单词 | hunt |
释义 | † huntn.1 Obsolete. A hunter; a huntsman. (In quot. c1000, a hunting-spider.) Common Hunt: see quot. 1707. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] huntc1000 huntera1325 cacherec1340 pricasourc1387 waithmanc1425 chaser1470 huntsman1567 pricker1575 Nimrod1623 venator1656 fieldmana1683 sportsman1699 coureur de bois1700 sporting parson1757 chasseur1796 jäger1823 shikari1827 venerer1845 hunting-man1859 gamer1887 hunterman1891 veldman1895 the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] > master of hounds huntsman1600 field master1648 huntsmaster1691 Common Hunt1700 master1781 skirter1827 c1000 Sax. Leechd. II. 144 Wiþ huntan bite, blace sneglas on hattre pannan gehyrste. c1131 Anglo-Saxon Chron. anno 1127 Ða huntes wæron swarte..& here hundes ealle swarte..& hi ridone on swarte hors. c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 209 Þe deuel..henteð us alse hunte driueð deor to grune. 1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Rolls) VII. 357 Alle þe hontes schulde come wiþ her houndes. a1475 Bk. Curtasye (Sloane 1986) l. 629 in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 320 A halpeny þo hunte takes on þe day For euery hounde, þo sothe to say. 1566 T. Drant tr. Horace Medicinable Morall sig. Aiij The hungrye hunts muste haue it all. 1575 G. Gascoigne Noble Arte Venerie xlii. 127 Then the chiefe hunte shall take his knyfe, and cut off the Deares ryght foote. 1700 T. Brown Amusem. Serious & Comical iii. 30 Would you buy the Common Hunt, the Common Cryers, the Bridge-Master's..Places? 1707 J. Chamberlayne Angliæ Notitia (ed. 22) 357 He [the Lord Mayor] hath four Officers that wait on him, who are reputed Esquires by their Places; that is, The Sword-Bearer. The Common-Hunt, who keepeth a good Kennel of Hounds for the Lord-Mayor's Recreation abroad. The Common Cryer. The Water Bailiff. 1807 Jrnl. 17 Dec. 84, in Common Council of London f. 135 b Motion thereupon made that the Office of Common Hunt be abolished, and eventually carried. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1899; most recently modified version published online June 2021). huntn.2 1. The act of hunting. a. The act of chasing wild animals for the purpose of catching or killing them; the chase. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > [noun] huntethc900 huntingc1000 sleatinga1122 purchasec1325 veneryc1330 venation1386 venison1390 the chase?a1400 chasing?a1400 waithc1400 huntc1405 vanchasea1425 enchase1486 vaunt-chase1575 field sport1580 shikara1613 huntsmanshipa1631 cynegetics1646 sport of kings1735 game hunting1823 blood sport1893 c1405 (c1385) G. Chaucer Knight's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 1770 Ther nas no tygre in the vale of Galgopheye..So cruel on the hunte. c1480 (a1400) St. Julian 236 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 465 In ȝouthhede..he a day til hwntis ȝede. 1537 in J. Gairdner Lett. & Papers Reign Henry VIII (1890) (modernized text) XII. i. 206 In formation against John Hogon, who, going about the country with a ‘crowde’ or a fiddle..sang a song with these words, ‘The hunt is up’, etc. 1594 W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus ii. ii. 1 The hunt is vp the Moone is bright and gray. View more context for this quotation 1594 W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus ii. iii. 19 Eccho mocks the hounds,..As if a double hunt were heard at once. View more context for this quotation 1750 J. S. Gardiner Art & Pleasures of Hare-hunting vi. 55 Why a Hare, towards the end of the Hunt, is often difficult to be killed. 1869 A. Trollope He knew he was Right I. i. 5 [He] could not have ridden a hunt to save either his government or his credit. b. figurative and gen. Pursuit, as of a wild animal; the act of strenuously seeking or endeavouring to find something; a search, esp. a diligent search. Also with adv., as a hunt-up. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > [noun] > a search quest?c1335 search?a1475 searching out1531 searching1562 hunt1608 inquest1621 the world > movement > progressive motion > order of movement > following behind > [noun] > pursuit > hostile or violent chasec1325 hunting-down1542 hunt1608 1608 W. Shakespeare King Lear vii. 169 I heare my selfe proclaim'd, And by the happie hollow of a tree Escapt the hunt. 1697 tr. Countess D'Aunoy's Trav. (1706) 52 They were now upon the Hunt for him. 1764 S. Foote Patron ii. 47 It is three months ago since I got the first scent of it, and I have been ever since on the hunt. 1817 J. Mill Hist. Brit. India II. v. viii. 659 On the hunt for appearances of guilt. 1852 J. W. Carlyle Lett. II. 194 I went off then on a new hunt for lodgings. 2. concrete. a. A body of persons (which may include also horses and dogs) engaged in, or associated for the purpose of, hunting with a pack of hounds; (also) a hunting association. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] > hunt hunt1579 meet1884 1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Sept. 159 For feare of raungers, and the great hunt. 1687 J. Dryden Hind & Panther i. 3 The common Hunt, though from their rage restrain'd..Grin'd as They pass'd. 1762 in Egerton-Warburton Hunt. Songs (1883) Introd. 14 The Orders of the Tarporley Hunt, November ye 14th, 1762. 