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单词 go in
释义

> as lemmas

to go in
to go in
1. intransitive.
a. To move or pass into a space or place; to go indoors or into a room.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > go or come in [verb (intransitive)]
to go ineOE
ingoc900
to come inOE
incomec1000
infarec1000
enterc1325
enderc1330
ingressc1330
entera1382
to fall inc1384
usha1400
to get ina1425
to step in1534
to set (or put) (a) footing1567
invade1590
to take in1595
to hop in (also out)1914
the mind > language > statement > agreement, concurrence, or unanimity > agree with [verb (transitive)]
to go ineOE
cordc1380
consentc1386
covin1393
condescend1477
agree1481
correspond1545
concur1590
to fall in1602
suffrage1614
to hit it1634
colour1639
to take with ——1646
to be with1648
to fall into ——1668
to run in1688
to think with1688
meet1694
coincide1705
to go in1713
to say ditto to1775
to see with ——1802
sympathize1828
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xxi. 153 Ic ða eode inn [L. ingressus], & geseah ðær ða anlicnessa eallra creopendra wuhta.
OE Ælfric Lives of Saints (Julius) (1881) I. 54 Hwæt ða Basilius..alede his ræf on þæra ea ofre & eode in nacod.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 60 Hwase wule mei gan in.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1969) Jer. xxxvi. 6 Go in [L. ingredere] þerfore þou & rede of þe volume..herende þe puple.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 13789 (MED) I ne may to þat watir wynne For oþere goon bifore me Inne.
1566 T. Heskyns Parl. Chryste ii. xi. f. cx How did he go in? All thinges are closse, ther ys no place, by the which he might go in.
1582 A. Munday Breefe Aunswer sig. B.5 He desiring vs to staye Dinner, we alighted and went in with him.
1653 F. G. tr. ‘G. de Scudéry’ Artamenes I. iii. ii. 97 She went into her Closet... I went in unto her, and found her leaning against the window.
1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. ii. viii. 163 One of the Servants opening the Door, I bent down to go in.
1794 Whole Proc. Trial Thomas Walker 81 Did you send word before you went in, or go in without giving notice?
1846 Children's Mag. 9 126 The sheets are going in at one end of the machine as the rollers are going out at the other.
1878 Scribner's Monthly 16 149/1 The men allowed the matter to go in at one ear and out at the other.
1889 M. Caird Wing of Azrael II. xix. 72 You are cold..Would you like to go in?
1932 A. Bell Cherry Tree x. 143 The old lodge-keeper was already holding the tall house-door open for us. We went in.
1995 J. Banville Athena 68 Morden..walked a little way along by the houses and stopped at one and went in at the garden gate.
b. to go in and (come) out and variants: (of a person) to come and go; to go about one's life or business. Chiefly in biblical contexts, esp. with reference or allusion to John 10:9. archaic and rare in later use. [Partly (in contexts from and allusions to the Old Testament and Hebrew Scriptures) after Hebrew lāṣēṯ wĕ-lāḇō, lit. ‘to go out and to come in’ (Deuteronomy 31:2, 1 Kings 3:7, etc.), and partly (with allusion to John 10:9) after Greek εἰσελεύσεται καὶ ἐξελεύσεται (New Testament, John 10:9), lit. ‘he goes in and he comes out’, perhaps itself ultimately after the Hebrew idiom.]
ΚΠ
a1549 T. Sternhold Al Suche Psalmes of David (?1553) sig. D.viv Thei go in and out, for the beholde and see.
1566 T. Becon Gouernaunce of Vertue f. 40 Christe is the dore. If any man enter in by him, he shall be safe. For he shall go in and come oute and finde pasture.
1584 E. Paget tr. J. Calvin Harmonie vpon Three Euangelists 243 By going in and comminge out, the Scripture doth oftentimes signifie vnto vs all the actions of life as wee say in Frenche Aller et venir.
1609 J. Donne Let. in Poems (1633) 364 In that life one is ever in the porch or posterne, going in or out, never within his house, himself.
