| 释义 | 
		anyadj.pron.n.adv. Origin: A word inherited from Germanic. Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian ēnich  , ienich  , ēng  , Old Dutch einig   (Middle Dutch ēnich  , ennich  , Dutch enig  ), Old Saxon ēnig   (Middle Low German einich  , ēnich  ), Old High German einag  , einīg   (Middle High German einic  , German einig  , now usually in plural, einige   ‘some’), all used as determiners in sense ‘any’ (also Old Icelandic einigr   anyone, none); apparently originally a specific use (in West Germanic) of the adjective reflected by Old English ǣnig  , ānig   (more usually weak ānga  ) sole, unique, solitary, Old Frisian ēnich   sole, unique, Old Dutch einig   sole, unique (Middle Dutch ēnich   sole, unique, solitary, Dutch enig  ), Old Saxon ēnag   sole (Middle Low German einich  , ēnich   sole, solitary, in agreement), Middle High German einic  , einec   sole, unique, solitary (German einig   united, in agreement), Old Icelandic einga-   (in compounds) sole, single, Old Swedish enigh  , enge   sole, Old Danish enigh  , enge   sole, Gothic ainaha   sole  <  the Germanic base of one adj.   + the Germanic base of -y suffix1. With the Germanic adjective compare similarly-formed post-classical Latin ūnicus   sole, unique (see unique adj.), Old Church Slavonic inokŭ (noun) solitary one, and perhaps Early Irish oenach (noun) reunion, gathering.Form history. In Old English the usual form ǣnig   (see α.  forms) shows i-mutation of the stem vowel; the rare unmutated form ānig   results either from variation in the vowel of the Germanic suffix (see discussion at -y suffix1) or from the analogical influence of ān  one adj.   The form ēnig   shows a (typically Kentish) raising of the initial vowel. The later α.  forms   chiefly show reflexes of Old English ǣnig  . Shortening of the initial vowel at different stages of development is reflected in the divergence in modern standard English between the spelling any   and the pronunciation /ˈɛni/. Forms with Middle English short ă   (giving rise to the modern spelling any) reflect early shortening (in late Old English) of ǣ   to æ  , whereas forms with Middle English short ĕ   (giving rise to the modern pronunciation  /ˈɛni/) reflect later shortening of long open ē  ; both shortened forms could sometimes be subject to later lengthening (see  E. J. Dobson Eng. Pronunc. 1500–1700 (ed. 2, 1968)  II. §70). In Middle English forms in e   are predominantly southern and south midland, while forms in a   are widespread. The Middle English β.  forms   (chiefly west midland and south-western) probably show reduction of Old English ǣnig   in unstressed position (perhaps originally inferred from a shortening of the accusative singular masculine æine  ; compare late Old English æigne). In some cases they can be difficult to distinguish from ay adv.   The γ.  forms   (chiefly east midland and northern, although very widespread in later Middle English) probably show diverse origins: continuation of Old English ānig  , as well as continuing influence from one adj. (compare δ.  forms at one adj., n., and pron.), and rounding of short ă   before n   (aided, especially in northern Middle English and Older Scots, by association with similarly developed forms of many adj.; compare forms at that entry). Occasional Old English and Middle English forms in -ing   apparently show assimilation of the ending to -ing suffix3; perhaps compare Old High German eining   any, (as pronoun) anyone. History of usage. Use as an indefinite adjective in non-affirmative contexts is well-established already in Old English. Use in affirmative and emphatic contexts is also found (see sense  A. 1c), but the word is less freely used in such contexts than in modern English, where it can occasionally be near-synonymous with every adj.   Use of stressed and unstressed forms in modern English. In use with singular count noun only in stressed form. In use with plural or mass noun in either stressed or (typically) unstressed form.  A. adj. ( determiner).  1. the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > 			[adjective]		 > not specified > of any kind > any OE     		(Corpus Cambr.)	 iv. 33  				Ða cwædon his leorningcnihtas him betwynan hwæðer ænig man [L. aliquis] him mete brohte. OE     		(Corpus Cambr.)	 ii. §1. 380  				Gif hit ænig preost elles gedo, þolige his wurðscipes & geferena freondscipes. a1250    Ureisun ure Louerde 		(Nero)	 in  R. Morris  		(1868)	 1st Ser. 201 (MED)  				Hwi luuie ich ei þing bute þe one? c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 2131  				Ȝef æi mon him liðere dude. 1340     		(1866)	 49  				Huanne þe man heþ uelaȝrede myd enye wyfmane. ?a1425						 (c1400)						     		(Titus C.xvi)	 		(1919)	 20  				Ȝif ony man do þere jnne ony maner metall. 