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单词 horde
释义

horden.

Brit. /hɔːd/, U.S. /hɔrd/
Forms:

α. 1500s 1700s– orda, 1500s–1700s horda.

β. 1500s hoorde, 1500s–1700s hord, 1600s–1700s hoord, 1600s– horde.

Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin horda.
Etymology: < post-classical Latin orda (later also horda: see below) encampment of the Mongol ruler, also the ruler's tent (1247 in the source translated in quot. 15981 at sense 1a), a group of nomadic Mongol or Turkic peoples, a khanate or its subdivision (1525 or earlier), partly < a Turkic language (compare Old Uighur ordu , ordo , Orkhon Turkic ordo royal residence (8th cent.)), and partly < Middle Mongolian ordo , orda palace, royal encampment, royal tent (itself < Turkic). Compare ordu n. and Urdu n.For other Turkic forms that probably contributed to the spread of the word in various Western and Eastern European languages, compare Chaghatai ordu royal encampment, royal residence (15th cent.; also in form orda, perhaps showing influence of Middle Mongolian), Ottoman Turkish ordu royal camp, military camp, army (14th cent.; Turkish ordu), Tatar orda royal residence, royal encampment. Compare ( < a Turkic language) Old Russian, Russian orda central encampment of the khanate (1242), large association of nomadic groups ruled by a khan (1390), group of nomadic people (15th cent.), army, multitude of hostile people (16th cent.); ( < Chaghatai or Mongolian) Spanish †ordo encampment (c1406); and also ( < post-classical Latin) German Horde a group of nomadic Mongol or Turkic peoples (1429 in a letter from Duke Vytautas, with reference to the Golden Horde), army (16th cent.), crowd, mob (17th cent.), Polish orda, horda a group of nomadic Mongol or Turkic peoples (1492; in later use also ‘crowd’), Italian orda, †horda a group of nomadic people (1520), multitude (1693), French horde a group of nomadic Mongol or Turkic peoples (1559), a large group of animals (1669), any group of nomadic people (1669), a disorderly group, rabble (1767), crowd (1769), a large number of things (1848), Spanish horda group of nomadic Mongol or Turkic peoples (1586). The ultimate origin of the forms in h- (attested earliest in 1429 in German, and from 1509 in post-classical Latin in a Polish source) is unknown. Compare the following earlier example where the Turkic or Mongolian word (transmitted via post-classical Latin) is treated as a place name:?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 83 Here prince þat gouerneth þat contree þat þei clepen Batho, duelleth at the cytee of Orda.
1.
a. Among the Mongol and Turkic peoples of Central Asia: an affiliation of a number of nomadic families or communities, typically dwelling in a large portable encampment, esp. one ruled by a khan and having a military function. Formerly also: †such an encampment; (also) †the tent of the khan or ruler within it (obsolete). Cf. ordu n. Now historical. See also Golden Horde n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > ethnicities > race > nomads > [noun] > types of nomads
nomadesa1544
horde1555
Strandlooper1935
1555 R. Eden tr. P. Giovio Libellus de legatione Basilii in tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 280v Tartares are diuided by companies which they caule Hordas [L. Hordas]..they consiste of innumerable Hordas.
1589 A. Jenkinson in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations ii. 348 The Nagayans..were diuided into diuers companies called Hords.
1598 R. Hakluyt tr. J. de Plano Carpini in Princ. Navigations (new ed.) I. xxiv. 66 It is the Orda or court of his fa[t]her which hee inhabiteth, and one of his wiues beareth rule there.
1598 R. Hakluyt tr. J. de Plano Carpini in Princ. Navigations (new ed.) I. xxv. 67 Because we had not as yet seene the Emperour, they would not inuite vs nor admit vs into his Orda [L. ad ordam], but caused good attendance and entertainement, after the Tartars fashion, to be giuen vnto vs in our owne tent.
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage 421 Stayed with him in his hord (which consisted of about 1000 housholds of a kindred).
1759 Mod. Part Universal Hist. V. vi. iii. 264 Many of the ordas had encamped there, but had returned as soon as sensible of Timûr's approach.
1799 W. Tooke View Russ. Empire II. 78 The Kirghises..have always been divided into three hordes, the great, the middle and the little hordes.
1854 J. H. Newman Lect. Hist. Turks ii. i. 63 The horde of Chozars, as this Turkish tribe was called,..transported their tents..into Georgia.
2016 G. Ubiria Soviet Nation-building in Central Asia ii. 37 Both the ‘Kazakh’ Khanate and the hordes were a type of multilevel tribal confederacies, the political unity of which largely depended on the existence of either a powerful Khan or a common security threat.