1755 S. Johnson Dict. Eng. Lang. at Go To go in and out. To do the business of life.
1852 C. M. Wake Simple Comm. New Test. III. xxxv. 186 He may go in and out, he may follow his worldly business, but he is safe, and he will find all that his soul needeth.
a1911 J. H. Eccleston in S. M. Shoemaker J. H. Eccleston Day-bk. (1915) 21 The one who welcomes the Christ as Shepherd and King..‘goes in and out’ in absolute safety under the ever-present Guide.
c. Of a person: to enter a body of water in order to swim, etc.
ΚΠ
1756 D. Fenning Universal Spelling Bk. i. xi. 32 What business had you in the Water..? You don't want to learn to swim you say. It is plain then that you go in for Idleness Sake.
1836 C. Dickens Sketches by Boz 1st Ser. II. 184 Sportive youths who ‘go in’ at that particular part of the river.
1888 J. B. Smiley Basket of Chips 70 All the other boys could swim, and they offered to teach me. I went in with them one day and they held my head under water for about fifteen minutes.
1952 Boys' Life July 9/3 ‘You going in?’ he asked... ‘Not now, Coach, but when I get back will you help me with my dive?’
2010 J. Coe Terrible Privacy Maxwell Sim (2011) 174 Max..sat down on the grass above the beach and announced that he wasn't going to go in today.
d. to be going in: (of a church, theatre, etc.) to be admitting a congregation or audience. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1830 Afr. Repository & Colonial Jrnl. Dec. 313 The rain falling in torrents just as church was going in.
1842 London Q. Rev. Sept. 207/2 On Sunday, we travelled..till we came to Newcastle, where the church was just going in.
1913 Rep. Select Comm. Motor Traffic II. 557/2 in Parl. Papers (H.C. 278) IX. 1 You will find, if you care to stand, say, outside the Carlton, just when His Majesty's Theatre is going in, that there is a very great confusion of traffic.
1918 J. S. Clouston Spy in Black ii. i. 67 Just as church was going in I thought I'd look in too.
1922 D. H. Lawrence England my England 256 The cinema was just going in, and the queues were tailing down the road.
e. Of a person: to be admitted to hospital as a patient.
ΚΠ
1866 Med. Times & Gaz. 7 Apr. 371/1 Do we never hear of patients who go in for slight injuries dying of fevers contracted from the occupant of the next bed?
1900 N.Z. Med. Jrnl. 1 189 It was after the second visit [he went in on the 26th March] that he was given medicine for urine trouble.
1972 N.Y. Times 3 Nov. 52/1 Last week..Mrs. Black said she went in to have the lump diagnosed.
2011 Sun (Nexis) 8 June 19 I am waiting on a date to go in for surgery.
f. Sport. Of a ball, etc.: to land in the goal, on target, or the like, after being struck or thrown. Also used of a shot, throw, etc.
ΚΠ
1870 Baily's Mag. Mar. 89 The smallness of the pockets would not..affect..a skilled player,..if there was room for the ball to go in at all, a practised player wanted nothing more.
1891 Golf 30 Jan. 318/1 (caption) If that ball goes in I'll——!
1933 Hockey Field & Lacrosse 16 Dec. 8/2 She..made some very fine saves, one goal especially being unlucky, as it went in off her stick.
1986 S. Middleton After Dinner's Sleep xv. 176 Taking a penalty that had gone in off one of the goalposts.
2008 T. Gulliver Golden Girl xv. 162 I can't describe how I felt when that winning dart went in.
2. intransitive. Of the sun or moon: to be obscured by a cloud or clouds.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > light > darkness or absence of light > become dark [verb (intransitive)] > by being obscured > specifically of the sun
to go ina1672
a1672 P. Sterry Rise Kingdom of God (1683) 48 When God withdraws, he draws in all his Blessings, as the Sun often goes in, and gives up the Sky, and Day to dark Clouds.
1747 S. Richardson Clarissa I. xxvii. 147 The sun is gone in—It was very fine half an hour ago.
1817 M. Edgeworth Ormond II. xxx. 301 We both of us silently stole along in the dark, for the moon had gone in.
1884 R. Buchanan Foxglove Manor III. xxxiv. 132 The sun had gone in, and the air was full of a heavy lowering sadness.
1963 N. Bawden Secret Passage viii. 122 The smile went from Victoria's face—just like the sun going in on a showery day.
2004 Independent 24 July 22/6 Advantages over the other renewables include the fact that it [sc. Biomass] is not intermittent in production (the wind drops; the sun goes in).