1480     		(Caxton)	 ccxxxij. sig. q7  				By hym or by any othir. 1535     Gal. vi. A  				Yf eny man be ouertaken of a faute. 1611     Psalms iv. 6  				Who wil shew vs any  good?       View more context for this quotation 1674    N. Fairfax  148  				To think of any other..way of making the body the souls inholder. 1700    T. Brown  iii. 31  				Have you any Use in your Country for Upright Honesty? 1793    R. Burns  26 Apr. 		(2003)	 II. 212  				If any opaque-souled lubber of mankind complain. 1849    T. B. Macaulay  I. 37  				The best governed country of which he had any knowledge. 1880     App. 166  				Buckets or carts should be stationed at certain places such as public latrines where the house sweepers could bring any night-soil. 1939    G. B. Shaw  70  				Laying a mine in the high seas to slaughter innocent travellers whose intentions,..if they have any intentions, are entirely friendly. 2011    A. Ghosh  iv. 104  				Do you have any reason to think that your seed is capable of begetting a male child? the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > 			[adjective]		 > any, however small OE     		(1931)	 180  				Ne þær ænig com blod of benne. OE     		(Corpus Cambr.)	 xi. 16  				He ne geþafode þæt ænig man [L. quisquam] ænig fæt ðurh þæt templ bære. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 l. 15578  				Nas hit nauere isæid..þat æuer ær weore æi swa muchel ferde..þurh ænie king to-gadere. 1389    in  C. Innes  		(1837)	 449  				That the forsaid wollys..yhe suffre..to pas withoutyn ony askying or takyng of custume. c1449    R. Pecock  		(1860)	 118  				Neuere saue in late daies was eny clok telling the houris. 1508    J. Fisher  sig. aa.ii  				I shall not declare to you ony parte of the epystle. 1567    W. Painter  II. xxv. f. 237v  				You abide in such extasie the space of xl. houres at the least without any beating of poulse or other perceptible motion. 1600    R. Surflet tr.  C. Estienne  & J. Liébault   vii. xxv. 847  				He must not vncouple any of his dogs: but onely marke the way that the Hart runneth. 1658    Sir T. Browne  Ep. Ded. sig. A2v  				We present not these as any strange sight. 1712    R. Steele  No. 503. ⁋2  				The Offence does not come under any law. 1790    E. Burke  23  				It ought not to be done at any  time.       View more context for this quotation 1811    Duke of Wellington Let. to C. Stuart 12 Jan. in   		(1837)	 VII. 91  				I conduct the operations of the Portuguese army as Marshal General, without any reference to the Secretariat. 1870    H. A. Nicholson  		(1880)	 463  				In..fish there is never any breast-bone. 1920    D. E. Lyon  iv. 34  				The bees cannot tolerate any foreign object in their homes. 1971    D. Crystal  Interlude 134  				A noun phrase may not have any separate intonation pattern at all. 2006    C. C. E. Vermaak  194  				Mom never wore any form of make up. the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > 			[adjective]		 > not specified > of every kind > each or every OE    Ælfric  		(Royal)	 		(1997)	 i. 180  				Þa wearð he & ealle his geferan forcuþran & wyrsan þonne ænig oðer gesceaft. OE    Ælfric  		(Julius)	 		(1881)	 I. 440  				Ða þe hrepodon þæs reafes ænigne dæl þe heo mid bewunden wæs, wurdon sona hale. a1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomaeus Anglicus  		(BL Add. 27944)	 		(1975)	 II.  xviii. cvi. 1256  				Smaller pouder þan eny fyle mighte make. a1400						 (a1325)						     		(Trin. Cambr.)	 l. 700  				Þe nedder..was more wise þen any beest. 1470    M. Paston in   		(2004)	 I. 367  				In any wyse..labore to haue an ende of your grete materes. 1483						 (    tr.  G. Deguileville  		(Caxton)	 		(1859)	  v. xiv. 79  				Hit is ful hard to ony creature to maken declaracion. 1563    J. Man tr.  W. Musculus  374 b  				For all that, it is in any wise [L. omnino] necessarie. 1599    W. Shakespeare   v. i. 67  				Mantuas lawe Is death to any he that vtters  them.       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  i. i. 8  				Any time these three hundred  yeeres.       View more context for this quotation 1699    R. Bentley  		(new ed.)	 Pref. p. lxvii  				The Director was consulted by him upon any Difficulty. a1715    Bp. G. Burnet  		(1724)	 I. 318  				It was a common piece of raillery in the Court, upon the death of any Prince, to ask what a person his widow was. 1798    J. Ferriar  ii. 26  				That enable any person to give an answer to any question. 1814    I. D'Israeli  II. 185  				On speculative points any man may be suddenly converted. 1914    N. A. Harvey  xviii. 215  				Nearly any parent will, if necessary, preserve the life of the child at the sacrifice of his own. 1968     44 211  				The publications..are available to any American library on inter-library loan. 2005     Oct. 20/2  				There are strategies that any company can use to cultivate customer engagement.   