b. More generally: any similar group among other nomadic peoples. Chiefly historical, or in fictional worlds.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > ethnicities > race > nomads > [noun]
nomadesa1544
Scenite1575
nomad1587
horde1617
nomade1798
1617 S. Purchas Pilgrimage (ed. 3) viii. iii. 925 One of our men went on land to their Tents, one of theirs remayning for hostage, in which Tents they liued by hoords, men, women, and children.
1695 W. Temple Introd. Hist. Eng. Introd. Such were the Hords among the Goths, the Clans in Scotland, and Septs in Ireland.
1840 T. Arnold Hist. Rome II. xxxiii. 320 The Samnite plans were, moreover, unexpectedly furthered by a new inroad of the Gauls; new hordes had lately arrived from beyond the Alps.
1921 Motor Oct. 20 This was the historic route followed by the Apache hordes in their descents upon the far-flung settlements of the encroaching whites.
2007 N.Y. Times Mag. (Nexis) 8 Apr. 28 Buljan found comfort in the sukkah, in this open-air proof of the affinity between his own fathers and those of the people (by the account of their own book once a wandering horde of tent dwellers and cattle raiders) whose faith they had adopted.
c. Cultural Anthropology. In traditional societies: a basic social division typically consisting of a small number of families living as a loosely connected group. Now rare.Common in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.Cf. primal horde n. at primal adj. and n. Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinship group > clan > [noun]
surname1455
sept1518
clana1522
gentility1583
blooda1599
horde1826
gens1855
1826 Eclectic Rev. Oct. 305 They live distributed in hordes of forty or fifty under a family government, recognising a common chief only at the moment of making war upon their neighbours.
1865 J. F. McLennan Primitive Marriage viii. 233 So far as the system of infanticide allowed, the hordes contained young men and women accounted of different stocks, who might intermarry consistently with exogamy.
1918 A. A. Brill tr. S. Freud Totem & Taboo iv. 208 Man, too, lived originally in small hordes in which the jealousy of the oldest and strongest male prevented promiscuity.
1923 Jrnl. Royal Anthropol. Inst. 53 428 [With reference to the Wangaaypuwan people of New South Wales.] It is therefore impossible to find out for certain whether the horde was or was not a clan, i.e., whether it consisted in all instances of persons related to one another in one direct line, or whether it might include persons of more than one line of descent.
2012 J. Goody in B. Isakhan & S. Stockwell Edinb. Compan. Hist. Democracy p. xi The next level of complexity beyond the horde has been seen, in political anthropology, as the acephalous society, which again has no overall leadership.
2.
a. Chiefly depreciative. A large group of people, esp. one which is disorganized, disorderly, or threatening; a rabble, a crowd, a throng. Also more loosely (chiefly in plural): a large number of people (of a specified type).robber horde, victim horde: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > of people or animals > regarded as a whole or a body of people gathered
weredc725
trumec893
thrumOE
wharfOE
flockOE
farec1275
lithc1275
ferd1297
companyc1300
flotec1300
routc1300
rowc1300
turbc1330
body1340
numberc1350
congregation1382
presencec1390
meiniec1400
storec1400
sum1400
manya1425
collegec1430
peoplec1449
schoola1450
turm1483
catervea1492
garrison?a1513
shoal1579
troop1584
bevy1604
roast1608
horde1613
gross1617
rhapsody1654
sortment1710
tribe1715
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage iv. xiii. 359 Pillars of Stone, which sometimes were Hoords of Men and Beasts feeding, transformed by diuine power.
1796 E. Burke Two Lett. Peace Regicide Directory France i. 23 I hardly shall allow..that with the hord of Regicides we could..obtain any thing at all deserving the name of peace.
1888 H. E. Scudder in Atlantic Monthly Aug. 227/1 This great horde of young readers in America has created a large number of special writers for the young.
1951 E. Paul Springtime in Paris (U.K. ed.) ii. 24 There were a few North Americans, hordes of English, many South Americans, and a few Near-Easterners.
2008 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 20 July ar4 The teeming hordes of tourists who descend on Manhattan in the summer rarely stray far from Times Square in search of theater.
b. A large (moving) group of animals, typically one considered as dangerous or destructive.locust horde, rat horde: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > animals collectively > [noun] > swarm
swarm1560
cloud1590
horde1613
skreeda1838
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage iv. xiii. 359 Pillars of Stone, which sometimes were Hoords of Men and Beasts feeding, transformed by diuine power.