3. intransitive.
a. To agree with; to concur with. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > statement > agreement, concurrence, or unanimity > agree with [verb (transitive)]
to go ineOE
cordc1380
consentc1386
covin1393
condescend1477
agree1481
correspond1545
concur1590
to fall in1602
suffrage1614
to hit it1634
colour1639
to take with ——1646
to be with1648
to fall into ——1668
to run in1688
to think with1688
meet1694
coincide1705
to go in1713
to say ditto to1775
to see with ——1802
sympathize1828
1713 J. Kirkpatrick Hist. Ess. Loyalty Presbyterians ii. iii. 403 Many of 'em had gone in with all the Measures of the two former Reigns.
1725 R. Wodrow Corr. (1843) III. 232 I heartily go in with your Lordship's observations upon the subject, which are very just.
1742 R. North & M. North Life F. North 89 His Lordship was so far from retaining any Offence at what was past, that he readily went in with the Promotion of Sir William Jones.
1837 Farmer's Mag. Sept. 160/1 We find him..going in with the opinion that horn is an unorganized animal matter.
b. To join with (a person or group of people) in a venture of some kind.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > association for a common purpose > associate with for common purpose [verb (transitive)]
alliance1533
to combine a league1562
enleague1596
to strike ina1637
factiona1652
adoptate1662
to strike up1714
enjoin1734
to go in1851
train1866
to tie up1888
affiliate1949
1851 Rep. Great Conspiracy Case 36 He spoke to me of it three different times, each time soliciting me to go in with him to do it.
1886 J. McCarthy & R. C. Praed Right Hon'ble II. xxiv. 214 Do you want to get up a republican party? And are you going in with that unfortunate Masterton and men like that?
1889 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Robbery under Arms iii. 31 If you like to go in with me, we'll go share and share.
1922 Southwestern Reporter 240 585/1 I can find out if Mr. Overby is ready to take a half interest, or if I will have to wait to get somebody else to go in with me.
1995 G. Burn Fullalove i. 53 Listen. We've got to crash it, man. Do it. Go in with me. Run a raid on the factory of bad karma.
4. intransitive.
a. Cricket. Of a team or a player: to take to the field to bat. More fully to go in to bat.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > batting > bat [verb (intransitive)] > go in to bat
to go in1718
to come in1774
1718 Weekly-Jrnl. 6 Sept. 543/1 Three of their Men made an Elopement, and got off the Ground without going in.
1744 ‘J. Love’ Cricket ii. 16 Equal in Numbers, bravely they begin The dire Dispute.—The Foes of Kent go in.
1837 Laws of Cricket in D. Walker Games & Sports 232 If the striker be hurt, some other person may stand out for him, but not go in.
1890 Field 31 May 790/2 Lancashire went in to bat at five minutes to six.
1955 Times 27 Jan. 9/4 Seated in the pavilion, padded-up early, though he was not to go in higher than eighth wicket.
1998 Bath Chron. (Nexis) 29 Aug. 3 In the afternoon, Doncaster went in to bat.
b. To take part in or enter a game, sporting contest, bet, etc. Also imperative in go in and win, expressing encouragement.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > competition or rivalry > compete or rival [verb (intransitive)] > enter a contest
to strike in1632
enter1702
to go in1822
society > leisure > sport > match or competition > take part in match or competition [verb (intransitive)] > engage in match or competition
to play a prize1565
to go in1822
1822 Sporting Mag. Oct. 52/2 Towards the conclusion of the battle [sc. a prize fight] he wished him to go in and win it.
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) ii. 23 This advice was very like that which by-standers..give to the smallest boy in a street fight; namely, ‘Go in, and win’.
1882 Poker: how to play it 49 After the cards have been dealt..each player..determines whether he will go in or not. And the player who decides to go in, that is, to play for the pool, must put into the pool double the amount of the ante, except [etc.].