2.  With quantitative force. the world > relative properties > quantity > 			[adjective]		 > some or any OE    Ælfric  		(Cambr. Gg.3.28)	 xvi. 164  				Ge cnapan, hæbbe ge ænige syflinge begyten? ?a1160     		(Laud)	 		(Peterborough contin.)	 anno 1137  				Þa namen hi þa men þe hi wenden ðat ani god hefden. c1225						 (?c1200)						     		(Bodl.)	 l. 95 (MED)  				Hire feader feng on earst feire on to lokin, ȝef he mahte wið eani luue speden. 1340     		(1866)	 190 (MED)  				He acsede..yef he hedde eny zeluer. 1466    in  C. Innes  		(1842)	 356  				Giff..I..gevis ony leiffe..to mak ony drauchtis of the said Magdelan burn. c1485						 (    G. Hay  		(2005)	 92  				How suld be punyst folk yat beris othir mennis armes but leue to do thame ony lak? 1526     Luke xxiv. 41  				Haue ye here eny meate? [So in  Cranmer,  Genev., and 1611;  Wyclif, ony thing that schal be eten,  Rhem., any thing to be eaten.] 1533    J. Frith  sig. C.iv  				Yf he had any Iudgement at all he might well perceyue that [etc.]. 1553    R. Eden in  tr.  S. Münster  Pref. sig. Ajv  				Whiche viage is sufficiently knowen to suche as haue any skyll in Geographie. 1563    J. Foxe  893/2  				Let the priest rence his hands, lest any parcels of the body or bloud be left behind in his fingers or in the chalice. 1607    G. Markham   vi. 12  				If there be any tussocks of long grasse, rushes, or dead fogge. 1687    C. Sedley   iii. i. 29  				Have you any Mirabilis? 1711     No. 4863/4  				Very little if any white about him. 1766    H. Brooke  II. xii. 241  				Have you any more blocks, madam, for the hewing out of our Mercuries? 1831    J. Crabb  xiv. 134  				I asked them if they had any books. 1854    J. Scoffern in   Chem. 507  				Whilst any lead..remains to be removed. 1937    H. Jennings et al.    ii. 387  				I forgot to ask you if you were going to buy any lard to-day. 2011     		(Nexis)	 9 Sept.  				Any questioning of governmental restriction gives rise to accusations of anti-patriotism. OE    Wulfstan  		(Hatton 113)	 		(1957)	 277  				Eal he wearð to woroldscame se þe stod on mane & on misdæde ænige hwile, butan he gewende þe raþor to his Drihtne. 1477    Earl Rivers tr.   		(Caxton)	 		(1877)	 lf. 55  				Thou shalt gyue me all the good that thou hast of ony valewe [Fr. tout ce que tu as vaillant], or thou shalt drynke all the watre of this Ryuier. 1591    R. Greene  f. 6  				In every Shire Citty and Towne of any receipt. 1696    Mary of Modena Let. 5 June in  M. Hopkirk  		(1953)	 x. 231  				If his illness lasts any time, i think it necessary he should have some woman to look after him as i sent word by Mr. Wyburn yesterday. 1778     III. 2284/2  				No gre-hound of any value should be run at this course. 1822    W. Hazlitt  I. i. 18  				To balance himself for any time in the same position the rope-dancer must strain every nerve. 1942     June p. xii 		(advt.)	  				The Kiwi bird..cannot migrate with the warm seasons, or travel any distance in search of food. 2004     Oct. 117/2  				Any incident of any importance immediately found its way into a song. the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > 			[adjective]		 > great (of quantity/amount) the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > 			[adjective]		 > used for large number 1758    R. Dossie  II. 214  				It may not be improper, where there is a prospect of keeping the wooden print for any length of time, to use very thin plank. 1826    R. Gourlay  p. xxxv  				I had any quantity, of the very best quality [sc. of House of Commons paper], furnished me, with ready-made pens by the dozen. 1845    in  N.E. Eliason  		(1956)	 277  				He will find any number of pretty Hookers in the Brick row not far from French's hotel. 1861    O. W. Norton  		(1903)	 26  				In the woods near us we found any quantity of grapes and chinquapins. 1862    O. W. Norton  		(1903)	 50  				We cut down any number of the poles. 1946    V. Bell Let. 20 Dec. in   		(1993)	 509  				There's a man in Kensington..who seems willing to buy any quantity of sgraffito work. 2002     		(Electronic ed.)	 3 Aug. 77  				She misidentifies a girl from Sunderland..as a Geordie (thereby alienating any number of Mackem readers).  the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > 			[adjective]		 > not specified > of any kind OE    Wulfstan  		(Hatton)	 201  				Ne beo ðu ænig manslaga. c1405						 (c1390)						    G. Chaucer  		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 83  				She was a Prymerole, a piggesnye For any lord to leggen in his bedde Or yet for any good yeman to wedde. ?1529    R. Hyrde tr.  J. L. Vives   i. xvi. sig. Sv  				Men neuer caste any fauoure to a woman, but for some good propretie. 