠ 1971 A. Bhushan et al. Request for Comments (Network Working Group) (Electronic text) No. 172. 2 The file transfer protocol (FTP) is a user-level protocol for file transfer between host computers (including terminal IMP's), on the ARPA computer network. 1993 Online Access Spring 41/1 11 file transfer protocols are available including the popular Zmodem. 1998 R. Darnell et al. HTML 4 Unleashed iii. xii. 193 The File Transfer Protocol is still in use for retrieving files from FTP servers, though not as much as in earlier days. Draft additions March 2014 file sharer n. Computing (originally) a piece of hardware or software which enables users to share files via a network; (now chiefly) a person who engages in file sharing (see file sharing n. at Additions). ΚΠ 1983 Computerworld 24 Jan. 6/2 The Modus file sharer offers file security as well as the ability to share records, files, programs and messages among computers. 1992 Network World 13 Jan. 37/5 System 7 comes bundled with Apple's AppleShare file-sharer software. 2000 Metallicster in alt.activism.youth-rights (Usenet newsgroup) 20 June Napster is loved by many an eager file sharer and loathed by the creators of the media it distributes. 2002 Times 22 May ii. 3/6 Although some file-sharers recognise that what they are doing may be technically illegal, they don't consider it to be particularly immoral. 2010 Billboard 24 Apr. 11/1 The government may allow the implementation of penalties against persistent file sharers, such as restricting bandwidth speeds or suspending their accounts. Draft additions March 2014 file sharing n. Computing the practice of making files available to other users of a network; (now esp.) the (often illicit) sharing of music or video files via the internet; frequently attributive. ΚΠ 1967 Operations Res. 15 177 Time-sharing and file-sharing computer systems. 1975 Computerworld 14 May 19 File-Sharing commands..allow one CPU to transfer data or request data from a file or I/O device that is part of another CPU system. 1995 L. Mui What you need to know when you can't find UNIX Syst. Administrator (1998) 92 Most UNIX systems today support some sort of remote file sharing. 2000 Infoworld 14 Aug. 5/4 The Napster model of peer-to-peer file sharing seems to have inspired Intel to apply similar technologies. 2005 Sydney Morning Herald 21 May 17/7 The final chapter of the Star Wars saga..has been leaked onto a big file-sharing network just hours after opening in cinemas. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † filen.3 Obsolete. A girl, woman; also in a bad sense, a concubine, a whore. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > young person > young woman > [noun] daughterOE maidenOE young womanOE mayc1175 burdc1225 maidc1275 wenchc1290 file1303 virginc1330 girla1375 damselc1380 young ladya1393 jilla1425 juvenclec1430 young person1438 domicellea1464 quean1488 trull1525 pulleta1533 Tib1533 kittyc1560 dell1567 gillian1573 nymph1584 winklota1586 frotion1587 yuffrouw1589 pigeon1592 tit1599 nannicock1600 muggle1608 gixy1611 infanta1611 dilla1627 tittiea1628 whimsy1631 ladykin1632 stammel1639 moggie1648 zitellaa1660 baggagea1668 miss1668 baby1684 burdie1718 demoiselle1720 queanie?1800 intombi1809 muchacha1811 jilt1816 titter1819 ragazza1827 gouge1828 craft1829 meisie1838 sheila1839 sixteenc1840 chica1843 femme1846 muffin1854 gel1857 quail1859 kitten1870 bud1880 fräulein1883 sub-debutante1887 sweet-and-twenty1887 flapper1888 jelly1889 queen1894 chick1899 pusher1902 bit of fluff1903 chicklet1905 twist and twirl1905 twist1906 head1913 sub-deb1916 tabby1916 mouse1917 tittie1918 chickie1919 wren1920 bim1922 nifty1923 quiff1923 wimp1923 bride1924 job1927 junior miss1927 hag1932 tab1932 sort1933 palone1934 brush1941 knitting1943 teenybopper1966 weeny-bopper1972 Valley Girl1982 society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > [noun] > illicit intimacy > person > a mistress chevesea700 wifeOE bed-sister1297 concubine1297 leman1297 file1303 speciala1400 womanc1400 chamberer?a1425 mistress?a1439 cousin1470 doxy?1515 doll1560 pinnacea1568 nobsya1575 lier-by1583 sweetheart1589 she-friend1600 miss1606 underput1607 concupy1609 lig-by1610 factoress1611 leveret1617 night-piece1621 belly-piece1632 dolly1648 lie-bya1656 madamc1660 small girl1671 natural1674 convenient1676 lady of the lake1678 pure1688 tackle1688 sultana1703 kind girl1712 bosom-slave1728 pop1785 chère amie1792 fancy-woman1819 hetaera1820 fancy-piece1821 poplolly1821 secondary wife1847 other woman1855 fancy-girl1892 querida1902 wifelet1983 1303 R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 4540 To rage wyþ ylka fyle [gl. maydgerle]. 1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. vii. 135 Dame purnele a prestes file, prioresse worth hue neuere. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2021). † filen.4 Obsolete. A worthless person (male or female); a rascal. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > worthlessness > worthless person > [noun] ribalda1250 brethelingc1275 filec1300 waynouna1350 waster1352 lorel1362 losel1362 land-leaper1377 javelc1400 leftc1400 lorerc1400 shackerellc1420 brethel1440 never-thrift1440 ne'er-thrifta1450 never-thrivinga1450 nebulona1475 breelc1485 naughty pack?1534 brathel1542 unsel155. pelf1551 wandrel?1567 land-loper1570 scald1575 baggage1594 arrant1605 good-for-nothing1611 hilding1611 vauneant1621 idle-pack1624 thimble-maker1654 never-do-well1664 ne'er-be-good1675 shack1682 vagabond1686 shag-bag1699 houndsfoot1710 blackguard1732 ne'er-do-well1737 trumpery1738 rap1742 good-for-naught1773 rip1781 mauvais sujet1793 scamp1808 waffie1808 loose fish1809 ne'er-do-good1814 hard bargain1818 vaurien1829 sculpin1834 shicer1846 wastrel1847 scallywag1848 shack-bag1855 beat1865 rodney1877 git1939 no-hoper1944 piss artist1962 society > society and the community > social class > the common people > low rank or condition > low or vulgar person > [noun] gadlinga1300 geggea1300 churlc1300 filec1300 jot1362 scoutc1380 beggara1400 carla1400 turnbroach14.. villainc1400 gnoffc1405 fellowc1425 cavelc1430 haskardc1487 hastardc1489 foumart1508 strummel?a1513 knapper1513 hogshead?1518 jockeya1529 dreng1535 sneakbill1546 Jack1548 rag1566 scald1575 huddle and twang1578 sneaksby1580 companion1581 lowling1581 besognier1584 patchcock1596 grill1597 sneaksbill1602 scum1607 turnspit1607 cocoloch1610 compeer1612 dust-worm1621 besonioa1625 world-worma1625 besognea1652 gippo1651 Jacky1653 mechanic1699 fustya1732 grub-worm1752 raff1778 person1782 rough scuff1816 spalpeen1817 bum1825 sculpin1834 soap-lock1840 tinka1843 'Arry1874 scruff1896 scruffo1959 society > morality > moral evil > evil nature or character > lack of magnanimity or noble-mindedness > [noun] > worthlessness > good-for-nothing person brethelingc1275 filec1300 dogc1330 ribald1340 waynouna1350 waster1352 lorel1362 losel1362 land-leaper1377 triflera1382 brothelc1390 javelc1400 leftc1400 lorerc1400 shackerellc1420 brethel1440 never-thrift1440 vagrant1444 ne'er-thrifta1450 never-thrivinga1450 nebulona1475 breelc1485 naughty pack?1534 brathel1542 carrion1547 slim1548 unsel155. pelf1551 shifterc1562 rag1566 wandrel?1567 land-loper1570 nothing-worth1580 baggage1594 roly-poly1602 bash-rag1603 arrant1605 ragabash?1609 flabergullion1611 hilding1611 hard bargain1612 slubberdegullion1612 vauneant1621 knick-knacker1622 idle-pack1624 slabberdegullion1653 thimble-maker1654 whiffler1659 never-do-well1664 good-for-nought1671 ne'er-be-good1675 shack1682 vagabond1686 shabaroon1699 shag-bag1699 houndsfoot1710 ne'er-do-well1737 trumpery1738 rap1742 hallion1789 scamp1808 waffie1808 ne'er-do-good1814 vaurien1829 sculpin1834 shicer1846 good-for-nothing1847 wastrel1847 scallywag1848 shack-bag1855 beat1865 toe-rag1875 rodney1877 toe-ragger1896 low-lifer1902 punk1904 lowlife1909 ringtail1916 git1939 no-hoper1944 schlub1950 piss artist1962 dead leg1964 c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 2499 Men mithe thethen a mile Here him rore, that fule file. c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 95 Þat did Roberd trauaile for nouht, he was a file. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 715 Sorful bicom þat fals file. c1450 Douce MS. 559 (Bodl.) Quest. 240 My brotheres wyfe may be a fyle. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online December 2021). † filen.5 slang. Obsolete. A pick-pocket. Also, file-cloy, file-lifter. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > pickpocket or cutpurse > [noun] > pickpocket fig-boyc1555 foister1585 foist1591 pickpocket1591 bung1600 diver1608 pocket-picker1622 pocketeerc1626 bung-nipper1659 file1673 filer1674 shark1707 hoister1708 knuckle1781 knuckler1801 buzzgloak1819 cly-faker1819 fingersmith1819 knuck1819 fogle hunter1821 buzzman1832 nobbler1839 wire1851 gonoph1853 wirer1857 dip1859 moll-tooler1859 buzzer1862 hook1863 snotter1864 tool1865 pocket-cutter1885 dipper1889 pogue-hunter1896 pick1902 finger1925 whizz1925 whizzer1925 prat diggera1931 whizz-boy1931 whizz-man1932 reefer1935 1673 R. Head Canting Acad. 191 The sixth is a Foyl-cloy. 1676 Warning for House-keepers (title page) Budg and Snudg, File-lifter, Tongue-padder, the private Theif. 1695 W. Kennett Parochial Antiq. Gloss. at Putta A file, or pick-pocket whore. 1708 P. A. Motteux Wks. F. Rabelais (1737) V. 218 Pickpockets, Divers, Buttocking-Foiles. 1721 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. at Bulk Bulk and File, is when one jostles you while another picks your pocket. 1725 New Canting Dict. File-Cloy, a Pickpocket, Thief or Rogue. 1743 H. Fielding Jonathan Wild iv. xiii, in Misc. III. 382 A Pick-pocket, or, in truer Language, a File. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † filen.6 Obsolete. Apparently = Fylde, proper name of a district in Lancashire. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > named regions of earth > Europe > British Isles > England > [noun] > districts of England wealdOE Oxon.c1439 the Stannaries1455 Midland1555 Home Counties1695 Islandshire1705 lakes1774 file1775 potteries1795 the Shires1796 Tyneside1824 lakeland1829 Lake District1835 lake country1842 Wessex1868 Shakespeare country1900 Geordieland1901 cherry country1902 1775 E. Barry Observ. Wines Ancients 416 The..files of Lancashire. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online June 2022). filen.7 U.S. local. A cloth used for wiping a floor or a table after scrubbing, a house-flannel. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > wiping > [noun] > mopping or swabbing > mop or swab swipple14.. mapplea1406 malkin1440 mop1496 makron1552 swabber1606 swab1787 swab-stick1839 file1851 squilgee1851 1851 S. Warner Wide Wide World II. xlvi. 228 ‘A file!’ said Ellen... ‘O I remember now... I didn't know what you meant. Margery calls it a dishcloth, or a floorcloth, or something else’. 1860 in J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms (ed. 3) 1889 in J. S. Farmer Americanisms This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2022). filev.1 1. a. transitive. To rub smooth, reduce the surface of, with a file. to file (one's) teeth: (figurative) to render harmless. to file in (or †a) two: to cut in two by filing.In the contextual use ‘to sharpen’ (weapons) sometimes associated with affile v.1 ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > work with tools or equipment [verb (intransitive)] > other tools or equipment filec1230 to blow the bellowsc1440 pump1508 vice1612 plane1678 shovel1685 turn1796 brake1862 pestle1866 chisel1873 roll1881 slice1893 leverage1937 monkeywrench1993 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > action of dividing or divided condition > division by cutting > divide by cutting [verb (transitive)] > with a file to file in (or a) twoc1230 the world > action or operation > safety > make safe or secure [verb (transitive)] > make safe or not dangerous > make harmless unarm1569 to file (one's) teeth1599 cicurate1606 disenvenoma1711 scotch1726 defang1919 neutralize1937 sterilize1939 declaw1940 recuperate1967 c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 147 Nis hit or acurset. þe iwurðeð swartre & ruhre se hit is ifilet mare? c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 2225 A deneȝ ax..Fyled in a fylor. c1420 Chron. Vilod. 354 And a file to file þis nayle a two. 1542–3 Act 34 & 35 Hen. VIII c. 6 Pinnes..shal..haue..the point well and rounde, filled, canted and sharped. 1553 R. Eden tr. S. Münster Treat. Newe India sig. Ciij He fyleth & whetteth his horne on a stone. 1599 Master Broughtons Lett. Answered i. 6 It is..time enough to file your teeth, or muzzle you. 1696 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) IV. 65 Some persons are committed for fyling the edges of new shillings. 1787 T. Holcroft tr. Life Baron Trenck (1886) II. 33 I filed the iron which passed through it on the outside. 1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) at File Leaving the surface that has been filed more or less smooth. b. figurative. To remove the roughness of; to smooth, polish, elaborate to perfection. Also, to wear down; to bring into (a certain condition) as if by filing. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > improvement > [verb (transitive)] > purify or refine slick1340 filec1400 polishc1400 burnish1526 polite1535 extirpate1548 purify1548 soften1579 purgea1582 refine1592 mellow1593 civilize1596 rarefy1600 incivilize1603 sublimate1624 alembicate1627 chastise1627 sublime1631 calcine1635 gentilize1635 ennoble1636 subtilize1638 deconcoct1655 sublimizea1729 smooth1762 absterge1817 decrassify1855 sandpaper1890 society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > elegance > compose elegantly [verb (transitive)] > refine or make more elegant file1551 raise1581 refine1582 smooth1667 the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > cause bad condition in [verb (transitive)] > cause to waste away > wear away or down > (as) by rubbing grate1555 fray1710 fridge1761 rub1791 file1837 scuff1909 the world > time > change > change [verb (transitive)] > turn or bring to a condition workOE cast1711 file1889 c1400 Rom. Rose 3812 His tunge was fyled sharpe & square. 1551 R. Record Pathway to Knowl. (title page) All fresshe fine wittes by me are filed. 1568 T. Howell Arbor of Amitie f. 42 Nor he that files his smoothed speeche. 1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets lxxxv. sig. F2v Precious phrase by all the Muses fil'd . View more context for this quotation 1700 J. Dryden Fables Pref. sig. *Av Dante had begun to file their Language, at least in Verse. 1757 J. Wesley Wks. (1872) IX. 192 The Treatise..which he has had leisure for many years to revise, file, correct, and strengthen against all objections. 1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe I. ii. 40 And file your tongue to a little more courtesy. 1837 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xli. 451 His bones [were] sharp and thin..the iron teeth of confinement and privation had been slowly filing them down for twenty years. 1889 Temple Bar Nov. 406 Lads who would be filed into business shape. 2. To remove (roughnesses, part of a surface, etc.) by filing. Now only with away, off. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > removal or displacement > remove or displace [verb (transitive)] > remove or take away > remove or displace by scratching, scraping, stripping, or cutting bestrip1065 file?c1225 to cut awayc1320 raze1419 screeve?1440 rakec1475 to scrape out, forth1530 scrata1560 scrabble1657 scamble1707 peel1787 ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 140 Heis þi file & fileð awei þirust. 