1889 F. C. Philips & C. J. Wills Fatal Phryne II. iii. 78 Sit down well in your saddle, and go in and win.
1915 H. Hall Pepper ix. 226 We all go in, and bet ten dollars on the first race.
1937 Boys' Life Apr. 10/3 We're a disgusting little bunch of yellow-bellies that haven't the stuff to go in and win.
2007 D. Strader in E. Mirlis Being There 251 Rutherford..went in to play goal, and Hewitt scored again!
c. To enter as a candidate or applicant for a job, prize, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > educational administration > examination > examine a candidate [verb (transitive)] > take examination
to go in1845
sit1859
write1943
1845 Punch 6 Sept. 108/2 Having heard that there was a better thing than the Newfoundland Judgeship to be had in the neighbourhood, he determined to ‘go in for it’.
1868 F. Tarver Eton French Gram. & Exercise Bk. 155 He wishes us to go in for the French prize.
1894 W. H. Wilkins & H. Vivian Green Bay Tree I. 127 You are going in for the History Tripos, like myself, I suppose.
1914 Hearings before Subcomittee of Comm. on Public Buildings & Grounds (U.S. House of Representatives, 63rd Congr.) No. 28B. 28 The general contractor went in for the job for the heating and ventilating of that building.
1919 R. Frost Let. 24 Mar. (1972) 5 Mamma told me you were in fact going in for the lyric prize.
2003 Observer (Nexis) 20 July 16 In London, she went in for the job of Labour Party international secretary.
5. intransitive.
a. To enter the field of combat; to attack. Also in extended and humorous use.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > attack > attack [verb (intransitive)] > commence an attack
enterprisec1570
to go in1810
to cut loose1900
1810 Parl. Deb. 1st Ser. 15 239 The fire ships were, by their written orders, to go in, in three divisions.
1862 Frank Leslie's Illustr. Newspaper 28 June 198/2 As for retreat, I knew the Colonel wouldn't hear of it, so we went in.
1917 W. Owen Let. 9 Apr. (1967) 451 Between us we are pulling the company together for we ‘go in’ again tomorrow!
1975 P. W. Fay Opium War, 1840–42 xv. 223 For eight..minutes upwards of seventy guns..thundered... Then the Wellesley flew the signal to desist and the troops went in.
2000 Fullhouse Sisters: Matchmakers x. 91 ‘I'm going in. Cover me!’ he joked. Michelle had to stifle a giggle as Joey carefully lifted the skirt of the couch.
2003 CNN Sunday Morning (transcript of TV programme) (Nexis) 25 May You are a combat cameraman, which means you go in whenever your fellow Marines go in, you're on the front lines with them.
b. colloquial. to go in at: to attack or assail vigorously. Now archaic and rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > attack > attack [verb (transitive)]
greetc893
overfallOE
riseOE
assail?c1225
to lay on or upon?c1225
onseekc1275
to set on ——c1290
infighta1300
saila1300
to go upon ——c1300
to turn one's handc1325
lashc1330
annoyc1380
impugnc1384
offendc1385
to fall on ——a1387
sault1387
affrayc1390
to set upon ——1390
to fall upon ——a1398
to lay at?a1400
semblea1400
assayc1400
havec1400
aset1413
oppressa1425
attachc1425
to set at ——c1430
fraya1440
fray1465
oppugn?a1475
sayc1475
envaye1477
pursue1488
envahisshe1489
assaulta1500
to lay to, untoa1500
requirea1500
enterprise?1510
invade1513
assemblec1515
expugn1530
to fare on1535
to fall into ——1550
mount1568
attack?1576
affront1579
invest1598
canvass1599
to take arms1604
attempt1605
to make force at, to, upon1607
salute1609
offence1614
strikea1616
to give a lift at1622
to get at ——1650
insult1697
to walk into ——1794
to go in at1812
to go for ——1838
to light on ——1842
strafe1915
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > hostile action or attack > make an attack upon [verb (transitive)]
assail?c1225
to set on ——c1290
saila1300
to turn one's handc1325
lashc1330
to set against ——c1330
impugnc1384
offendc1385
weighc1386
checka1400
to lay at?a1400
havec1400
to set at ——c1430
fraya1440
rehetea1450
besail1460
fray1465
tuilyie1487
assaulta1500
enterprise?1510
invade1513
sturt1513
attempt1546
lay1580
tilt1589
to fall aboard——1593
yoke1596
to let into1598
to fall foul1602
attack1655
do1780
to go in at1812
to pitch into ——1823
tackle1828
vampire1832
bushwhack1837
to go for ——1838
take1864
pile1867
volcano1867
to set about ——1879
vampirize1888
to get stuck into1910
to take to ——1911
weigh1941
rugby-tackle1967
rugger-tackle1967
1812 Sporting Mag. 39 138 Dogherty went in at his antagonist's head.
1849 C. Dickens David Copperfield (1850) xviii. 189 Sometimes I go in at the butcher madly, and cut my knuckles open against his face.