1571    J. Northbrooke  f. 100  				Any truthe what soeuer it bee, is better then any thyng, that can of our owne heade be deuised of vs. 1665    R. Howard Committee  iii. i, in   95  				Now am I ready for any Plot; I'le go find some of these Agitants. 1699    J. Dunton  103  				Any Excuse is better than none. 1762    O. Goldsmith  II. 98  				Marriage is at present so much out of fashion, that a lady is very well off, who can get any husband at all. 1799    T. Burns  49  				Some are studying to be rich by any means; others studying how to cheat,..and some are even studying how to set the world on fire. 1868    M. Pattison  2  				The danger is..that any reform should be adopted because some reform is required. 1879     Nov. 37/1  				One of the common trees that may be found on almost any lawn. 1920     Jan. 39/2  				Any change would be an improvement. 1925     1 Aug.  				The prevailing psychology of Hollywood is that any publicity is good publicity. 2003    W. Saletan  		(2004)	 vii. 174  				What riled the senator wasn't just any unwanted pregnancy, but pregnancy by rape.  4. OE    Cynewulf  683  				Swa se waldend us, godbearn on grundum, his giefe bryttað. Nyle he ængum anum ealle gesyllan gæstes snyttru.   1536    J. Gwynneth  sig. h.iiv  				Thou mayste rather blame me, for the superfluyte of many thynges mo then neded. Then for the lack of any one. 1567    W. Painter  II. xx. f. 134v  				Behold Christian, if amongs al these roabes, there be any one which thou hast seene before. 1657    J. Davies tr.  V. de Voiture   i. iv. 7  				Of all those Enchantments which he hath dissolv'd, there is not any one which you could not have master'd. 1797     Sept. 196/1  				Their authority may be a means of deterring many persons from applying their minds to this subject; yet there is scarcely any one which more requires investigation. 1844    H. Stephens  II. 699  				See that all the pigs are safe, and..remove any one immediately that..may have died in the pigging. 1895    F. T. Lent  vi. 68  				Among the many building papers which are now flooding the markets, it is a difficult matter to choose any one that is really the best. 1922     10 June 640/2  				There should be formed in Halifax an overhead university connected with all the colleges, but not particularly with any one. 2005    R. Hume  284  				There were other days like this in the Mara—I could pick any one at random. c1449    R. Pecock  		(1860)	 384  				Eny oon persoon. 1577    S. Avgvstines Manuell in   		(rev. ed.)	 sig. Pv  				Neither soule, fleshe, nor reason can in any one thyng please thee. 1690    W. Walker  26  				I understand not any one word. 1710    R. Steele  No. 118. ⁋12  				I shall not allow the reviving of any one Part of that antient Mode. 1833    H. Martineau  i. 1  				That any one district of Amsterdam was busier than another at any one hour. 1885    G. L. Goodale in  A. Gray  & G. L. Goodale  		(ed. 6)	 II.  i. ii. 95  				Latex-cells are not restricted to any one organ of the plant. 1925    A. N. Whitehead  143  				It is an exaggeration to attribute a general change in a climate of thought to any one piece of writing. 2007     13 Apr. 9/5  				It is no longer conceivable for any one Church of the Christian oikumene to go it alone.    B. pron. and  n. 1. the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > 			[noun]		 > state of being non-specific > unspecified thing(s) > anyone OE (Northumbrian)     xi. 16  				Et non sinebat ut quisquam transferret uas per templum : & ne gelefde þætte ænig [OE West Saxon Gospels: Corpus Cambr. ænig man] oferferede faet ðerh þæt tempel. OE    Ælfric  		(Julius)	 		(1881)	 I. 474  				Ne sege þu heononforð þæt ænig sy his gelica. c1175     		(Burchfield transcript)	 l. 9938  				He nollde nohht. Þatt aniȝ shollde dwellenn. a1250    Wohunge ure Lauerd in  R. Morris  		(1868)	 1st Ser. 271 (MED)  				Is ani ricchere þen þu, mi leof, þat rixles in heuene? c1325						 (c1300)						     		(Calig.)	 7721  				Ȝif þat eni him wraþþede, adoun he was anon. 1472    J. Paston in   		(2004)	 I. 454  				Yit have I..nott leffte any at hys most neede. 1550    J. Heywood  iii. sig. Aiiii  				Please they any, That serue many? Nay. 1584    T. Cogan  ccxvii. 216  				Wherefore if any be desirous to vomit, let them rather go to the Sea. 1611     2 Pet. iii. 9  				The Lord is..not willing that any should  perish.       View more context for this quotation 1686    R. Plot  viii. 316  				Into which Society when any are admitted, they call a meeting. 1764    S. Lowthion  27  				Whether this may not be one reason why scarce any are educating, amongst us, for the ministry, I shall not positively determine. 1796    E. Gibbon  19 Dec. 		(1956)	 II. 133  				You may say in general in the family (if any should bark) that you are satisfied with my conduct. 