1597 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie v. xxvii. 58 They which would file away most from the largenes of that offer. a1618 W. Raleigh Advice of Sonne (1651) 7 Death hath already filed from you the better part of your natural forces. a1625 J. Fletcher Noble Gentleman i. i, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Dd2/1 That..Files of all rudenesse, and uncivill haviour. 1670 Earl of Clarendon Ess. in Tracts (1727) 216 He will never file away the stain. 1707 J. Norris Pract. Treat. Humility iii. 154 It [Humility]..files off the roughnesses of our passions. 1833 J. Holland Treat. Manuf. Metal II. 291 They adjusted the balance by filing away some of the thickness of the longest part of the beam. 1850 H. Rogers Ess. II. iv. 204 What was required was to file away asperities [in language]. 1859 Ld. Tennyson Vivien in Idylls of King 126 So grated down and filed away with thought. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2022). filev.2 1. a. transitive. To render (materially) foul, filthy or dirty; to pollute, dirty; to destroy the cleanness or purity of; = defile v.1 2. Obsolete exc. dialect. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirty [verb (transitive)] uncleanseOE horyc1200 befoulc1320 behorewe1340 file1340 flobber1377 smatterc1386 foulc1400 slurryc1440 filtha1450 sowla1450 sollc1480 bawdy1495 squagea1500 arrayc1525 ray1526 bawdc1529 beray1530 filthify1545 belime1555 soss1557 embroyn1566 dirt1570 filthy1581 turpifya1586 dirty1591 muck1618 bedirt1622 bedirty1623 smooch1631 dight1632 fewma1637 snuddle1661 bepaw1684 puddle1698 nasty1707 muddify1739 scavenger1806 mucky1828 squalidize1837 mullock1861 muddy1893 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > pollution or defilement > pollute or defile [verb (transitive)] afileeOE besmiteeOE shenda950 befilec1000 bisulienc1200 defoulc1320 file1340 foilc1380 smota1387 lime1390 solwea1400 surda1400 infectc1425 filtha1450 poison?a1513 defile1530 polluve1533 inquinate1542 pollute1548 contaminate1563 bumfiddlec1595 impure1598 conspurcate1600 defoil1601 sullya1616 vilify1615 deturpate1623 impiate1623 defedate1628 dreg1628 contemerate1650 spot1741 empoison1775 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > pollution or defilement > be polluted [verb (intransitive)] sulea1250 begoc1275 file1607 1340 R. Rolle Pricke of Conscience 2348 A thyng es fouler þat may file Þan þe thyng þat it fyles. c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) l. 136 No festiual frok but fyled with werkkez. a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. clxxxxvii. f. cxviiiv He felyd the holy lyker with the fruyte of his wombe. ?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. xxiv Yf any shepe..be fyled with dong about the tayle. 1572 (a1500) Taill of Rauf Coilȝear (1882) 446 Oft fylit my feit in mony foull fen. 1607 G. Wilkins Miseries Inforst Mariage sig. I4 As not to file my hands in villaines blood. 1721 J. Kelly Compl. Coll. Scotish Prov. 384 You need not file the House for want of Legs to carry you to the Midding. 1753 Trial J. Stewart App. 84 A piece which is laid by foul, will..file one's finger. 1792 R. Burns in J. Johnson Scots Musical Museum IV. 389 Her face wad fyle the Logan water. 1825 R. Southey Tale of Paraguay iii. 44 No art of barbarous ornament had..'filed her face. 1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. File, to defile. b. Proverbs. ΚΠ a1250 Owl & Nightingale 100 Dahet habbe that ilke beste, That fuleth his owe nest. 1568 Newe Comedie Iacob & Esau ii. iii. sig. C.iv Clawe a churle by the tayle, and he will file your hand. 1823 J. Galt Entail II. xx. 190 It's a foul bird that files its ain nest. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > soiled condition > become soiled [verb (intransitive)] solwe1303 soil1530 file1565 sully1598 1565 J. Calfhill Aunswere Treat. Crosse f. 53v Hys garmentes neuer filed, nor hys shooes..waxed old. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > defecation or urination > defecation > [verb (intransitive)] dritea1000 to do one's filthheadc1300 shit?c1335 to go to siegec1400 scumbera1425 cack1436 to do one's easementa1438 to ease nature, ease oneselfc1440 skite1449 to do of one's needingsc1475 fen1486 dung1508 spurge1530 to cover his feet1535 lask1540 stool1540 to exonerate nature1542 file1564 fiant1575 cucka1605 wray1620 exonerate1631 excrement1632 to do one's ease1645 sir-reverence1665 excrementizec1670 nest1679 poop1689 move1699 defecate1837 crap1874 mire1918 to make a mess1928 mess1937 to go poo-poo (also poo-poos)1960 potty1972 to do a whoopsie (or whoopsies)1973 pooh1975 1564 T. Becon New Catech. in Catech. & Other Pieces (1844) 62 If doves, or any other fowls or beasts file upon their [i.e. the images] heads, they perceive it not. 1607 G. Wilkins Miseries Inforst Mariage sig. D4 Oathes are..like smoake through a chimney, that files all the waye it goes. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > production of disease > make diseased [verb (transitive)] > infect infecta1398 touch?c1400 smit1428 file1456 disease1467 fect?1541 tache?1541 tack1601 smittle1625 1456 Sc. Acts James II (1814) §6 And not lat þame pas away fra þe place..to fyle þe cuntre about thame. 3. To render morally foul or polluted; to destroy the ideal purity of; to corrupt, taint, sully; = defile v.1 3. Obsolete exc. archaic. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > corruption > [verb (transitive)] forbraidc888 besmiteeOE awemOE filec1175 soila1250 envenomc1300 beshrewc1325 shrew1338 corrumpa1340 corrupt1382 subvertc1384 tache1390 poison1395 infect?c1400 intoxicatec1450 deprave1482 corrup1483 rust1493 turkess?1521 vitiate1534 prevary?1541 depravate1548 fester?1548 turkish1560 wry1563 taint1573 disalter1579 prevaricate1595 sophisticate1597 invitiate1598 fashion1600 tack1601 debauch1603 deturpate1623 disaltern1635 ulcer1642 deboise1654 Neronize1673 demoralize1794 bedevil1800 society > morality > moral evil > moral or spiritual degeneration > degrading or impairing morally > degrade or impair morally [verb (transitive)] > pollute or defile afileeOE awemOE filec1175 wemc1175 soila1250 foulc1330 defoula1340 bleckc1380 blemishc1380 pollutea1382 tache1390 sulpa1400 vilec1400 spota1413 stain1446 defilec1450 violate1490 tan1530 smear1549 beray1576 moil1596 discolour1598 smut1601 bespurtle1604 sullya1616 commaculatec1616 decolour?c1622 collutulate1623 deturpate1623 berust1631 smutch1640 discolorate1651 smoot1683 tarnish1695 tar1817 dirten1987 c1175 Cott. Hom. 205 Ich habbe..mid flesches fulðe ifuled me.] c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 1959 Þatt nan ne shollde filedd ben Wiþþ hæþenndom þurrh macche. c1290 S. Eng. Leg. I. 287/314 Alle þo..þat his ordre fuylden ouȝt with..worldes feo. a1340 R. Rolle Psalter Prol. To confourme men þat are filyd in adam til crist in newnes of lyf. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 882 She haþ me fuyled wiþ her synne. R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Mending of Life 129 No man filys hym-self with wardly bisynes after þat he truly has ioyd in lufe euerlastyng. a1522 G. Douglas in tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) iv. Prol. 104 Is that trew lufe, gude faith and fame to fyle? a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iii. i. 66 For Banquo's Issue haue I fil'd my Minde. View more context for this quotation 1816 Ld. Byron Childe Harold: Canto III cxiii. 61 Had I not filed my mind, which thus itself subdued. 1861 A. Trollope Framley Parsonage III. ii. 25 Why had he thus filed his mind? ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > loss of chastity > deprive of chastity [verb (transitive)] > a woman forliec1275 defoulc1290 dishonour1393 defilea1400 file?a1400 spilla1400 foilc1440 diviciatec1470 foul?1473 fulyie1505 vitiate1547 dishonest1565 fray1567 out1922 ?a1400 Morte Arth. 978 He has forsede hir and fylede. a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. x. 96 For me was she neuer fylyd. a1586 Peblis to Play in W. A. Craigie Maitland Folio MS (1919) I. 180 Ȝe fylit me fy for schame quod scho. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > sullying or staining of reputation > stain or sully [verb (transitive)] filea1325 foulc1330 tache1390 dark?c1400 distain1406 smita1413 blemish1414 black?c1425 defoul1470 maculate?a1475 macule1484 tan1530 staina1535 spota1542 smear1549 blot1566 besmear1579 defile1581 attaint1590 soila1596 slubber1599 tack1601 woad1603 besmirch1604 blur1604 to breathe upon ——1608 be-smut1610 clouda1616 sullya1616 taint1623 smutch1640 blackena1649 to cast, put, throw (etc.) a slur on or upon (a person or thing)1654 beslur1675 tarnish1695 blackwash1762 carbonify1792 smirch1820 tattoo1884 dirten1987 a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 3498 Tac ðu nogt in idel min name, Ne swer it les to fele in gamen. c1440 Gesta Romanorum (Harl.) xvii. 62 He made the new lawe, & fylid not þat othir. c1470 J. Hardyng Chron. ccxviii. v They the trewce had broken and did fyle. 1502 tr. Ordynarye of Crysten Men (de Worde) iv. xxi. sig. bb.ii If he hath broken & fyled ye preuyleges of ye chyrche. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 8120 Euery lede will þe lacke and þi lose file. 1594 King James VI in P. F. Tytler Hist. Scotl. (1864) IV. 217 That so wise and provident a prince [Elizabeth]..should be so fyled and contemned by a great number of her own subjects. a1600 Doctrynall Good Servauntes in E. F. Rimbault Anc. Poet. Tracts 16th Cent. (1842) 10 A good name that none dooth fyle. 1673 Siege in W. Davenant Wks. iii. 75/1 The bold Warrier, that hath deserv'd Fame whose Deeds engros'd All publick noise once feel'd [mod. ed. fil'd] his victories Are quite forgot. a. To charge with a crime, accuse. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > testing > accusation, charge > accuse [verb (transitive)] > accuse of or charge with tee871 upbraidc1000 acoupc1300 retc1300 becalla1325 charge138. impeachc1380 putc1380 blamea1400 appeach1430 gredea1450 articlea1460 filea1500 slander1504 to lay to one's charge1535 aggravate1541 to charge (a person) with1559 reproach1570 attaint1586 impute1596 censure1634 arraign1672 saddle1794 inculpate1799 society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > accusation, allegation, or indictment > charge, accuse, or indict [verb (transitive)] wrayc725 forwrayOE beclepec1030 challenge?c1225 indict1303 appeachc1315 aditea1325 appeal1366 impeachc1380 reprovea1382 arraigna1400 calla1400 raign?a1425 to put upa1438 present?a1439 ditec1440 detectc1449 articlec1450 billc1450 peach1465 attach1480 denounce1485 aret1487 accusea1500 filea1500 delate1515 crimea1550 panel1560 articulate1563 prosecute1579 impleada1600 to have up1605 reprosecute1622 tainta1625 criminatea1646 affect1726 to pull up1799 rap1904 run1909 a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. xxvii. 360 To thare prynces thay can hym fyle. c1560 in J. Raine Depositions Courts Durham (1845) 64 Mr. Ratlyf was in great greif that Doon shuld fyll his man Dixon for certain shepe. 1721 J. Kelly Compl. Coll. Scotish Prov. 376 You are busy to clear your self when no Body files you. 1759 J. Lauder Decisions I. 14 They..were ready to file, by their delation, sundry gentlewomen. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > judging > conviction or judicial condemnation > convict or condemn [verb (transitive)] fordeemc1000 attain1330 filec1330 condemna1340 shape1340 dem1377 convictc1380 reprovea1382 damnc1384 overtakea1393 attainta1400 taintc1400 commita1425 vanquish1502 convincea1535 cast1536 convanquish1540 deprehend1598 forejudge1603 do1819 c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 173 Þe courte opon him sat, þe quest filed him & schent. 1525 in R. Pitcairn Criminal Trials Scotl. I. *131 Quhil þai had..fylit þame of þe said slauchtir. 1609 J. Skene tr. Regiam Majestatem iv. i. §5 Gif anie man is fyled or condemned of that crime. 1673–50 J. Row Hist. Kirk Scotl. (1842) 387 He was noted as if he had fylled him. DerivativesΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > pollution or defilement > [adjective] mixedc1300 pollutea1382 infectc1384 unpurea1398 fouledc1400 drossyc1420 polluteda1425 defouledc1440 dreggyc1440 feculent1471 filed1483 violate?c1500 feding1502 fly-blown1528 cankered1530 defiled1530 contagious1547 dregful1552 contaminatea1555 menstruous1560 dreggish1561 conspurcate1563 empoisoned1581 inquinated?1593 pollutionate1593 fly-bitten1598 impure1598 druggy1599 contaminated1609 transboundary1918 1483 Cath. Angl. 130/2 Filed, deturpatus. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene iii. i. sig. Cc5v She lightly lept out of her filed bedd, And to her weapon ran. 1593 Queen Elizabeth I tr. Boethius De Consolatione Philosophiæ in Queen Elizabeth's Englishings (1899) 95 His fyled conscience. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2022). filev.3 1. a. transitive †To string upon a thread (obsolete); to place (documents) on a file; to place (papers) in consecutive order for preservation and reference. Also, †to file together, to file up (obsolete). ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > written record > arrangement and storage of written records > arrange and store written records [verb (transitive)] keep1552 file1581 administrate1969 the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > arrangement in (a) row(s) or line(s > arrange in (a) row(s) or line(s [verb (transitive)] > string together enfile1393 file1581 string1612 thread1633 bead1883 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. 613 Their maner is to bore holes through them, and then to file them vp into chains and collars. 1631 B. Jonson Staple of Newes i. ii. 76 in Wks. II They..sort, and file, And seale the newes, and issue them. 1653 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures xxxvi. 142 At her arm-pits hung a many of little idols..filed together. 1682 N. Grew Anat. Plants Pref. sig. A2 A Letter..now filed amongst others in the Custody of the Royal Society. 1770 B. Franklin Wks. (1887) IV. 364 No care is taken to file the newspapers. 1865 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend II. iii. ii. 16 Miss Abbey filed her receipts. b. spec. To place (a document) in a due manner among the records of a court or public office; esp. to file a bill (in Chancery), to file an information. Also, †to file up (obsolete). ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court papers > [verb (transitive)] > lodge document in court enter1425 enrol1495 file1511 affile1512 encorpore1523 box1789 society > communication > record > written record > arrangement and storage of written records > arrange and store written records [verb (transitive)] > specific file1511 filace1537 archive1934 1511–12 Act 3 Hen. VIII c. 23 §3 The same accomptes..to be taken and filed up in the Pipe. 1511–12 Act 3 Hen. VIII c. 23 §5 The Kinges said lettres missives annexed and fyled to the same Accomptes. 1529 T. More Dialogue Heresyes iii, in Wks. 213/1 He..therwith brought in those letters and filed them among the recordes of the court. 1677 London Gaz. No. 1211/4 If they do not forthwith File and Enter all such their Proceedings. 