1787 R. Burns Poems (new ed.) Ded. p. v To the Noblemen and Gentlemen of the Caledonian Hunt. 1791 ‘G. Gambado’ Ann. Horsemanship To Rdr. p. v They might ere now have belonged to the first hunts in the country. 1812 Sporting Mag. 39 134 Foxes..have been poisoned..to the great annoyance of the hunts established in that county. 1877 R. H. Roberts Harry Holbrooke of Holbrooke Hall i. 12 She..is looked upon as a privileged person, a pet of the hunt. 1889 C. Smith Repentance Paul Wentworth I. 56 To withdraw his subscription to the Hunt. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animals hunted > [noun] > caught or killed in hunting gamec1300 purchasec1325 venison1338 huntinga1500 hunt1588 the world > food and drink > hunting > thing hunted or game > [noun] preya1250 gamec1330 chase1393 waitha1400 purchasea1450 small gamec1474 quarryc1500 gibier1514 meat1529 hunt-beast1535 hunt1588 course1607 felon1735 ground-game1872 1588 R. Parke tr. J. G. de Mendoza Hist. Kingdome of China 17 In the which..is great quantitie of hunt and flying foules. a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iii. vi. 87 Boyes wee'l go dresse our Hunt . View more context for this quotation c. The district over which a pack of hounds hunts. Cf. chase n.1 3. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting area > [noun] fieldOE forest1297 seta1425 chasea1440 hunting-fieldc1680 hunting-ground1721 flying county1856 hunt1857 moor1860 the Shires1860 driving moor1873 beat1875 killing ground1877 flying country1883 killing field1915 1857 in Art Taming Horses (1859) xi. 178 The celebrated ‘Haycock’ [inn].., standing..in the middle of the Fitzwilliam Hunt. 1882 Field 28 Jan. 100/3 Every landowner within the hunt should be careful to preserve foxes. 1899 N.E.D. at Hunt Mod. The property is situated within the Heythrop hunt. 3. Change-ringing. (See quot. and cf. hunt v. 7.) ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > bell-ringing > [noun] > going through all the changes > changes > position in changes lead1671 dodge1684 hunt1684 1684 R. Howlett School Recreat. 93 In all Peals upon five Bells there are two Hunts, to wit, a whole and an half-Hunt. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 462/2 The First, or Treble Bell, it is termed the Hunt, and the Second Bell the half Hunt, because they run from the round Ringing, through all the change of Bells backwards and forewards, before they come to round Ringing againe. 4. A hunting or oscillatory motion (see hunt v. 7b, hunting n. 1f). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > [noun] > undesirable oscillation hunting1880 hunt1920 1920 Nature 11 Mar. 46/1 It moves backwards and forwards very slightly, and this motion we term the ‘hunt’. 1934 Brit. Jrnl. Psychol. 24 399 The ‘angle of hunt’, i.e. the angle of oscillation about the mean radial velocity, cannot exceed 360/N degrees, where N is the number of segments in the armature. 1937 Jrnl. Royal Aeronaut. Soc. 41 410 The well behaved short period oscillation develops into an irritating hunt. 1952 A. Tustin Automatic & Man. Control 280 If the amplitude is not too large, and..we know how to reduce the amplitude by increasing the hunt frequency, it is possible to check a mean position of the system. 5. Telephony. An operation of hunting by a selector or switch (see hunting n. 1g). ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telephony > [noun] > methods and procedures release1882 trunking1896 hunting1912 dialling1927 hunt1927 trunk dialling1952 direct distance dialling1955 direct dialling1958 dial-up1967 1927 W. E. Hudson Director Syst. Autom. Telephony ii. 42 Relay C..is used to determine when the impulse train is finished so as to allow the automatic hunt to start. 1966 M. Rubin & C. E. Haller Communication Switching Syst. i. 31 The hunt motion is a vertical move of the wipers along the contact bank. Compounds C1. General attributive. a. hunt-breakfast n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > meal > [noun] > breakfast or morning meal forme-metea1175 breakfast1463 disjune1491 jentation1599 jenticulation1658 meat breakfast1728 English breakfast1773 déjeuner1787 dejeune1788 fork-breakfast1812 tea-breakfast1825 cooked breakfast1848 chota hazri1863 hunt-breakfast1877 petit déjeuner1879 brekker1889 brekkie1904 Continental breakfast1911 prayer breakfast1930 Oslo breakfast1937 fry1959 1877 A. Trollope Amer. Senator II. xxiv. 254 That old farmer at the hunt breakfast. 1897 Daily Tel. 23 Nov. 9/3 A hunt-breakfast was given to the followers of the East Kent foxhounds. 1973 K. Giles File on Death v. 133 The other one..kept pawing the ladies..and falling off his horse after the Hunt Breakfast. hunt-button n. ΚΠ 1859 J. S. Rarey Art of taming Horses (new ed.) xi. 183 Scarlet-coated, many with the Brocklesby hunt button. hunt-dinner n. ΚΠ 1844 B. Disraeli Coningsby iii. v It was at the Hunt dinner. hunt-servant n. ΚΠ 1894 J. D. Astley Fifty Years of my Life II. 5 Horses, hounds, and hunt-servants have never been better turned out. b. hunt-weary adj. ΚΠ a1861 A. H. Clough Poems & Prose Remains (1869) II. 467 Artemis..alone, hunt-weary, Unto a dell..her foot unerring Had guided. C2. hunt ball n. a ball given by members of a hunt. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > dancing > ball or dance > [noun] > other balls or dances carolc1300 buttock-ball1698 redoubt1698 ridotto1708 race ball1770 county ball1771 dress ball?1772 promenade1778 waltz1802 hunt ball1807 dignity ball1834 ball-royala1843 polkery1845 jigging-party1872 prom1879 Cinderella dance1883 dinner dance1887 white ball1891 cotillion1898 taxi dance1910 Stampede Dance1950 go-go1965 1807 Sporting Mag. 31 40/1 The annual Hunt Ball took place at Chepstow. 1853 E. C. Gaskell Ruth I. i. 13 The annual hunt-ball was to take place. 1933 A. Powell From View to Death iv. 113 Ungainly young men who had had a glass too much of champagne at hunt-ball suppers. 1968 A. Diment Bang Bang Birds x. 193 Penny told us about a hunt ball she had attended recently. 1973 K. Giles File on Death iv. 90 'E provides the catering for the 'unt ball at seven guineas the ticket. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animals hunted > [noun] preya1250 wildc1275 felon1297 wild beastc1325 gamec1330 venison1338 venerya1375 chase1393 waitha1400 quarryc1500 gibier1514 wild meat1529 hunt-beast1535 beasts of warren1539 outlaw1599 course1607 big game1773 head1795 meat1851 the world > food and drink > hunting > thing hunted or game > [noun] preya1250 gamec1330 chase1393 waitha1400 purchasea1450 small gamec1474 quarryc1500 gibier1514 meat1529 hunt-beast1535 hunt1588 course1607 felon1735 ground-game1872 1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) I. 480 He ordanit..That na hunt beist with schutting sould be slane. hunt-sergeant n. an officer of Massachusetts in the colonial and provincial period, who had charge of the hunts (carried on with hounds) for hostile Indians. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > order of movement > following behind > [noun] > pursuit > hostile or violent > man-hunt or man-hunting > one who pursues American Indians hunt-sergeant1706 1706–7 in E. Ames & A. C. Goodell Acts Province Mass. Bay (1896–1922) l. 599 Persons who shall..have them [hounds] at all times in readiness to attend the hunt serjeant. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > equipment > [noun] > spear boar-spear1465 otter spear1540 boar-staff1579 hunt-spear1594 wolf-spear1823 1594 C. Marlowe & T. Nashe Dido iii. sig. D3 Ascanius..Bearing his huntspeare brauely in his hand. Draft additions 1993 hunt sab n. colloquial = hunt saboteur n. at Additions below; also as v. intransitive, to act as a hunt saboteur (present participle in quot.); cf. sab n.2 ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] > disrupting hunt hunt saboteur1964 hunt saboteuse1977 saboteur1977 sab1978 hunt sab1981 sabbing1983 the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > hunt [verb (intransitive)] > disrupt the hunt hunt sab1981 1981 N.Y. Times 11 Feb. c1/5 The ‘hunt sabs’, as they call themselves, are mostly young, and many are vegetarians. 1986 Peace News 20 June 5/1 Sixty odd Hunt Sabs..talking and debating with the forty-strong hunt. 1986 G. F. Newman Set Thief 8 In a village..where she had been hunt sabbing.., it [sc. the car] had been almost totally vandalized by hunt supporters. Draft additions 1993 hunt saboteur n. a person whose intention is to disrupt a hunt. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] > disrupting hunt hunt saboteur1964 hunt saboteuse1977 saboteur1977 sab1978 hunt sab1981 sabbing1983 1964 Western Times (Exeter) 8 May 9/7 A broken jaw is said to be one of the relics hunt saboteurs took away with them from a meet of the Culmstock Otter Hunt at Colyford on Saturday. 1986 Financial Times 20 Oct. 1/1 Police are investigating clashes between hunt saboteurs and the North Surrey and Sussex Beagles at Lingfield. Draft additions 1993 hunt saboteuse n. rare a female hunt saboteur. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] > disrupting hunt hunt saboteur1964 hunt saboteuse1977 saboteur1977 sab1978 hunt sab1981 sabbing1983 1977 ‘E. Crispin’ Glimpses of Moon xi. 215 ‘Polluters,’ said the hunt saboteuse. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1899; most recently modified version published online March 2022). huntv. 1. a. intransitive. To go in pursuit of wild animals or game; to engage in the chase. Also of animals: to pursue their prey. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunt [verb (intransitive)] huntc1000 chasec1320 sporta1635 to go out1749 shikar1872 c1000 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 92/11 Ne canst þu huntian buton mid nettum. c1000 Sax. Leechd. III. 172 Gif him þince þæt he huntige, beorge him georne wið his fynd. c1131 Anglo-Saxon Chron. anno 1127 Þa sægon & herdon fela men feole huntes hunten. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 718 Ȝe huntieð [c1300 Otho honteþ] i þes kinges friðe. c1290 S. Eng. Leg. I. 256/5 Ase he hountede In a dai In Iolifte j-nouȝ. 1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum (Bodl.) xviii. i Some [beasts] hunteþ by nyȝt. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 3519 Esau went for till hunt. a1400 Octouian 891 To hounty yn ech mannys boundes Hyt was hys wone. a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 36/1 [He] sente for the Mayre and Aldermenne of London to hym..too haue them hunte and bee mery with hym. 1665 R. Hooke Micrographia 201 I have beheld them instructing their young ones, how to hunt. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth III. 270 The dog kinds..love to hunt in company. 1841 E. W. Lane tr. Thousand & One Nights I. 91 One day the son went forth to hunt. b. With prepositions (after, †to, †at, for). (Now blending with sense 3a.) ΚΠ c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 13467 Þatt teȝȝ sholldenn hunntenn. Acc nohht wiþþ hundess affterr der Acc affterr menn wiþþ spelless. c1385 G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Dido. 981 Ony wilde bor..That they han huntid to in this foreste. c1400 Mandeville's Trav. (Roxb.) xiv. 63 Grete plentee of wylde bestes for to hunt at. 1486 Bk. St. Albans E ij b When ye hunt at the Roo. a1500 (?c1450) Merlin xii. 183 Yo do nought elles..but hunte after the hare thourgh the feldes. 1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World i. 9 Walks out into the Woods, and hunts about for Pecary, Warree..or Deer. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth IV. 155 Training them up to hunt for fish. 2. transitive. To pursue (wild animals or game) for the purpose of catching or killing; to chase for food or sport; (often spec.) to pursue with hounds or other tracking beasts. Also said of animals chasing their prey. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunt [verb (transitive)] huntc1000 chasec1330 teisec1400 work1568 drive1622 call1768 rattle1829 shikar1882 c1000 Ælfric Homilies I. 576 Ic asende..mine huntan, and hi huntiað hi of ælcere dune and of ælcere hylle. c1275 Laȝamon Brut 1423 Corineus was to wode ivare for hunti deor wilde. 1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum (Bodl.) xii. vi Scheo [the owl] hunteþ and eeteþ myes and reremyesse. 1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum (Bodl.) xii. xiii Swalewes þat fleeþ in þe aiere hunteþ flies. c1480 (a1400) St. Placidus 85 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 71 He went to hont þe auld bestis, as he wes wont. 1486 Bk. St. Albans E iv a All other beestys that huntid shall be. 1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost iv. iii. 1 The King he is hunting the Deare. View more context for this quotation 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics i, in tr. Virgil Wks. 61 The proper Time..T'inclose the Stags in Toyls, and hunt the Hare. View more context for this quotation 1788 W. Blane Acct. Hunting Excurs. 16 The hunting the wild buffaloe is also performed by shooting him from elephants. 1837 W. Irving Adventures Capt. Bonneville III. 45 To hunt the elk, deer, and ahsahta or bighorn. 1859 J. S. Rarey Art of taming Horses (new ed.) xii. 203 When the hounds hunt anything beside fox the word is ‘Ware Riot’. 3. figurative and gen. a. intransitive. To search, seek (after or for anything), esp. with eagerness and exertion. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > search for or seek [verb (transitive)] seekc888 aseekc1000 i-secheOE huntc1175 to seek afterc1175 beseechc1200 fand?c1225 ofseche?c1225 to seek forc1250 atseekc1275 furiec1290 forseeka1300 outseekc1300 upseekc1315 to look after ——c1330 wait1340 laita1350 searchc1350 pursuea1382 ensearchc1384 to feel and findc1384 inseekc1384 looka1398 fraist?a1400 umseeka1400 require?c1400 walec1400 to look up1468 prowla1475 to see for ——c1485 to look for ——a1492 to have in the wind1540 sue1548 vent?1575 seek1616 explore1618 dacker1634 research1650 to see out for1683 quest1752 to see after ——1776 c1175 [see sense 1b]. ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 54 Ha huntet efter Pris. a1240 Ureisun in Cott. Hom. 203 Hwuder schal ich fleon hwon þe deouel hunteð efter me. c1305 St. Lucy 119 in Early Eng. Poems & Lives Saints (1862) 104 Hit is al for noȝt þat þu huntest aboute. 1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection ii. sig. Qiiiiv Sathanas and his minysters, whiche dayly hunteth to take thy soule. 1549 M. Coverdale et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. II. 1 Thess. ii. f. iiiv We hunted so litell for rewarde at your handes. 1722 W. Wollaston Relig. of Nature ix. 211 Hunting after knowledge which must perish with them. 1830 T. De Quincey Life R. Bentley in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Oct. 672/1 Hunting backward, upon the dimmest traces, into the aboriginal condition of things. 1862 Mrs. H. Wood Mrs. Halliburton's Troubles i. iii. 15 Spending all his superfluous minutes hunting for a house. 1895 Law Times 100 3/1 The judge and Master Macdonell hunted through the White Book, and unearthed a rule sufficiently elastic. b. transitive. To go eagerly in search of, search for, seek (esp. with desire and diligence); to endeavour to capture, obtain, or find. ΚΠ c1480 (a1400) St. Placidus 126 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 72 Þi gud dedis causis me, as þou [me] huntis, to hont þe. 1573 J. Davidson Breif Commendatioun Vprichtnes xli. 19 He neuer huntit benefice, Nor catchit was with Couatice. 1702 C. Beaumont J. Beaumont's Psyche (new ed.) i. ccxxxv. 14 He therefore through close paths of wary hast Hunts his escape. 1753 J. Bartram in W. Darlington Memorials J. Bartram & H. Marshall (1849) 195 Next morning..we hunted plants till breakfast. 1818 E. P. Fordham Pers. Narr. Trav. (1906) 221 The next day I shall cross the Little Wabash to ‘hunt land’. 