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单词 juggle
释义

jugglen.1

Brit. /ˈdʒʌɡl/, U.S. /ˈdʒəɡ(ə)l/
Etymology: < juggle v.
A piece of juggling; a trick or act of skill performed by legerdemain; a conjurer's trick, esp. one claiming to be done by magic or occult influence; hence, an act of deception, an imposture, cheat, fraud.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > [noun] > a trick, deception
wrenchc888
swikec893
braida1000
craftOE
wile1154
crookc1175
trokingc1175
guile?c1225
hocket1276
blink1303
errorc1320
guileryc1330
sleightc1340
knackc1369
deceitc1380
japec1380
gaudc1386
syllogism1387
mazec1390
mowa1393
train?a1400
trantc1400
abusionc1405
creekc1405
trickc1412
trayc1430
lirtc1440
quaint?a1450
touch1481
pawka1522
false point?1528
practice1533
crink1534
flim-flamc1538
bobc1540
fetcha1547
abuse1551
block1553
wrinklec1555
far-fetch?a1562
blirre1570
slampant1577
ruse1581
forgery1582
crank1588
plait1589
crossbite1591
cozenage1592
lock1598
quiblin1605
foist1607
junt1608
firk1611
overreach?1615
fob1622
ludification1623
knick-knacka1625
flam1632
dodge1638
gimcrack1639
fourbe1654
juggle1664
strategy1672
jilt1683
disingenuity1691
fun1699
jugglementa1708
spring1753
shavie1767
rig?1775
deception1794
Yorkshire bite1795
fakement1811
fake1829
practical1833
deceptivity1843
tread-behind1844
fly1861
schlenter1864
Sinonism1864
racket1869
have1885
ficelle1890
wheeze1903
fast one1912
roughie1914
spun-yarn trick1916
fastie1931
phoney baloney1933
fake-out1955
okey-doke1964
mind-fuck1971
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > legerdemain, etc. > [noun] > a trick
colea1307
playa1475
conveyance1534
legerdemain?1544
prank1555
convoyance1578
sleight1596
pass1599
paviea1605
trick1609
sleight of handa1626
hocus-pocus1647
juggle1664
hocus-trickc1680
passe-passe1687
jugglementa1708
thaumaturgics1721
necromantics1745
conjuration1820
1664 H. More Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity ii. i. xvii. 327 Whether by the juggle of their Priests or the assistence of some officious Dæmons, there were several Miracles and strange Cures conceived to be done in the Temples.
1669 W. Simpson Hydrologia Chymica 168 It's a meer juggle upon the senses.
1686 tr. J. Claude Acct. Persecutions Protestants in France 3 Juggles and amusing Tricks.
1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses I. 16 The Money he had got by imposing on the Vulgar with his Juggles.
1727 D. Defoe Syst. Magick i. iii. 63 At first the Magicians satisfied the Curiosity of the People by Juggle and Trick.
1808 W. Scott Marmion vi. viii. 329 Or featly was some juggle played.
1871 E. A. Freeman Hist. Ess. 1st Ser. vii. 200 By one of the most disreputable of juggles, France obtained the Italian Island of Corsica.
1882 ‘F. Anstey’ Vice Versâ (ed. 4) iii. 41 As if he were actually the schoolboy some hideous juggle had made him appear.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1901; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

jugglen.2

Brit. /ˈdʒʌɡl/, U.S. /ˈdʒəɡ(ə)l/
Etymology: Compare joggle n.1
(See quot. 1875.)
ΚΠ
1875 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Juggle, a block of timber cut to a length, either in the round or split.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1901; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

jugglev.