1887 Pall Mall Gaz. 19 Feb. 2/2 Napoleon's pet soldiers were far more eager to go in at their fellow-citizens than at the German enemy.
1964 Boys' Life Mar. 27/3 Then a bugle sounded the charge, and we went in at them.
2007 C. Cook Chandlers Attack xvi. 203 Didn't they go in at those bastards sir—God, I was proud of them.
c. Sport (chiefly Association Football). To tackle a player.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > play football [verb (intransitive)] > actions
to kill a ball1883
chip1889
miskick1901
to go in1914
to give (a ball) air1920
punt-kick1960
1914 Vanderbilt Univ. Q. 14 311 Cody, whose chief fault in the opening game was high tackling, went in hard and low.
1976 Evening Post (Nottingham) 14 Dec. 17/5 Bennett, who had already floored John O'Hare with a dubious tackle, went in dangerously against Peter Withe.
2014 People (Nexis) 15 June (Sport section) 8 Those serious foul play tackles where players go in with straight legs and studs showing above the ankle.
6. intransitive. colloquial (originally U.S.) to go in for: to support or be in favour of; to engage habitually in; to adopt as one's speciality, interest, principle, style, etc.; to have a characteristic liking or preference for.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > intention > intend [verb (transitive)] > have as purpose or object
followeOE
studylOE
turna1200
pursuea1382
purposec1384
to shoot atc1407
ensue1483
proponea1500
studyc1503
prick1545
tread1551
suit1560
to go for ——1568
to set (up) one's rest1572
expect1578
propose1584
propound1596
aima1616
scope1668
to set up1691
aim1821
to go in for1835
to be out for1887
to be flat out for1930
target1966
shoot1967
1835 A. B. Longstreet Georgia Scenes 119 She would..‘go in’ for Augusta, live or die, hit or miss.
1849 N.Y. Tribune 25 Dec. We go in for all the postage reduction President Taylor recommends.
1863 C. Kingsley Water-babies viii. 316 My mamma says that my intellect is not adapted for methodic science, and says that I must go in for general information.
1873 M. Oliphant Innocent III. x. 167 Not elegant—the judge had never gone in for elegance—but forcible and clear.
1917 A. Cahan Rise of David Levinsky (1993) xii. i. 409 Oh, these two girls go in for highbrow fellows.
1961 A. Christie Pale Horse v. 64 She's very occult... Goes in for spiritualism and trances, and magic.
1971 Boys' Life Apr. 43/1 The brown trout..doesn't go in for the crazy leaping and jumping that a rainbow does.
2005 S. Rushdie Shalimar the Clown 12 Max customarily went in for big classic English vehicles.
7. intransitive.
a. Of wiring, pipes, an appliance, etc.: to be installed, fitted, etc., esp. as a piece of work within a larger project.
ΚΠ
1863 B. Harte in Golden Era 22 Feb. 4/4 Boonder [sc. a dog] had previously resisted the gas, but although he spent one whole day in angry altercation with the workmen,..somehow the gas went in.
1887 M. Rutherford Revol. in Tanner's Lane xviii. 294 Everybody wanted to know how water was going to get through fifteen inches of heavy land... However, the pipes went in.
1944 Billboard 2 Dec. 61/4 New wiring will go in all over the grounds and lighting will be installed for night harness horse racing.
2001 B. Long RX-7 (2004) iii. 49/1 You could be messing around for ages trying to get an early Jaguar door right, and then you'd have to adjust it again once all the electrics went in.
2014 Evening Standard (Nexis) 6 Aug. 16 Concrete tiles were ripped off,..new windows went in, and it was rewired and replumbed.
b. Of a sum of money, cheque, etc.: to be paid into or credited to a bank account; to be deposited.
ΚΠ
1872 Baily's Mag. June 61 The anonymous well-wisher..offered 100l.... His cheque had gone in; only instead of one hundred it was two.
