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单词 annect
释义

annectadj.

Forms: late Middle English adnecte, late Middle English a nette (transmission error).
Origin: Apparently a borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin annectere.
Etymology: Apparently < classical Latin annect- (in annectere annex v.), apprehended as a past participial stem after e.g. collectus collect adj.1, confectus confect adj. Compare later annect v.
Obsolete. rare.
With to. Connected, joined, attached; contiguous (literal and figurative).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fact or action of being joined or joining > attachment > [adjective]
annect?a1440
adjoined?1556
affixed1563
appendinga1661
alligateda1676
attached1777
?a1440 (c1390) G. Chaucer Pardoner's Tale (Paris angl. 39) (1892) l. 482 The fyre of lecchery that is a nette [read anecte; c1405 Hengwrt annexed] to glutony.
?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1865) I. 321 Denmarke, is an yle contiguate or adnecte [L. contigua] to the northe parte of Germayne.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2022).

annectv.

Brit. /əˈnɛkt/, U.S. /əˈnɛk(t)/
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin adnectere, annectere.
Etymology: < classical Latin adnectere, annectere annex v. Compare earlier annect adj., annex v., and also connect v.Compare Anglo-Norman anecter , annecter (end of the 13th cent. or earlier). In recent use, e.g. in quot. 1963 at sense 1b, chiefly after German annektieren (16th cent. as †annectiren).
Now rare (chiefly in the English of non-native speakers).
In senses corresponding to those of annex v.
1.
a. transitive. To attach or bestow as an attribute, adjunct, condition, consequence, etc.; to associate with. Frequently with to, unto. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fact or action of being joined or joining > join (together) [verb (transitive)]
gatherc725
fayOE
samc1000
join1297
conjoinc1374
enjoinc1384
assemble1393
compound1393
sociea1398
annex?c1400
ferec1400
marrowc1400
combinec1440
annectc1450
piece?c1475
combind1477
conjunge1547
associate1578
knit1578
sinew1592
splinter1597
patch1604
accouple1605
interjoina1616
withjoina1627
league1645
contignate1651
to bring on1691
splice1803
pan1884
suture1886
c1450 ( J. Walton tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Linc. Cathedral 103) 181 (MED) ‘This is,’ quod I, ‘full faire and preciouse, Wheþire it porysme or corilare is.’ ‘Hit is,’ quod sche, ‘more faire and gloriouse Þat resoun will annecten [a1500 Trin. Coll. Oxf. aughten, a1500 Harl. 44 amitte] vnto þis.’
1660 H. More Explan. Grand Myst. Godliness vi. i. 212 Three things are to be considered as very nearly annected and comprehended in it [sc. the Return of Christ to Judgment].
1680 H. More Apocalypsis Apocalypseos 257 To this Line..all the rest of the visions..may some way be annected.
b. transitive. To add (property, land, etc.) to one's existing possessions; to incorporate (territory) into a domain, state, or administrative area.
ΚΠ
a1475 (a1447) O. Bokenham Mappula Angliae in Englische Studien (1887) 10 29 Þe terrytorye the wch is be-twix Twede & the scottysshe see, he annectyd to his kyngdam.
1963 A. Schimmel Gabriel's Wing i. 48 Ibn Sa'ud..had annected the kingdom of Hijaz in 1924, and had become thence ruler of the Holy Cities.
c. transitive. To attach, append, or include (text, a table, etc.) to a document, esp. as an appendix or supplement. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1577 M. Hanmer tr. Socrates Scholasticus vii. xxxv, in Aunc. Eccl. Hist. 397 To annect the canon decreed in this behalfe vnto our present history.
1776 in Pennsylvania Mag. Hist. & Biogr. 22 (1898) 130 Wether it may please our Representatives..to annect or add unto the 47th Section of the proposed Plan the following Words.
1820 (title) Ephemeris of the distances of the four planets..from the Moon's center for 1822, to which are annected Tables for finding the Latitude by the Polar-Star.
1892 Notes from Leyden Mus. 14 15 Compared with Mr. Tristram's original description,..our specimen shows some rather important differences, and even his description will not entirely agree with the plate annected to it.
2.
a. transitive. With to, with. To unite, connect, or associate (a thing) with another (without the implication that one thing is an adjunct of or subordinate to the other; cf. sense 1a). Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. xix. sig. Kij But annecteth it [sc. dancing] with tillynge and diggynge.
1737 W. Whiston tr. Josephus Antiq. Jews iii. vii, in tr. Josephus Genuine Wks. 80 The like rings being annected to the Ephod.
1820 J. H. Green Dissector's Manual §ii. i. iii. 121 The great vessels are annected to this part of the heart.
1821 T. D. Fosbroke Ariconensia 132 In 1377 John Gilbert, Bishop of Hereford, unites and annects together the Chantry founded by John Rosse..with a certain society or fraternity in the village of Rosse.
b. transitive. To join or connect (a building) to another building. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1577 M. Hanmer tr. Socrates Scholasticus v. vii, in Aunc. Eccl. Hist. 343 A certen litle church within ye walls of Constantinople. vnto ye which ye Emperour afterwards annected a goodly temple.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2022).
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adj.?a1440v.c1450
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