1797 J. Fox Santa-Maria II. 67 Which would you choose, hen-hearted poltroon, to be minced in pieces by a banditti, or nibbled to atoms by a horde of wild beasts?
1880 Amer. Naturalist 14 804 By collecting, in winter, these caterpillars, mummified and filled with spores, they can be used in destroying the hordes of caterpillars of the next summer.
1935 Advertiser (Adelaide) 13 Aug. 14/5 A ravening horde of rabbits laid waste a great expanse of pasture land.
2003 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 6 July viii. 12/1 Hordes of mosquitoes greeted us as we unloaded.
c. A large amount, number, or quantity of a thing or things. Now often in plural: masses, loads.In quot. as part of an extended metaphor with reference to sense 2b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > (a) great quantity or amount
felec825
muchc1230
good wone1297
plentyc1300
bushelc1374
sight1390
mickle-whata1393
forcea1400
manynessa1400
multitudea1400
packc1400
a good dealc1430
greata1450
sackful1484
power1489
horseloadc1500
mile1508
lump1523
a deal?1532
peckc1535
heapa1547
mass1566
mass1569
gallon1575
armful1579
cart-load1587
mickle1599
bushelful1600–12
a load1609
wreck1612
parisha1616
herd1618
fair share1650
heapa1661
muchness1674
reams1681
hantle1693
mort1694
doll?1719
lift1755
acre1759
beaucoup1760
ton1770
boxload1795
boatload1807
lot1811
dollop1819
swag1819
faggald1824
screed1826
Niagara1828
wad1828
lashings1829
butt1831
slew1839
ocean1840
any amount (of)1848
rake1851
slather1857
horde1860
torrent1864
sheaf1865
oodlesa1867
dead load1869
scad1869
stack1870
jorum1872
a heap sight1874
firlot1883
oodlings1886
chunka1889
whips1888
God's quantity1895
streetful1901
bag1917
fid1920
fleetful1923
mob1927
bucketload1930
pisspot1944
shitload1954
megaton1957
mob-o-ton1975
gazillion1978
buttload1988
shit ton1991
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > [noun] > a large number or multitude
sandc825
thousandc1000
un-i-rimeOE
legiona1325
fernc1325
multitudec1350
hundred1362
abundancec1384
quantityc1390
sight1390
felec1394
manyheada1400
lastc1405
sortc1475
infinityc1480
multiplie1488
numbers1488
power1489
many1525
flock1535
heapa1547
multitudine1547
sort1548
myriads1555
myriads1559
infinite1563
tot-quot1565
dickera1586
multiplea1595
troop1596
multitudes1598
myriad1611
sea-sands1656
plurality1657
a vast many1695
dozen1734
a good few1756
nation1762
vast1793
a wheen (of)1814
swad1828
lot1833
tribe1833
slew1839
such a many1841
right smart1842
a million and one1856
horde1860
a good several1865
sheaf1865
a (bad, good, etc.) sortc1869
immense1872
dunnamuch1875
telephone number1880
umpty1905
dunnamany1906
skit1913
umpteen1919
zillion1922
gang1928
scrillion1935
jillion1942
900 number1977
gazillion1978
fuckload1984
1860 ‘G. F. Preston’ Ballads & Metrical Sketches 216 Chase away the horde Of guilt inspired, unholy meditations.
1908 R. D. Ware In Woods & on Shore 239 He..rowed, shivering, through the chilly darkness to a coffin-shaped box anchored in a waste of waters in the middle of a horde of bobbing, wooden decoys.
1985 Times 19 Dec. 17/2 After putting a horde of firms through one of the most hard-fought ‘beauty contests’ the City has seen, Marks and Spencer has appointed its new stockbrokers.
2014 J. A. Boone Homoerotics of Orientalism vii. 312 By the era of European travel to these regions, it is clear that hordes of book manuscripts were available for viewing and sale.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2020; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

hordev.

Brit. /hɔːd/, U.S. /hɔrd/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: horde n.
Etymology: < horde n.
intransitive. With adverb or prepositional complement. To gather in a large group; to congregate or live in a horde.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > gather together [verb (intransitive)] > specifically of people or animals > in large numbers
thringOE
threngc1175
crowda1400
flocka1400
swarm1526
growl1542
throngc1565
shoala1618
horde1801
bike1805
fry1816
hotch1893
1801 Derby Mercury 13 Aug. The impolitic custom of hording together in families, and of not marrying out of their own kraals, has tended to enervate this race of men.
1907 Canad. Mag. Feb. 385/2 It is a daily sight to see them wandering here, there and everywhere, half-starved, half-naked, hording in wretched hovels.
2017 N. Devon Jrnl. (Nexis) 3 Aug. 2 The stunt was achieved by placing a caged queen bee on Ben's chin and attracting the worker bees to horde around her, forming a beard.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2020; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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n.1555v.1801
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