| 单词 | key | 
| 释义 | keyn.1adj. A. n.1  I.  An instrument designed to be inserted into a lock and turned.  1.   a.  A (usually metal) instrument shaped to fit the wards or pins of a particular lock, so that it may be inserted into the keyhole and turned, in order to lock or unlock a door, chest, box, etc. Frequently with of, for, to.A key typically has one end specially shaped (as with notches or projections) to operate the lock, and the other end broad and flat so that is easy to hold between finger and thumb.door-, house, latch-, locker-, master, room, skeleton key, etc.: see the first element. See also lock and key at lock n.2 1c. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > 			[noun]		 > key > key to the door keyOE opener1942 OE    Ælfric Lives of Saints 		(Julius)	 		(1881)	 I. 78  				Ða eode Basilius to ðam clyfan, ac se preost nolde undon þa duru mid cæge. OE    Ælfric Gloss. 		(St. John's Oxf.)	 314  				Clauis, cæg [c1225 Worcester keie]. OE    tr.  Gospel of Nicodemus 		(Cambr.)	 xii. §2. 171  				Hig uninseglodon þæt loc and þa cægan and þa duru geopenigende [L. aperientes clauem et signa hostii]. lOE    Laws of Cnut 		(Corpus Cambr. 383)	  ii. lxxvi. §1a. 362  				Ðara cægan.., þæt is hire heddernes cæge & hyre cyste cæge. c1300    St. Patrick's Purgatory 		(Laud)	 l. 14 in  C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary 		(1887)	 200  				Þe prior haueth þe keiȝe in warde. c1330						 (?c1300)						    Bevis of Hampton 		(Auch.)	 l. 3207 (MED)  				A..schette þe dore wiþ þe keie [rhyme veie (= fey)]. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 17357 (MED)  				Þai sperd fast wit lok and kai [Gött. kay, Trin. Cambr. key], þe seles als-sua þai bar away. 1491–2    in  H. J. F. Swayne Churchwardens' Accts. Sarum 		(1896)	 40  				j Key to the Organ dore & iij keyis to the quer dorys vijd. 1506–7    in  H. Littlehales Medieval Rec. London City Church 		(1905)	 261  				Payd for makyng of ij keyes for the tresory chest in the vestry, vi d. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Judges iii. 25  				(For no man opened the perler dore) they toke the keye, and opened it. 1596    E. Spenser Second Pt. Faerie Queene  iv. x. sig. I8v  				Either through gifts, or guile, or such like waies, Crept in by stouping low, or stealing of the kaies .       View more context for this quotation 1632    W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav.  iv. 137  				The doore, that he had newly locked, and taken the key with him to the ship. 1697    E. Settle World in Moon  iv. 34  				I'll steal the Keys of the Window. 1700    J. Dryden tr.  G. Boccaccio Sigismonda & Guiscardo in  Fables 128  				The Dame, who long in vain had kept the Key, Bold by Desire, explor'd the secret Way. 1772    ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra II. lxviii. 342  				A key was found in his room. 1820    J. Keats Eve of St. Agnes in  Lamia & Other Poems 103  				The key turns, and the door upon its hinges groans. 1867    C. Dickens Let. 24 Jan. 		(1999)	 XI. 304  				The enclosed key is the key of the drawers of my writing table at Gads. In the left hand top-drawer is a bunch of keys. 1905    H. R. Voth Trad. of Hopi xlix. 160  				They locked up the house, hiding the wooden key of the wooden lock somewhere near he fireplace. 1970    K. Roos What did Hattie See? x. 92  				You don't give a dame a key to your safe deposit box. 2005    J. Weiner Goodnight Nobody xxii. 193  				Her husband stalked to the driver's side of the car and shoved the key into the lock.  b.  