1964 G. Simons What Every Woman doesn't Know xxvi. 156 If the account has been maintained for many years with sums going in and coming out.., you will have to know exactly what you deposited and what your husband deposited.
2012 S. Mills Debtor's Diary 378 My bank statement was waiting for me when I got home and I'd gone into my overdraft by £51 before my last pay cheque went in.
8. intransitive. To enter into a financial venture, to invest. Also with on: to invest in or contribute to a purchase; to participate in an undertaking or scheme.With quot. 1867 compare to get (or be let) in on the ground floor at ground floor n. b.
ΚΠ
1867 Six Hundred Dollars Year ii. 9 He had bought two hundred shares of ‘Oil’ stock. A friend of his who had gone in on what was called ‘the ground floor’ had let him into the ring at a merely nominal advance.
1894 C. H. Hoyt Milk White Flag i, in Five Plays (1941) 206 You let me put up the money to go in on a good thing.
1895 Rep. Comm. Agric. & Forestry on Condition Cotton Growers I. 57 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (53rd Congr., 3rd Sess.: Senate Rep. 986, Pt. I) III Generally the outside buyers and speculators see the same causes why prices should advance, and they go in on the same side.
1907 12th Ann. Rep. Illinois Farmers' Instit. 164 The only time to do it is in October and November, when the ground is in good condition. We went in on it together, about ten neighbors.
1921 Mich. Manufacturer & Financial Rec. 2 Apr. 3/3 Speculative buyers went in at the top of the market and, in many cases, are sufferers thereby.
2013 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 10 Sept. The key for new investors is to go in at a very low-risk entry level and to not use a lot of your own money.
extracted from gov.
to go in
c. intransitive. With in, into, †til, to, unto. Of a man: to have sexual intercourse with a particular woman. Also in to go in. archaic and rare in later use.Frequently with allusion to passages in the Old Testament and Hebrew Scriptures such as Genesis 38:8 (see quot. a1382).Quot. 1890 is a translation of quot. eOE.
ΚΠ
eOE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Tanner) ii. v. 110 He..unalyfedre forlegenesse & egeslicre wæs besmiten, swa þæt he eode to his fæder wife [L. ita ut uxorem patris haberet].
OE Ælfric Old Eng. Hexateuch: Num. (Claud.) xxv. 1 Hi eodon ða to manega of ðam folce to ðam myltystrum & wið hi hæmdon [L. fornicatus est populus cum filiabus Moab].
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 223 Þe oþer cas huer me may zeneȝy be spoushod is huanne man geþ to his wyue ine time þet he ne ssolde naȝt guo.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) Gen. xxxviii. 8 Go inne to þe wyf [L. Ingredere ad uxorem] of þi broþer..þat þou rere seed to þi broþer.
c1443 R. Pecock Reule of Crysten Religioun (1927) 32 Þe sones of god..han goon into þese douȝtris of men, and þei han gendrid gyauntis.
c1450 (a1425) Metrical Paraphr. Old Test. (Selden) l. 246 (MED) When he tyll Eue agan can go, Then bare scho suns and doyghters.
1561 T. Norton tr. J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig. iv. f. 10 Iudas when he would geue hymselfe to fornication agaynst the lawe of nature, went into his sonnes wife.
?1573 L. Lloyd Pilgrimage of Princes f. 76v The candles might not bee lyghted in that house, where the man was, when that hee woulde go vnto his wife.
1608 T. Draxe Churches Securitie 18 Good Vrias..made a conscience to go into his wife.
1651 J. F. tr. H. C. Agrippa Three Bks. Occult Philos. iii. xli. 483 The ghosts which they call Catechanæ were wont to return back into their bodies, and go in to their wives, and lie with them.
1808 A. Loudon Select. Interesting Narr. Outrages Indians I. 240 The man goes in unto the woman, and she becomes his wife.
1890 T. Miller Old Eng. Version Bede's Eccl. Hist. ii. v. 111 He..was polluted with unlawful and fearful fornication, so that he went in to his father's wife.
1906 G. Moore Mem. My Dead Life (1923) ix. 167 She was une file en marbre, but not at all une file de marbre; and, all preliminaries over, I went in unto her.
extracted from gov.
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as lemmas
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英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

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