Brit. /ˈdʒʌɡl/, U.S. /ˈdʒəɡ(ə)l/
Forms: Middle English iogly(n, Middle English–1500s iogel, Middle English iugille, 1500s ioggel, iogyl(l, iuggel, iugyll, iugul, 1500s–1600s iuggle, iugle, 1600s jugle, 1600s– juggle.
Etymology: Middle English < Old French jogler, jugler (later jougler) = Italian giocolare < late Latin joculāre for Latin joculārī to jest.
1. intransitive. To act as a juggler n. 1; to amuse or entertain people with jesting, buffoonery, tricks, etc. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > performance of jester or comedian > perform as jester or comedian [verb (intransitive)]
juggle1377
clown1600
fool1640
to fool up1640
1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xiii. 232 I can noither..Iape ne iogly [1393 C. xvi. 207 Iapen ne Iogelen] ne gentlych pype.
1483 Cath. Angl. 199/1 To Iugille, ioculari.
1600 R. Armin Foole vpon Foole sig. E4v William Sommers watcht to disgrace him: when he was Iugling and Iesting before the King.
2. To practise the skill or art of a juggler n. 2 in magic or legerdemain; to play conjuring tricks; to conjure.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > [verb (intransitive)]
jugglec1440
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > legerdemain, etc. > practise legerdemain, etc. [verb (intransitive)]
jugglec1440
tregetc1440
repass?1555
pass1589
hocus-pocus1687
c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 263/2 Ioglyn (K., P. iogelyn), prestigior.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 592/2 Mathewe iogyled the cleanest of any man in our dayes.
1727 D. Defoe Ess. Hist. Apparitions ix. 187 He [the Devil] can juggle and play scurvy Tricks.
1883 Standard 21 June 2/2 He..painted, acted, juggled and mesmerised.
1885 R. L. Stevenson in Contemp. Rev. Apr. 550 The conjurer juggles with two oranges.
3. transferred and figurative. To play tricks so as to cheat or deceive; to practise artifice or deceit with.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > act fraudulently, cheat [verb (intransitive)]
faitc1330
defraudc1384
to take (the) advantagea1393
false1393
halt1412
haft1519
juggle1528
wily beguile1550
foist1584
lurch1593
fog1621
imposture1624
rook1637
impone1640
cheat1647
chicane1671
humbug1753
fineer1765
gag1781
mountebank1814
jockeya1835
sniggle1837
barney1848
straw1851
honeyfuggle1856
skinch1891
finagle1926
1528 W. Tyndale Obed. Christen Man To Rdr. f. xiiij Why shall I not se the scripture..that I maye know whether thyne interpretacion be the right sence, or whether thou iuglest and drawest the scripture violently vnto thy carnall and fleshly purpose?
a1533 J. Frith Against Rastel (?1535–6) sig. Avii Here he ioggeleth wyth me and wolde make me beleue that he tossed me myne owne ball agayne, but when I beholde hit, I perceaue it to be non of myn.
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. x. 437 A grievous thing to see incapable men, to jugle with the high mysteries of mans salvation.
1660 J. Milton Brief Notes Serm. 7 Prime Teachers, who to thir credulous Audience dare thus jugle with Scripture.
1821 C. Lamb Mackery End in Elia 1st Ser. She never juggles or plays tricks with her understanding.
4.
a. transitive. To deceive by jugglery; to deceive, trick, cheat, beguile; to cheat out of something.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > treat fraudulently, cheat [verb (transitive)] > trick out of
delude1493
juggle1531
bull1532
defeata1538
cozen1602
Don Diego1607
foista1640
sham1681
jockey1719
fling1749
short1942
1531 W. Tyndale Expos. Fyrste Epist. St. Jhon ii. 33 God can not but let the deuell..iuggle oure eyes to confirme us in blyndnesse.
1533 W. Tyndale Souper of Lorde 26 He neuer thus iugled nor mocked hys so dearely beloued discyples.
1689 R. Milward Selden's Table-talk 8 If Men at first were juggled out of their Estates, yet they are rightly their Successours.
a1764 R. Lloyd Poet in Poet. Wks. (1774) II. 19 When near his latest breath The patient fain would juggle death.
1850 J. S. Blackie in tr. Æschylus Lyrical Dramas I. p. xxi The evil Spirit of Error..juggles the plain understandings of men that they become the sport of every quibble.
1866 Parl. Deb. 3rd Ser. 182 210 They have no system of compounding which would juggle men out of their franchise.
b. To bring, get, convey, or change (away, into, etc.) by, or as by, magic or conjuring, or by trickery or deceit.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > [verb (transitive)] > transform (as if) by magic
jugglea1592
Aladdinize1848
sorcerize1866
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > legerdemain, etc. > effect by legerdemain [verb (transitive)]
conjurea1535
jugglea1592
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > trickery, playing jokes > trick, hoax [verb (transitive)]
jape1362
bejape1377
play1562
jugglea1592
dally1595
trick1595
bore1602
jadea1616
to fool off1631
top1663
whiska1669
hocus1675
to put a sham upon1677
sham1677
fun?1685
to put upon ——1687
rig1732
humbug1750
hum1751
to run a rig1764
hocus-pocus1774
cram1794
hoax1796
kid1811
string1819
to play off1821
skylark1823
frisk1825
stuff1844
lark1848
kiddy1851
soap1857
to play it (on)1864
spoof1889
to slip (something) over (on)1912
cod1941
to pull a person's chain1975
game1996
a1592 R. Greene Frier Bacon (1594) sig. A4v He can make women of deuils, and hee can iuggle cats into Costermongers.
1619 E. M. Bolton tr. Florus Rom. Hist. iii. xix. 349 He iuggled a nut into his mouth, filld with brimstone, and fire, and..spat fire as he spake.
1813 T. Jefferson Writings (1830) IV. 216 Our debt was juggled from forty-three up to eighty millions.
18.. G. Meredith Juggling Jerry in Poems viii Now from his old girl he's juggled away.