1769 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. IV. 305 When an information is filed. 1776 Trial Maha Rajah Nundocomar for Forgery 80/1 An office copy of the executors' accounts..filed the first of October, 1774. 1818 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. (ed. 2) II. 20 Leaving two daughters, who..afterwards filed a bill in Chancery against the trustees. 1835 T. P. Granger Tomlins' Law-dict. (ed. 4) I. at Bankrupt 11 By what Acts..a Trader may become a Bankrupt... If any..trader shall file..a declaration..that he is insolvent..the..secretary of bankrupts..shall sign a memorandum that such declaration hath been filed. 1853 J. B. Marsden Hist. Early Puritans (ed. 2) 387 The king..cancelled the judgments filed against him. 1886 Williams in Encycl. Brit. XX. 342/1 The difference between filing and registration is that the documents filed are filed without alteration, while only an epitome is usually registered. 1957 Encycl. Brit. III. 66/2 An act of bankruptcy is committed..if he [sc. the debtor] files in court a declaration of inability to pay his debts. 1966 Times 12 Aug. 14/4 About 80 of the world's larger foreign companies whose shares are traded in the United States have filed public financial information about their operations. c. North American. To file a claim on or upon, assert a title to, apply for (a piece of land or a mining claim); also absol. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > action of courts in claims or grievances > claim at law > [verb (transitive)] > assert ownership of demand1485 assert1652 enter1733 vindicatea1859 file1871 1871 Scribner's Monthly 2 254 The half-breed who had ‘filed on’ the claim alongside Lindley's. 1879 [see sense 4c]. 1893 Congress. Rec. 11 Feb. 1470/1 Many persons filed upon these lands. 1910 W. A. Fraser Red Meekins (1921) 194 First thing in the mornin' we'll hike to the outside an' file the claim. 1911 J. F. Wilson Land Claimers 2 The relinquishment has been made in Portland where you filed. 1932 T. G. Springer Sagebrush Buckaroo (1933) xxii. 252 You thought to stake out all the locations, file on them with dummies, and..get the cream! 1948 Sat. Evening Post (Philadelphia) 4 Dec. 70/2 He..had assays made and was on the way to file his claim, but I got him drunk and filed myself. 1968 R. M. Patterson Finlay's River 29 F. H. Davis was the first man alert enough to stake the fraction and get in first to the mining recorder's office to file. d. Of a newspaper reporter: to transmit (a story, information, etc.) to his newspaper. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > [verb (transitive)] > report > transmit report to newspaper file1954 1954 D. Dodge Lights of Skaro ii. 57 A reporter could file one, and only one, story the Party didn't like before they cancelled his visa. 1964 New Statesman 13 Mar. 387/2 They agreed not to file their stories for that morning's British papers. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > arrange in sequence or series [verb (transitive)] filec1470 settle1551 serialize1852 seriate1878 sequence1954 c1470 J. Hardyng Chron. vii. i In balade thus it shall be made and fyled. a1475 Bk. Curtasye (Sloane 1986) l. 435 in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 313 Gromes palettis shyn fyle and make litere. 1607 F. Beaumont Woman Hater i. ii. sig. B1v I would haue my seuerall courses, and my dishes well fil'd. 1682 N. Grew Anat. Plants iv. ii. i. 164 Not being filed one just over another, but alternately. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > arrangement in (a) row(s) or line(s > arrange in (a) row(s) or line(s [verb (transitive)] > one behind the other file1598 1598 R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres iii. 44 The other halfe is to be brought vnto the traine of the pikes, and there filed in like maner. 1623 J. Bingham tr. Xenophon Hist. 87 They stood a hundred deepe..filing themselues one opposite to the other. 1642 T. Fuller Holy State iii. xviii. 200 The King of Sweden never filed his men above six deep in one company. 1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) ii. §1 One man is ranked with another, another filed before him, according to the quality of his desert. View more context for this quotation 4. a. intransitive. To march or move in file. Also with away, etc. to file off, ‘to wheel off by files from moving in a spacious front, and march in length’ (Stocqueler Mil. Encycl.). ΘΚΠ society > travel > aspects of travel > going on foot > go on foot [verb (intransitive)] > in order troop1592 file1616 crocodile1889 society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > work with tools or equipment [verb (transitive)] > filing, polishing, or smoothing tool planea1398 pumicea1425 roll?1523 plain1535 pounce1580 file1616 smooth-file1683 plane1726 sandpaper1846 pumice-stone1851 paper1875 lap1881 sand1928 the world > space > shape > flatness or levelness > smoothness > make smooth [verb (transitive)] > by filing file1616 elimate1623 society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > form (line, column, etc.) [verb (transitive)] > cause (soldiers) to diverge to file off1616 1616 J. Bingham in tr. Ælian Tactiks xix. 109 The first [kind of Rhombe] both filedn and ranked, this neither fileth, nor ranketh. 