1834 Visit to Texas i. 10 An old Tennessean and his wife with their sons were going ‘to hunt land’. 1834 Visit to Texas xiii. 122 He sometimes sends out three or four men to collect and mark them. This is called hunting cattle. 1891 M. E. Ryan Told in Hills iv. iii. 309 All were sleepy enough to hunt beds early. 1894 S. Baring-Gould Deserts S. France I. 140 It [the truffle] is hunted regularly by trained dogs. 1903 A. Adams Log of Cowboy iii. 38 Flood..suggested that all hands hunt their blankets and turn in for the night. c. To follow (as a hound does); to track. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > order of movement > following behind > follow [verb (transitive)] > follow (a track or trail) > follow track or trail of troda1250 tracec1440 track1565 train1575 tract1577 hunt1579 foot1581 trail1590 to tread the feet of1596 insist1631 pad1861 sleuth1905 back-trail1907 back-track1925 1579 E. K. in E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Ep. Ded. In regard wherof, I scorne and spue out the rakehellye route of our ragged rymers (for so themselues vse to hunt the letter). 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. i. sig. A4v That path..Which when by tract they hunted had throughout, At length it brought them to a hollowe caue. 1847 Ld. Tennyson Princess ii. 43 ‘They hunt old trails’ said Cyril ‘very well; But when did woman ever yet invent?’ 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps ii. xxxii. 417 I hunted the seams still farther up the glacier. 4. a. transitive. To pursue with force, violence, or hostility; to chase and drive before one; to put to flight; to chase or drive away or out. See huntaway n. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > causing to go away > command to go away [verb (transitive)] > drive away feezec890 adriveeOE aflemeeOE off-driveeOE flemeOE withdrivec1000 adreveOE to drive outOE biwevea1300 chasec1300 void13.. catcha1325 firk1340 enchasec1380 huntc1385 to catch awayc1390 forcatch1393 to put offa1398 to cast awaya1400 to put outc1400 repel?a1439 exterminate1541 chasten1548 propulse1548 keir1562 hie1563 depulse1570 band1580 bandy1591 flit1595 ferret1601 profugate1603 extermine1634 the world > movement > progressive motion > order of movement > following behind > follow [verb (transitive)] > pursue > with hostility or violence seekc825 to seek afterc1175 chasec1330 huntc1385 persecute1477 to gun for1893 bloodhound1935 c1385 G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Phyllis. 2414 So huntith hym the tempest to and fro. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 13658 Þei huntid him as a dogge Riȝt out of her synagogge. 1483 W. Caxton tr. A. Chartier Curial sig. iij She is by force hunted away. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms cxxxix. [cxl.] 11 A malicious and wicked person shal be hunted awaye and destroyed. 1582 N. Lichefield tr. F. L. de Castanheda 1st Bk. Hist. Discouerie E. Indias li. 110 To hunt them foorth lyke theeues. 1642 D. Rogers Naaman 31 The Lord would hunt her out of it. 1808 W. Scott Life Dryden in Dryden's Wks. I. 205 He might lay his account with being hunted out of society. 1886 R. C. Leslie Sea-painter's Log 25 They are hunted by ‘the bobby’ from place to place. b. figurative. To pursue with injury or annoyance; to persecute, pester, worry. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > state of being harassed > harass [verb (transitive)] tawc893 ermec897 swencheOE besetOE bestandc1000 teenOE baitc1175 grieve?c1225 war?c1225 noyc1300 pursuec1300 travailc1300 to work (also do) annoyc1300 tribula1325 worka1325 to hold wakenc1330 chase1340 twistc1374 wrap1380 cumbera1400 harrya1400 vexc1410 encumber1413 inquiet1413 molest?a1425 course1466 persecutec1475 trouble1489 sturt1513 hare1523 hag1525 hale1530 exercise1531 to grate on or upon1532 to hold or keep waking1533 infest1533 scourge1540 molestate1543 pinch1548 trounce1551 to shake upa1556 tire1558 moila1560 pester1566 importune1578 hunt1583 moider1587 bebait1589 commacerate1596 bepester1600 ferret1600 harsell1603 hurry1611 gall1614 betoil1622 weary1633 tribulatea1637 harass1656 dun1659 overharry1665 worry1671 haul1678 to plague the life out of1746 badger1782 hatchel1800 worry1811 bedevil1823 devil1823 victimize1830 frab1848 mither1848 to pester the life out of1848 haik1855 beplague1870 chevy1872 obsede1876 to get on ——1880 to load up with1880 tail-twist1898 hassle1901 heckle1920 snooter1923 hassle1945 to breathe down (the back of) (someone's) neck1946 to bust (a person's) chops1953 noodge1960 monster1967 1583 C. Hollyband Campo di Fior 387 But hunger hunteth me. 1678 T. Otway Friendship in Fashion ii. 12 He hunts and kisses you when he's drunk. 1807 Salmagundi 13 Feb. 41 When..I choose to hunt a Monsieur for my own particular amusement. 1860 N. Hawthorne Marble Faun II. viii. 99 These pests..had hunted the two travellers at every stage of their journey. 5. To scour (a district) in pursuit of game; spec. to make (a district) the field of fox-hunting; hence, figurative to search (a place) thoroughly and keenly for something which one hopes to find there; to examine every nook and cranny of. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunt [verb (transitive)] > search for game hunta1440 draw1575 try1909 the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting specific animals > [verb (transitive)] > make district the field of fox hunting hunt1569 the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > search for or seek [verb (transitive)] > search (a place) seekc1230 searcha1382 lay1560 ferret1582 sift1611 inquire?1615 hunt1712 screenge1825 a1440 Sir Degrev. 174 I wulle ffore thy lordes tene, Honte hys fforesstus and grene. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 121 The Citizens haue free libertie of hunting a certeyne circuite aboute London. 1712 J. Swift Let. 28 Oct. I must now go hunt those dry letters for materials. 1834 T. Medwin Angler in Wales I. 101 Let us hunt the waterfalls higher up. 1875 G. J. Whyte-Melville Riding Recoll. (1879) i. 9 When he [Sir R. Sutton] hunted the Cottesmore country. 1899 N.E.D. at Hunt Mod. I have hunted the house for it, but cannot lay my hands on it. 6. To use or employ in hunting; to ride (a horse), direct or manage (hounds), in the chase. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunt [verb (transitive)] > employ in hunting hunt1607 1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 148 The best time to..traine them [sc. greyhounds] to their game... Some hunt them at ten months if they be males, and at 8. monthes if they be females. 1708 London Gaz. No. 4465/6 The Owner..to certify, that his Horse was constantly Hunted the last Season. 1735 W. Somervile Chace i. 83 To rear, feed, hunt, and discipline the Pack. 1857 Earl of Malmesbury Mem. Ex-Minister (1884) II. 80 In consequence of his always hunting his pointers down wind. 1875 G. J. Whyte-Melville Riding Recoll. (1879) i. 6 He hunts one pack of his own hounds in Northamptonshire. 1889 in Horse & Hound 24 Aug. 516/2 Horses described as ‘hunters’..must have been hunted, and be capable of being hunted. 7. a. Change-ringing. To alter the position of (a bell) in successive changes so as to shift it by degrees from the first place to the last ( hunting up), or from the last to the first ( hunting down). Also absol. or intransitive. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > bell-ringing > [verb (intransitive)] > go through all the changes > position in changes lead1671 dodge1684 hunt1684 to make places1874 1684 R. Howlett School Recreat. 92 So by turns, 'till every Bell being hunted up and down, comes into its proper Place again. 1684 R. Howlett School Recreat. 96 Whatsoever Bells you follow when you Hunt up, the same Bells in the same order you must follow in Hunting down. 1880 C. A. W. Troyte in Grove Dict. Music I. 334 The bells work in regular order from being first bell to being last, striking two blows as first and two as last: this is called by ringers ‘hunting up and down’. b. intransitive. Of a governor, a synchronous electric motor or generator, etc.: to run alternately faster and more slowly than the desired speed. Hence more widely of other machines, systems, etc.: to oscillate about a desired speed, position, or state to an undesirable extent, to jump backwards and forwards. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > render mechanical [verb (intransitive)] > of machine: operate > oscillate hunt1877 pump1901 1877 Inst. Mech. Engineers: Proc. 273 Siemens' interesting governor..had..a great tendency to ‘hunt’,..if it was first left a little behind, and then got an excess of force, it would be constantly ‘hunting’ or oscillating about a mean position. 1894 Rep. Brit. Assoc. Advancem. Sci. 759 A Watt governor..does not hunt if designed for stability. 1902 Trans. Amer. Inst. Electr. Engineers 1901 18 374/2 The motors attempt to follow the generator exactly. If the latter pulsates, the motors pulsate also; they vibrate about a mean position, ‘hunting’ or pumping. 1921 M. Walker Diagn. Troubles Electr. Machines vi. 239 In the case of steam turbines and steam engines, it is possible for the governor to hunt in a perfectly periodic manner. 1951 S. Deutsch Theory & Design Television Receivers xiii. 431 If the feedback loop is underdamped, the oscillator frequency will swing below 15,750 cycles per second, whereupon the correcting voltage causes a swing above 15,750 cycles per second, etc. In other words, the oscillator will ‘hunt’ about the correct frequency. 1953 Electronic Engin. 25 156/1 Since the torque balance has an on-off action..it has a tendency to hunt. 1969 Daily Tel. 10 Jan. 26/4 The British train will be able to use existing railway tracks because of a new type of suspension... This will stop the train ‘hunting’ sideways. 1969 J. Argenti Managem. Techniques 99 If the action is too late or too weak, control will be inadequate, if too early or too strong the system will ‘hunt’—i.e. swing violently above and below the standard. 1970 J. Earl How to choose Tuners & Amplifiers iii. 74 On weak stereo signals this circuit can ‘hunt’ over mono and stereo in a very disconcerting manner, switching to stereo as the signal rises and back to mono as it falls. 8. To call upon (a person) to fill up or drink off his glass: chase v.1 4. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > drinking > [verb (transitive)] > drink intoxicating liquor > call to drink hunt1780 1780 Bannatyne in Mirror No. 76. ⁋11 Umphraville received a slap on the shoulder from one of the company, who at the same time reminded him that he was hunted. My friend..thanked the gentleman..for his attention, and drank off his bumper. 