Derivatives

ˈjuggled adj. done by jugglery.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > [adjective] > effected by
juggled1536
conjured1599
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > legerdemain, etc. > [adjective]
juggling?1531
sleight1533
prestigious?1534
juggled1536
conjuring1552
legerdemain1576
prestigiatory1588
hocus-pocus1668
presto1826
prestidigital1856
prestidigitatory1860
prestidigitatorial1861
presto changeo1923
1536 Protest. Lower House Convoc. in J. Strype Eccl. Memorials (1721) I. App. lxxiii. 179 Item. That halowed water is but iogelled water.
1618 T. Gainsford True Hist. P. Warbeck 38 The fame of this iuggled miracle was..blowne ouer Flanders.

Draft additions 1997

b. spec. To toss and catch several objects continuously, keeping at least one of them in the air while handling the others. Also, to toss an object, etc., from hand to hand with dexterity; (of two or more persons) to toss an object, etc., back and forth between them. Frequently const. with.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > legerdemain, etc. > practise legerdemain, etc. [verb (intransitive)] > specific type
juggle1892
1892 Routledge's Bk. of Circus 56 All acrobats can juggle.
1892 Routledge's Bk. of Circus 58 It is very difficult to juggle with articles of various..weights at the same time.
1901 Playgoer Oct. 15/2 Before he left the cradle, he juggled with his feeding bottle.
1921 J. E. T. Clark Juggling 98 Learning to juggle is like learning to walk on stilts.
1930 H. Walpole Rogue Herries i. 131 A company of Chinese people travelling with the Fair..juggled with gold balls and swallowed silver swords.
1938 N. Streatfield Circus is Coming vii. 117 The first Risley who had the idea of juggling with a real boy.
1975 R. Davies World of Wonders (1977) ii. iii. 185 He can't juggle and he can't walk rope.
c. transferred. Const. with. To manipulate something (or several often conflicting things simultaneously), esp. with ingenuity or skill.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > be versed or skilled [verb (intransitive)] > deal with thing(s) with skill or ingenuity
juggle1897
1897 Strand 14 95/2 The Burmese are born jugglers; they juggle with everything..even their finances.
1902 R. Kipling in Windsor Mag. Dec. 13/2 Kysh's hands juggling with the levers behind the discreet backward sloping dash.
1927 E. Bowen Hotel ix. 96 Happiness, she said to herself, is not to be solicited, but coming, for however short a time, comes with an appearance of finality, to be juggled with offhand.
1935 D. L. Sayers Gaudy Night xviii. 382 How dared he pick up her word ‘sleep’ and use it four times in as many lines, and each time in a different foot, as though juggling with the accent-shift were child's play?
1964 Mod. Law Rev. 27 264 To juggle with the language of the forms of action and say that the plaintiff's action sounds in tort not contract, cannot alter the fact.
1982 A. Price Old ‘Vengeful’ vi. 87 The child juggled with her burdens the better to display the garment.

Draft additions 1997

c. Baseball. Of a fielder: to mishandle (a ball) without dropping it, thereby failing to prevent a runner reaching a base.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > play baseball [verb (transitive)] > actions of fielder
juggle1873
1873 N.Y. Herald 13 Sept. 5/3 Fulmer tried Pearce with a scorching hot grounder, but Dickey juggled it and Devlin went to second.
1889 Cent. Mag. Oct. 833/1 A short-stop or third baseman finds that he has no time to ‘juggle’ the ball and then throw the man out.
1911 Z. Grey Young Pitcher vi. 63 Raymond..pounced upon the ball... Nothing got past him, but he juggled the ball.
1993 Chicago Tribune 29 June iv. 3/4 He scored when Tony Gwynn doubled and Sosa juggled that ball.
d. To toss and catch (a number of objects) continuously, keeping at least one of them in the air while handling the others. Also, to toss (an object, etc.) from hand to hand with dexterity; (of two or more persons) to toss (an object, etc.) back and forth between them.
ΚΠ
1897 Strand Mag. 13 94/2 He juggles a heavy knife, a fork, and a turnip.
1909 H. R. Cort Donakin Circus 10 They could juggle balls while dancing a waltz.
1921 J. E. T. Clark Juggling 98 It is advisable for the novice to acquire skill in..juggling various and diverse articles.
1959 F. Astaire Steps in Time iv. 26 The older Japanese would lie on their backs..and juggle my pal back and forth with their feet.
1981 W. Soyinka Aké iii. 37 The man in the lead juggled an enormous mace.
1984 J. Updike Witches of Eastwick iii. 233 Van Horne juggled first three, then four, then five tangerines.
e. transitive. To handle or combine (something or several things) adroitly; to balance (one thing) with another.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > be skilled or versed in [verb (transitive)] > handle or treat with skill > several things
juggle1935
1935 G. Greene in Spectator 9 Aug. 222/2 What matters is the witty dialogue, the quick intelligent acting of Mr. Tone and Miss Merkel, who juggle death so expertly and amusingly between them.
1985 G. Ehrlich Solace Open Spaces 98 They have to know how to do many things—from juggling the futures market to overhauling a tractor or curing viral scours..in calves.
1990 OnSat 17 June 9/1 Bachelor dads have juggled leading their own lives with being a good influence on their dependents.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1901; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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更新时间:2025/3/22 0:33:03