1827    J. F. Cooper  II. v. 68  				If any can pretend to know the world, or to have seen scary sights, it is myself! 1885    H. R. Haggard  vii. 117  				If any should wish a further proof. 1933    R. Sencourt   ii. ix. 190  				The effect on the modern Emperor..was more than any could have guessed. 1968    F. Exley  vi. 288  				So amenably courageous in leaving his door ajar for any who would enter. 1977    G. F. Newman  74  				Any who did it [sc. investigating complaints] with cheerful willingness usually applied to join A10. c1580						 (    tr.   		(1927)	 III.  ii. 6801  				Mare than ony that leuand is [Fr. plus que nus qui soit vis]. 1628    G. Wither  i. f. 30v  				Thou art for any who in thee beleeves, Though Traytors, Strumpets, Murtherers, or Theeves. 1665    J. Crowne   i. 38  				Infinitely beneath any, who are endued with the smallest portion of a Royal spirit. 1705    J. Addison  Pref. sig. A4  				[He] has wrote a more correct Account of Italy in general than any before him. 1827    R. Cobbold  222  				I know the stage, the tricks the actors play, And mark their characters as any may. 1862    M. L. Whately  		(1863)	 x. 88  				It [is] hard for any who are not desert-bred to find their way. 1966    R. Ardrey  		(1967)	 viii. 283  				Pessimism, under the rule of a Pax Britannica, was a dirty little luxury which any could afford. 2006    G. Jennings  		(2007)	 i. 1  				The great warhorses..crushed any before them under their heavy hooves.   2. the world > relative properties > quantity > 			[noun]		 > some, any, or indefinite amount OE    Wulfstan  		(Corpus Cambr.)	 		(1972)	 xli. 10  				We lærað þæt ælc calic gegoten beo þe man husl on halgige, and on treowenum ne halgige man ænig. lOE     		(Laud)	 anno 1103  				Eac on morgen..gedyde se wind swa mycel to hearme her on lande..swa nan man ne ge munde þat æfre ænig ær gedyde. c1390						 (?c1350)						     		(1871)	 l. 307 (MED)  				I beo-take þe..soules to kepe; ȝif eni þorw þi defaute falle fro my riche, At þe day of Iuggement þou beost ioyned harde. 1477    in  J. Stuart  		(1842)	 II. 253  				We sal gif him the best counsale we can quhen he ony askis at ws. 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin  xlvi. 276  				As excellent a lesson as a man shall read any. 1591    R. Greene  f. 5v  				[He] pawnes his rings if he hath any, his sword, his cloake, or else what he hath about him. a1625    J. Fletcher  		(1640)	  iii. 30  				Cac. Ever thank him that has mony. Sanc. Wilt thou lend mee any? a1682    Sir T. Browne  		(1683)	 v. 115  				This, if any, may probably destroy that obstinate Disease. 1741    S. Richardson  IV. lxi. 410  				Must you, my Lord,..add to my Plagues, if I have any? 1769    W. Falconer  at Ship-building  				The pointers, if any, are..fixed across the hold diagonally to support the beams. 1839    S. G. Morton  107  				The narrowness of the head..is not remarkable, and very slight pressure, if any, has been applied to the frontal bone. 1883     11 July 5/3  				The mean temperature of the month was lower than any recorded since 1879. 1928    P. Grainger Let. 31 Jan. in   		(1994)	 88  				The whole tone of the letter must be called a greater blow to my hopes than any I have yet had from you. 2010    A. Atwater-Rhodes  i. 8  				Maybe he should talk to a priest? He didn't know any. OE    St. Andrew 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 in  F. G. Cassidy  & R. N. Ringler  		(1971)	 214  				For þon þe þu eart blind, þu ne gesihst ænigne of Godes þam halgum. OE    Wærferð tr.  Gregory  		(Corpus Cambr.)	 		(1900)	  i. x. 79  				Saga me..hwæðer þu ongæte his wundra ænigu. c1175						 (     		(Bodl. 343)	 		(1894)	 6  				Ȝif ic æniȝ þare ȝyfæ habbe þe ðu ȝyrnende bist. c1225						 (?c1200)						     		(Bodl.)	 		(1940)	 495  				Ȝef hit is misboren..& wonti ei [a1250 Titus eni] of his limen, Oðer sum mis feare, hit is sorhe to hire. 1340     		(1866)	 5 (MED)  				Huo þet agelt ine enie of þe ilke hestes. c1384     		(Royal)	 		(1850)	 James i. 5  				If ony of ȝou nedith wisdom, axe he of God. 1409    in  J. Stuart  & G. Burnett  		(1880)	 IV. p. ccxi  				Gif..[they] rebellis or disobesis till ony of the saide lordis again resoun. 1526     James i. 5  				If eny of you lacke wysdome. 1567    J. Jewel   v. vi. §7. 533  				It is a sinne, as greate as Sacrilege, or Churche robbinge, to reason of any of the Popes dooinges. a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  iii. iii. 127  				If there be any of him left, Ile bury  it.       View more context for this quotation 1690    J. Locke   ii. xxviii. 164  				In any of these cases, the print left by the Seal, will be obscure. 1711    R. Steele  No. 154. ⁋2  				How do you know more than any of us? 1798    J. Austen  27 Oct. 		