1703 London Gaz. No. 3914/5 Some of their Battalions filed up several steep and narrow Passages. 1704 London Gaz. No. 4054/1 At night they filed and stood to the Northward. 1708 London Gaz. No. 4475/3 The Enemy filed off..towards the Thickets. 1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones III. ix. iii. 331 This fair Creature entering the Field of Battle, immediately filed to that Wing where [etc.] . View more context for this quotation 1796 Instr. & Regulations Cavalry 118 The whole divisions then file from their reverse flanks. 1808 W. Scott Marmion i. xxxii. 54 Till, filing from the gate, had past That noble train, their Lord the last. 1813 in Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1838) XI. 101 The French troops shall file out tomorrow morning. 1858 N. Hawthorne Fr. & Ital. Jrnls. (1872) I. 70 A party of Americans filed into his studio. 1876 F. E. Trollope Charming Fellow I. iv. 48 The players file off in the wake of the host. 1883 E. E. Hale in Harper's Mag. Dec. 145/2 They filed away for the south. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > agree, harmonize, or be congruous with [verb (transitive)] conspirec1384 accorda1393 to stand with ——c1449 to sit with ——a1500 correspond1545 resound1575 square1583 quader1588 to comport with1591 sympathize1594 beset1597 range1600 even1602 consort1607 to run with ——1614 countenancea1616 hita1616 sympathy1615 filea1625 quadrate?1630 consist1638 commensurate1643 commensure1654 to strike in1704 jig1838 harmonize1852 chime in with1861 equate1934 to tie in1938 to tune in1938 to tie up1958 the world > action or operation > prosperity > advancement or progress > [verb (transitive)] > advance at equal rate with to hold a wayOE to keep (also hold) pace1583 evena1616 filea1625 1623 W. Shakespeare & J. Fletcher Henry VIII iii. ii. 172 My endeauors, Haue euer come too short of my Desires, Yet fill'd [mod. edd. filed] with my Abilities. View more context for this quotation] a1625 J. Fletcher Monsieur Thomas (1639) i. ii. sig. C1v Too light..To fyle with her affections. c. U.S. to file upon: to march upon, occupy (vacant land). Also with on. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > taking possession > take possession of [verb (transitive)] > take (land) into occupation occupya1382 to take up1478 to file upon1871 1871 E. Eggleston in Scribner's Monthly 2 254 The half-breed who had ‘filed on’ the claim alongside Lindsley's. 1879 H. King in Scribner's Monthly Nov. 132/1 Intervals not yet ‘filed upon’ or ‘opened up’. 5. transitive. To cause or order (soldiers) to file off. ΚΠ 1831 Examiner 338/1 When the soldiers had returned..they were filed off in four divisions to receive billets for the night. Derivatives ˈfiling adj. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > [adjective] > diverging filing1616 1616 J. Bingham in tr. Ælian Tactiks xix. 110 The filing Rhombe began at the front point, & reare-point, & proceeded to the flanks. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † filev.4 slang. Obsolete. To pick pockets. Also, to file a cly. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > picking pockets > pick pockets [verb (intransitive)] figc1555 nip1592 dive1699 file1699 pickpocket1822 wire1853 dip1857 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew at Tout Do you Bulk and I'll File, if you'll jostle him, I will Pick his Pocket. 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew at Cly Filed a Cly, Pickt a Pocket. Derivatives ˈfiler n. a pick-pocket. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > pickpocket or cutpurse > [noun] > pickpocket fig-boyc1555 foister1585 foist1591 pickpocket1591 bung1600 diver1608 pocket-picker1622 pocketeerc1626 bung-nipper1659 file1673 filer1674 shark1707 hoister1708 knuckle1781 knuckler1801 buzzgloak1819 cly-faker1819 fingersmith1819 knuck1819 fogle hunter1821 buzzman1832 nobbler1839 wire1851 gonoph1853 wirer1857 dip1859 moll-tooler1859 buzzer1862 hook1863 snotter1864 tool1865 pocket-cutter1885 dipper1889 pogue-hunter1896 pick1902 finger1925 whizz1925 whizzer1925 prat diggera1931 whizz-boy1931 whizz-man1932 reefer1935 1674 C. Cotton Compl. Gamester (1680) i. 5 Filers, Budgies, Droppers..&c...may all pass under the general..appellation of Rooks. 1719 in T. D'Urfey Wit & Mirth III. 100 A Filer my Sister, a Filcher my Brother. ˈfiling n. the action of file v.1, in combination filing-lay, pocket-picking. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > picking pockets > [noun] pocket-picking1662 palmistry1711 pickpocketing1742 filing-lay1743 pickpocketry1756 buzzing1819 fogle drawing1823 fogle hunting1823 pickpocketism1830 cly-faking1862 dipping1882 prat-digging1908 whizz1925 whizzing1925 1743 H. Fielding Jonathan Wild iv. ii, in Misc. III. 298 I am committed for the Filing-Lay. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1896; most recently modified version published online March 2021). < |
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