9. Telephony. Of a selector or switch: to carry out the operation of hunting (hunting n. 1g). Const. for, over. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telephony > communicate by telephone [verb (intransitive)] > methods or procedures hunt1924 1924 W. Aitken Automatic Telephone Syst. III. lvi. 275 Dialling O..results in the starting of a free-trunk finder, which automatically hunts for the calling line. 1924 H. H. Harrison Introd. Strowger Syst. Autom. Telephony i. 26 The preselector or line switch..hunts to find one of ten or more idle group selectors. 1933 K. B. Miller Telephone Theory & Pract. III. v. 250 It is usual to adjust the speed to permit the selector to hunt over a group of 30 trunks in 1 second. 1961 Proc. Inst. Electr. Engineers 107 b. Suppl. 161/2 A maximum of 1·8 millisec is required to select a channel,..and a further period of 900 microsec to hunt for a free channel. Phrases P1. to hunt down. a. To chase (an animal) until caught or killed; to run to earth, to bring to bay; figurative to pursue and overcome or destroy; also, to pursue until one gets possession or mastery of. (See also 7.) ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunt [verb (transitive)] > hunt down or bring to bay stallc1400 to set up1608 to run down1650 to hunt down1711 to tire down1835 to stick up1850 bail1872 1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 125. ¶8 We should then single every Criminal out of the Herd, and hunt him down. 1816 M. Keating Trav. (1817) I. 291 Errors, popular or not, are lawful game, and free to every one to hunt down. 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. vii. 217 Refusing to spy out and hunt down little congregations of Nonconformists. 1877 E. R. Conder Basis of Faith iv. 150 Let us..try to hunt down this fugitive question. b. New Zealand. (See quot. 1933.) ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > sheep-farming > rear sheep or wool [verb (transitive)] > herd > drive down from hills to hunt down1933 1933 L. G. D. Acland in Press (Christchurch, N.Z.) 28 Oct. 17/7 Hunt down, to hunt the sheep off the higher parts of their winter country on to lower, safer spurs when snow is expected; e.g., ‘We hunted down every day for a week, but no snow came.’ 1961 B. Crump Hang on a Minute Mate 85 I want you blokes to go round to the Snow Hut and hunt the sheep down into the valley from the open spur. P2. to hunt out: to expel or drive from cover or shelter by hunting or persistent search; to track out; to arrive at or discover by investigation. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > discovery > research > find out by investigation [verb (transitive)] seekc900 seeOE searcha1382 takea1382 inquire1390 undergrope?a1412 explore1531 to pry out1548 to scan out1548 to hunt out1576 sound1596 exquire1607 pervestigate1610 pump1611 trace1642 probe1649 to hunt up1741 to pick a person's brains (also brain)1770 verify1801 to get a load of1929 sus1966 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming out > letting or sending out > let or send out [verb (transitive)] > expel > from seclusion or shelter disharbour1566 to hunt out1576 unlodge1598 unnestle1598 unkennel1604 uncloister1611 unnest1683 discloister1881 the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > finding or discovery > find or discover [verb (transitive)] > by searching or tracking down > and bring to light to search outc1425 to hunt out1576 unrip?1576 to ferret out1577 to fetch up1608 fish1632 prog1655 rummage1797 rout1814 exhume1819 excavate1840 ferret up1847 unearth1863 fossick?1870 exhumate1881 1576 A. Fleming tr. P. Vatinius in Panoplie Epist. 128 Except he hath taken flight into Dalmatia, from whence (notwithstanding he lurk for a season) we intend to hunt him out. a1599 E. Spenser View State Ireland 29 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland (1633) Not certainely affirming any thing, but by conferring of times, language, monuments, and such like, I doe hunt out a probability. 1733 Ess. Hunting 37 Or Spaniel, which will hunt out their Masters, or their Master's Horse, distinctly from all others. 1881 J. Taylor Sc. Covenanters (Cassell) 128 To assist the soldiers in hunting out and butchering the hapless fugitives. P3. to hunt up: to prosecute the search for, until one finds; to pursue with eager investigation; to ‘look up’ (what is not found without energetic search). (See also sense 7.) ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > discovery > research > find out by investigation [verb (transitive)] seekc900 seeOE searcha1382 takea1382 inquire1390 undergrope?a1412 explore1531 to pry out1548 to scan out1548 to hunt out1576 sound1596 exquire1607 pervestigate1610 pump1611 trace1642 probe1649 to hunt up1741 to pick a person's brains (also brain)1770 verify1801 to get a load of1929 sus1966 1741 Coll. S. Carolina Hist. Soc. IV. 33 The General..sent out the Indians to hunt up the Spanish horses and cattell. 1791 W. Bartram Trav. N. & S. Carolina 488 They enter..with a view of chasing the roebuck, and hunting up the sturdy bear. 1817 J. Bradbury Trav. Amer. 265 If he finds them within three or four miles of his house, he thinks himself fortunate; but it sometimes happens that he is two days in ‘hunting them up’, as they term it. 1844 A. R. Smith Adventures Mr. Ledbury I. vii. 75 [He] employed his time in hunting up all the old students that he had known formerly. 