(1995)	 17  				Dame Tilbury's daughter has lain-in—Shall I give her any of your Baby Cloathes? 1837    E. Hayes   ii. xiii. 631  				As every count in the indictment contains a distinct charge, there is no doubt that the jury may acquit or convict on any of them. 1876    J. Harley  		(ed. 6)	 371  				Oats contain a larger proportion of gluten than any of the other cereals in use. 1924    V. Sackville-West Let. 22 Aug. in   		(1984)	 43  				I like you a fabulous lot; and any of my friends could tell you that. 2011     24 Feb. 15/1  				I had always ambled through life, never suffering from..any of the ills the urban mind is prey to.  c1400    in  J. Slater  		(Ph.D. thesis, Univ. of Edinb.)	 		(1952)	 No. 53  				Ony of the said partis. c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer  		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 233  				If that any [c1415 Corpus Oxf. eny, c1430 Cambr. Gg.4.27 ony] of vs haue moore than oother Lat hym..parte it with his brother. c1449    R. Pecock  		(1860)	 558  				Sithen fewe othere taken eny of hem bothe. ?1541    M. Coverdale  sig. f.viijv  				Doth anie of both these ensamples proue, that [etc.]? 1587    A. Fleming et al.   		(new ed.)	 III. 1253/1  				Not at all..benefited by anie of them both. 1660    R. South  14  				The Ministers of God are not to evade, or take refuge in any of these two forementioned wayes. 1795     Nov. 400/2  				The passage by any of the two bridges is impossible. 1809    L. de Tousard  II. vii. 201  				The cannonier, who had pointed the gun, could not ascertain..whether any of the two salient points had not been deranged by some shock. 1887    M. Salmonson  viii. 72  				We find more religious sects amongst them [sc. the Swedes] than amongst any of the two other nationalities. 1922    G. W. Edwards  iv. 53  				Many exporters are willing to concede that a bank may cancel its advice at any of the two points mentioned above. 1996    C. I. Macafee  7/1  				Any, either, one of two things. 2000    M. R. Matthews  viii. 202  				For him [sc. Descartes], the sum of motion of two equal bodies travelling at equal speed in opposite directions is double that of any of the pair.   C. adv.the world > relative properties > quantity > degree or relative amount of a quality, action, etc. > 			[adverb]		 > in any degree or at all c1300    Childhood Jesus 		(Laud)	 137 in  C. Horstmann  		(1875)	 1st Ser. 7  				With oute ani more lette Þat treo ful sone upriȝht him sette. c1450						 (?a1422)						    J. Lydgate  		(Durh.)	 		(1961)	  vi. l. 263  				Or he come eny nere. 1548     f. clxxxiiij  				Not mynding to differre the time any farther. 1573    J. Daus tr.  H. Bullinger  		(rev. ed.)	 xxxii. f. 91v  				I suppose we neede not to reason any curiouslyer hereof at this present. a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  iv. ii. 113  				You are not to goe loose any  longer.       View more context for this quotation 1711    R. Steele  No. 154. ⁋4  				Before you go any farther. 1792    W. Cowper  30 Nov. 		(1984)	 IV. 246  				It is impossible any longer to find a pound of butter or cream to our tea in all the country. 1837     Oct. 46/1  				It is a well-known fact..that contract work is never done any better than can be helped. c1875    L. Stephen  1st Ser. 347  				Few people..would be any the worse for the study. 1951    K. Ferrier  30 Jan. 		(2003)	 v. 141  				Knowing you coped with mother too doesn't make me feel any better. 2007     July 97/1  				We won't be any the wiser until the earthquakes strike. 1735    R. Lee in   3 356  				Y'r colts have not been gentled any, so that Charles can't lead them up. 1780    S. Holten Jrnl. in   		(1920)	 LVI. 96  				I have not traveled any this day on account of my horses. 1827     8 Aug.  				It can't be that he has been examined and cross-questioned, and differed any. 1857    J. G. Holland  iii. 32  				Your words come down jest like rain spatterin' on a rock. They don't soak in any. 1869    ‘M. Twain’  iv. 45  				It is a good tune—you can't improve it any. 1886    R. E. G. Cole  7  				He's not worked any sin' June. She can't sit up any. 1896     Apr. 778/2  				I don't think he could have suffered any, he looked so peaceful. 1904     Mar. 360  				One interesting speech followed which did not help matters any. 1911    H. P. Fairchild  101  				Costa was not used to springs, and he did not mind this any. 1928    A. E. Pease  (at cited word)  				Did it raan any? 1958     17 Sept. 386/1  				This couldn't have helped the Yogi any. 2006    M. Cabot  89  				My humiliation in front of Detective Canavan hasn't helped the matter any.  Phrases P1.    any but. 1481						 (a1470)						    J. Tiptoft tr.  Cicero  		(Caxton)	 sig. a6  				They ne shal but denye, that name of goodnesse to be graunted to ony, but to wise men. 1525    Ld. Berners tr.  