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单词 glissade
释义

glissaden.

/ɡlɪˈsɑːd//ɡlɪˈseɪd/
Etymology: < French glissade, < glisser to slip, slide; a mountaineering term.
1. The action of sliding down a steep slope (esp. of ice or snow).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > [noun] > actions
glissading1832
rock climb1861
glissade1862
traversea1877
step cutting1884
hand traverse1897
conquest1902
bouldering1920
lay-back1925
soloing1929
hand-jamming1937
safing1937
rappelling1938
leading through1945
pendulum1945
free-climbing1946
laybacking1955
pendule1957
finger jam1959
jumar1966
jam1967
prusiking1968
jumaring1971
free solo1977
redpoint1986
mantel1987
crimping1990
1862 J. Tyndall Mountaineering in 1861 vii. 61 In some places the rocks are worn to a powder, along which we shoot by glissades.
1871 L. Stephen Playground of Europe (1894) v. 133 He appeared..none the worse for his involuntary glissade.
1895 A. F. Mummery Climbs Alps & Caucasus (ed. 3) iii. 62 Burgener suggested a standing glissade..We trusted to luck and a sitting glissade.
figurative and in extended use.1871 C. H. Spurgeon Treasury of David II. Ps. xxxvi. 2 The descent to eternal ruin is easy enough, without making a glissade of it.1882 A. Edwardes Ballroom Repent. I. 74 The hundred thousand miles glissade of some shooting meteor.1883 R. L. Stevenson Silverado Squatters ii. ii. 88 Here and there dwarf thicket clinging in the general glissade.
2. Dance. A step consisting of a glide or slide to the right or left.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > dancing > movements or steps > [noun] > step > gliding step
slur1598
chasing1775
glissade1843
chassé1867
glide1889
sashayc1940
1843 M. Howitt tr. F. Bremer Home I. x. 120 ‘Our Louise in time will dance very well’, remarked the Judge to his wife, as he noticed with great pleasure the little glissades and chassées of his daughter.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online September 2018).

glissadev.

/ɡlɪˈsɑːd//ɡlɪˈseɪd/
Etymology: < glissade n.
intransitive. To perform a glissade.
Thesaurus »
Categories »
a. Dance. (See glissade n. 2) Also to glissade it.
b. Mountaineering. To slide down a steep slope.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > mountaineer or climb [verb (intransitive)] > climbing techniques
glissade1837
sidle1867
traverse1897
abseil1908
to back up1909
bridge1909
to rope down1935
jam1950
rappel1950
prusik1959
solo1964
free-climb1968
hand jam1968
jumar1969
layback1972
pendule1973
top-rope1974
crimp1989
free solo1992
1837 Lett. fr. Madras (1843) 57 Glissading up to me, waving her pretty little hands, and making a number of graceful, unmeaning antics.
1845 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 58 628 He comes ‘glissarding [sic] it’ into the drawing-room, and bowing like a dancing-master.
1859 F. W. Farrar Julian Home xvi. 213 Kennedy and Cyril..glissaded gallantly over the slopes of snow.
1877 A. B. Edwards Thousand Miles up Nile xiii. 347 Driving our heels well into the sand, we half ran, half glissaded, and soon reached the bottom.

Derivatives

gliˈssading n. and adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > dancing > movements or steps > [adjective] > movements
glissading1832
cambré1913
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > [noun] > actions
glissading1832
rock climb1861
glissade1862
traversea1877
step cutting1884
hand traverse1897
conquest1902
bouldering1920
lay-back1925
soloing1929
hand-jamming1937
safing1937
rappelling1938
leading through1945
pendulum1945
free-climbing1946
laybacking1955
pendule1957
finger jam1959
jumar1966
jam1967
prusiking1968
jumaring1971
free solo1977
redpoint1986
mantel1987
crimping1990
1832 F. A. Kemble Rec. Girlhood (1878) III. 189 Gibbering, glissading women greeting one another with the rapid music of the original scene.
1865 Reader No. 143. 348/2 Talking of glissading.
1892 C. T. Dent et al. Mountaineering (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) vi. 194 Snow slopes..on which patches of ice intervene, are unfit for glissading.
gliˈssader n. one who glissades.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > [noun] > mountaineer or climber
rock climber1767
rockman1798
cragsman1816
cliffsman1829
mountaineer1860
Alpestrian1861
alpinist1861
cliffer1861
glissader1861
ascensionist1863
alpenstocker1864
shin-scraper1869
hillmana1885
second1907
Munro-bagger1910
summiteer1926
middleman1968
rock jock1980
free soloist1984
1861 F. W. Jacomb in Peaks, Passes, & Glac. 2nd Ser. I. 315 That undignified attitude peculiar to the inexperienced glissader.
1892 C. T. Dent et al. Mountaineering (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) vi. 195 A good glissader can go fast and stop quickly.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online September 2018).
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n.1843v.1832
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更新时间:2025/3/28 6:44:25