1884 J. A. H. Murray in 13th Addr. Philol. Soc. 20 In..hunting up earlier quotations for recent words. P4. to hunt change (change n. Phrases 3), to hunt counter (counter adv. 1), to hunt in couples at couple n. 1b, to hunt the foil foil n.4, to hunt at force (see force n.1 22a), to hunt riot n., to hunt at the view (view n. Phrases 4a): see these words. ΚΠ 1627 J. Taylor Armado sig. D2 Allaye, Relaye, Foreloyning, Hunt-cownter, Hunt-change, Quarry, Reward, and a thousand more such Vtopian fragments of confused Gibberish. Compounds C1. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting with hounds > work done by hounds > action of hounds [verb (intransitive)] > follow wrong scent to hunt (the) changea1425 to run riot1594 hunt-counter1600 to run at check1667 riot1781 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lack of truth, falsity > an error, mistake > [noun] > serious error, blunder > one who commits hunt-counter1600 blunderer1741 1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 i. ii. 92 You hunt counter, hence, auaunt. 1765 S. Johnson Note Hunt-counter, that is blunderer.] ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > [noun] > sexual indulgence > womanizing or associating with loose women > one who horlinga1200 holourc1230 whore-mana1325 putourc1390 putroura1425 whoremastera1425 whoremonger?a1472 putyer1477 whoredomerc1485 holarda1500 whore-keeper1530 mutton-monger1532 smell-smock?1545 stallion1553 woman-louper1568 limb-lifter1579 Lusty Laurence1582 punker1582 wencher1593 womanist1608 belly-bumper1611 sheep-biter1611 stringer1613 fleshmongera1616 hunt-smock1624 whorer1624 womanizer1626 woman errant1628 mongera1637 linen-lifter1652 whorster1654 whorehopper1664 cousin1694 smocker1708 mutton-master1729 woman dangler1850 masher1872 chippy chaser1887 chaser1894 stud1895 molrower1896 skirt-chaser1942 1624 P. Massinger Bond-man ii. i. sig. D2 Your rambling hunt-smocke, feeles strange alterations. C2. In names of various games. hunt the fox n. = fox and hounds n. at fox n. Compounds 2d. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > children's game > hiding or chasing game > [noun] > hare and hounds hunt the foxa1600 hunt the hare1762 fox and hounds1821 hare and hounds1839 fox-chase1856 paperchase1856 paper hunt1871 a1600 in Strutt Sports & Past. iv. iv. 487 When we play and hunt the fox, I outrun all the boys in the schoole. hunt the hare n. = hare and hounds n. at hare n. Compounds 1b. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > children's game > hiding or chasing game > [noun] > hare and hounds hunt the foxa1600 hunt the hare1762 fox and hounds1821 hare and hounds1839 fox-chase1856 paperchase1856 paper hunt1871 1762 in W. L. Collins Etoniana (1865) xii. 179 [A list of Games popular at Eton in 1762 comprises] Hunt the dark lanthorn [known also at Harrow]. 1825 J. T. Brockett Gloss. North Country Words Hunt-the-hare, a game among children—played on the ice as well as in the fields. hunt the slipper n. a parlour game in which all the players but one sit in a ring and pass a slipper covertly from one to another, the remaining player standing in the middle and seeking to get hold of it. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > parlour and party games > [noun] > hunt the slipper, etc. hunt the whistle1757 hunt the slipper1766 shuffle the slipper1766 1766 O. Goldsmith Vicar of Wakefield I. xi. 100 Last of all, they sate down to hunt the slipper. 1885 Athenæum 16 May 635/3 The courtiers, playing at ‘hunt the slipper’ in a very decorous manner. 1897 Daily News 5 May 5/3 When the game of hunt the slipper was broken off for the day, the Committee..took the evidence of Mr. Lionel Phillips. hunt the squirrel n. an outdoor game in which one player is chased by another who must follow all his windings in and out of a ring formed by the remaining players; also called cat and mouse. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > children's game > hiding or chasing game > [noun] > other chasing games course-a-park1613 hunt the squirrel1742 Tom Tiddler's ground1816 one catch all1854 Relievo1877 pig in the middle1887 Red Rover1891 ring-a-levio1891 stuck-in-the-mud1944 British Bulldog1949 kiss chase1957 stick-in-the-mud1968 1742 H. Walpole Lett. to H. Mann 8 Oct. The raising of the siege of Prague, and Prince Charles and Marechal Maillebois playing at hunt the squirrel, have disgusted me. 1883 W. W. Newell Games & Songs Amer. Children cxvii. (Cent). hunt the whistle n. a game resembling hunt the slipper, in which the seeker is blindfolded and has a whistle fastened to his dress, which the other players blow at intervals. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > parlour and party games > [noun] > hunt the slipper, etc. hunt the whistle1757 hunt the slipper1766 shuffle the slipper1766 1757 S. Foote Author ii. 27 We ben't enough for Hunt the Whistle, nor Blind-Man's Buff. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1899; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1c1000n.2c1405v.c1000 |
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