J. Froissart  II. clxix. f. cxciiiv/2  				No lorde sente any but [Fr. ne..que ceulx] of their owne seruauntes. 1569    E. Fenton tr.  P. Boaistuau  f. 66  				I have red one wonder of hyr, whiche I neuer hearde of in any but in hir, that is, that she never shewed affection to any man. 1623    R. Jobson  46  				An open house, where stands his chaire empty, vnlawfull for any but himselfe to sit in. 1653    I. Walton  vii. 160  				This dish of meat is too good for any but  Anglers.       View more context for this quotation 1728    A. Ramsay  76  				Nor will North Britain yield for fouth Of ilka thing, and fellows couth To ony but her sister South. 1741    J. Wilford  498  				It was wholly impossible for any but those which knew otherwise, not to have mistaken her for their natural Mother. 1817    S. T. Coleridge  II. xx. 113  				Would any but a poet..have brought all the different marks and circumstances of a sea-loch before the mind. 1897    E. Lynn Linton George Eliot in   101  				A task beyond the power of any but the few Masters of our literature. 1963    A. Beales   i. ii. 18  				The monasteries had long ceased, most of them, to teach any but interns. 2003    B. Bryson  		(2004)	 xx. 377  				The attributes that distinguish archaea from bacteria are not the sort that would quicken the pulse of any but a biologist. 1598    tr.  J. de Serres  266  				He prohibited all publike exercise of any but the Romish religion. 1677    W. Hughes   ii. i. 9  				That the Apostles should leave the Care of all the Churches, to take up that of one Particular Church,..can never go down with any but a Roman Swallow. 1727    S. Switzer   vii. lvi. 295  				Some few tops [of parsley] may be indeed used in sallets, but it is a little too coarse for any but rusticated palates. 1789    W. Cowper  22 Apr. 		(1982)	 III. 279  				The burthen..too heavy for any but Atlantean shoulders. 1826    M. Wilmot  25 Sept. 		(1935)	 250  				My eyes are too weak to count the threads of any but coarse canvas. 1880    W. MacCormac  103  				The volatility of the acid renders any but recently prepared gauze untrustworthy. 1939     86 62/1  				It is scarcely conceivable that any but an American designer would have designed such a building: it is ‘styling’ applied to architecture. 2004    B. Greene  513  				The wavefunction..is merely a theoretical tool for making (probabilistic) predictions and should not be accorded any but mathematical reality.  1558–9    Act 1 Elizabeth I c. 20 in   		(1963)	 IV.  i. 382  				And of every Twentye shillinges value of Tynne and Pewter Vessell caried oute of thy yor Realme by any and every Marchaunte Alyen dij d. over and above the xij d. aforesayd. 1587    J. Bridges  v. 462  				His authoritie excelled any and euery one of his fellowes. a1651    Disc. Difference Long Prayers 11 in  R. Steward  		(1684)	  				Their hands were imployed in any and every of their works upon earth. 1793    T. Jefferson Rep. 16 Dec. in   		(1990)	 120  				Where a nation refuses permission to our merchants and factors to reside within certain parts of their dominions, we may..refuse residence to theirs in any and every part of ours. 1833    J. Forbes et al.   II. 378/2  				The term misplaced gout..has been applied to any and every incidental disease occurring in a gouty habit. 1888     4 Aug. 133/1  				Those who..profess themselves willing to take, ‘lying down’, any and every inconvenience that the victorious Irish may inflict. 1956    A. Wilson   i. iv. 172  				The brother..is a modern Churchman, which means, as far as I can see, an attachment to any and every belief save the dogmas of his own religion. 2005     4 Mar. 20/1  				Betrayal, booze and bad luck put paid to any and every scheme. 1770    L. Carter  31 Aug. 		(1965)	 I. 479  				Those hands..might any time produce me 500 bushels of wheat which they could not do when sown in Tobacco ground. 1847    C. Brontë  II. v. 132  				A crater-crust which may crack and spue fire any day. 1865    ‘L. Carroll’  viii. 122  				Alice..had not as yet had any dispute with the Queen, but she knew that it might happen any minute. 1924    P. G. Wodehouse  ii. 32  				He said this girl..might be leaving the party any moment now. 1956    W. Golding  		(1960)	 139  				I shall be rescued any day now. 2001    C. Glazebrook  17  				Baby Nathan looks as if he could wake up and start bawling for his dinner any second. 1831     27 Dec.  				I can make nayther head not tail to it—nor swallow it up not down—nor git it any which way at all at all. 1860    T. C. Haliburton  ii. 53  				But bleedin' at the heart, marm, is sudden death any which way you fix it. 1936    C. Day  213  				After the first two or three drawers had had their upper levels fixed up, things were pushed into the others any which way, and when she was through they were locked. 1974    T. P. Whitney tr.  A. Solzhenitsyn  I.  i. v. 193  				The tractor was driven any which way by whoever happened along and was quickly ruined. 2005     July 135/1  				The locals continue to prepare it any which way, pounding it, mincing it, marinating it, frying it, steaming it, grilling it and stewing it in gravy. 1866     Jan. 2/2  				The blacksmith’s house, you know, was burned down, and his kind of a register-—if it was any good, and I am sure I don’t know if it was any good—and then that woman died. 1880     June 138/1  				And when I buy a goose unplucked, if his quills are any good, his legs won't carve, and his gizzard is full of gravel-stones! 1901     31 July 88/2  				Oh, chuck it! I never was any good at arithmetic! 1914    C. E. A. Philipps Let. 13 Nov. in  L. Housman  		(2002)	 213  				Nothing can shift our squadron unless a Black Maria happens to do us in, as no trench is any good against them. 1985     15 July 1/8  				Are work shadow schemes any good? 2014    S. Dharmapala  		(2015)	 28  				You must practise designing to be any good at it.  P6.   colloquial. the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > 			[adjective]		 > not specified > of any kind 1833    R. Sharp  5 Mar. 		(1997)	 407  				Newlove was selling his Furniture by Auction yesterday..; we neither wanted any old Riff Raff, nor had any Money to waste in it.]			 1896    G. Ade  xviii. 171  				Any old farmer..could buy up him and a hundred more like him. 1911    R. W. Chambers  ii. 63  				‘Would you like to have a chance to study?’..‘Study? What?’ ‘Sculpture—any old thing!’ 1958    B. Hamilton  iv. 78  				His steward..just shoves some fruit in his cabin, any old time. 2002    M. McGrath  		(2003)	 viii. 86  				Len likes his morning slice. And not just any old slice, but the right kind of slice fried in the right kind of way.  c.    any old how. the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > qualification > 			[adverb]		 > at all events, at any rate 1900    L. S. Dorr  ii. 11  				I'd like to know what he was after. If it was to find out how many Dacres there be, he didn't get full measure, pressed down, running over, any old how. 1924    P. Creswick  xxxiii. 183  				Yes, she likes me. But liking's nothing. Well, any old how, I had to tell you. 1958    F. Norman   ii. 34  				Any old how..he managed to get behind him. 1995    K. Coles   ii. vi. 141  				I'd say you were lucky to get him, any old how. the world > action or operation > manner of action > carelessness > 			[adverb]		 > unmethodically the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > 			[adverb]		 > hastily or haphazardly the world > relative properties > order > disorder > irregularity > irregular			[phrase]		 > at random 1904    E. C. Wilson  x. 201  				The teacher hunts down the examples in various arithmetics, writes them on the board, often hurriedly..; he does it accurately, perhaps, but ‘any old how’. 1933     23 Aug. 216/1  				Scenes like a splash of confetti Hurled any old how. 1937    M. Hillis  v. 81  				The kind of woman who gets herself up any-old-how..deserves just what she gets. 2008    P. Hensher  179  				As you went into the mine, the passages were more and more provisional,..the sides just hacked out any old how.  1936     8 Feb. 17  				[A fighter] named Connie McVey.., willing to pick up money any old way. 1995     June 38/1  				Strawberries are sexy. Eat them any old way—moussed, marinated in red wine..or topped with chocolate. 2003    C. Birch  xvi. 216  				The terrorists were dead, killed by rockets and bombs... There were eight of them, lying where they'd been thrown, any old way.   P7.  the mind > language > statement > refusal > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > reject 1895     7 Dec. 776/2  				Oh! if there's any hocus-pocus to be done, why, I'm not having any. 1905    A. Henderson in  E. T. Whittaker et al.   35  				The verdict pronounced by the masses has been: ‘If this is religion..then I am not having any of it.’ 1923    D. H. Lawrence  vii. 133  				Hester urges Dimmesdale to go away with her, to a new country, to a new life. He isn't having any. 1940    J. Hanley  456  				Come on, you! Not having any of this now! 1951    J. Steinbeck   i. 24  				I came in to tell you once and finally what I think of that stuff you were telling me. I won't have any of it. 1990    J. Buffong in  N. Payne  & J. Buffong  189  				Mammy wasn't having any of that. She said anybody who ‘don't wash their hand’ is not staying in her house. 2000    D. Ginsberg  x. 255  				He pointed out to the waitress that she'd charged him incorrectly, but she wasn't having any of it.  This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022). <  adj.pron.n.adv.OE |