A representation of a key, esp. as a heraldic device. Cf. cross keys n. ΘΚΠ society > faith > artefacts > symbol (general) > Christian symbols or images > 			[noun]		 > papal keys keyc1390 St. Peter's keys1568 society > communication > indication > insignia > heraldic devices collective > representations of domestic items > 			[noun]		 keyc1390 society > communication > indication > insignia > heraldic devices collective > representations of domestic items > 			[noun]		 > cross-keys cross keysa1563 key1874 c1390						 (a1376)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Vernon)	 		(1867)	 A.  vi. l. 13 (MED)  				He bar..Moni Cros on his cloke and keiȝes of Rome. c1450						 (?c1408)						    J. Lydgate Reson & Sensuallyte 		(1901)	 l. 6957  				The secounde povne..was callyd syght Which in his shelde..Bare y-grave a large key. a1525						 (c1448)						    R. Holland Bk. Howlat l. 345 in  W. A. Craigie Asloan MS 		(1925)	 II. 105  				Twa keyis our croce of siluer so cleir In a feild of asure flammit on fold. 1572    A. Golding tr.  H. Bullinger Confut. Popes Bull f. 17  				Thus much concerning the Keyes, Armes, and Cognisances of the Romane Bishops. 1688    R. Holme Acad. Armory  iii. 301/2  				He beareth Azure, a key double Bited in Fesse. 1718    A. Nisbet Ess. Armories vi. 82  				They have adorned the Outer-sides of their Shields with Mitres, Crosiers, Keys, and pastoral Staves. 1765    ‘M. A. Porny’ Elements Heraldry 155  				Gules, a Sword in Bend sinister Argent, pomeled and hilted Or, interposed between two Keys addorsed in Bend..the Arms of the Bishopric of Winchester. 1867    C. Boutell Eng. Heraldry 134  				When represented in early blazon, Keys have always elegant forms. 1874    B. J. Lossing Pict. Hist. Civil War II. xv. 397  				On the battle-ground was once a tavern, whose sign-board had the device of two keys crossed. 1911    R. K. Wood Honeymooning in Russia iv. 42  				A grand Duchess honours a court chamberlain whose back bears an embroidered key. 1987    R. A. Chorzempa Design your own Coat of Arms 23  				The two keys are symbolic of St. Peter, the first pope.  2.  A similar instrument for operating a switch or other control which is in the form of a lock with a keyhole, esp. an ignition switch in a motor vehicle (cf. ignition key n. at ignition n. Compounds 2, car key n. at car n.1 Compounds 1b).Often a single vehicle key of this type works in the doors, storage compartments, etc., as well as in the ignition; cf. quot. 2005 at sense  A. 1a. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > parts and equipment of motor vehicles > 			[noun]		 > door or ignition key key1915 ignition key1933 car key1939 1915    Pop. Mech. Dec. 922/2  				If the key for the switch lock of an automobile is made of steel, it can be safely..kept in the car..by attaching it to a small permanent magnet, concealed under the false dash. 1935    J. Hargan Gloss. Prison Lang. 5  				[A] coil arrangement which starts any car—without the aid of key. 1952    Ellery Queen's Myst. Mag. 29 31/2  				There was a car parked in front of the entrance... The key was in the ignition switch. 1974    Pop. Sci. Mar. 34/1  				Turn the special key, and the alarm station will deactivate or activate any standard burglar alarm attached to it. 1987    M. Richard in  S. Ravenel New Stories from South 		(1988)	 9  				Our new-moon boat with the Chrysler inboard was gassed up with the key rusted in the ignition. 2006    G. Malkani Londonstani iv. 44  				Ravi turned the key in the ignition.  II.  Figurative and allusive uses.  3.   a.  				 [With allusion to Matthew 16:19 (see quot. c1384).]			 Roman Catholic Church. The spiritual authority believed to have been transmitted from Christ to St Peter, and so to the Pope considered as his successor, as symbolized by the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Also in a wider sense: the power or authority of the Christian Church or its priests. Usually in plural. Cf. church key n. 1b, power of the keys n. at power n.1 Phrases 9. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > 			[noun]		 > office of keyOE popedomlOE apostailec1380 poperichea1387 thronec1390 papacya1393 papatea1393 see?a1400 popeheadc1410 popehoodc1410 pontificate?a1425 popeshipc1450 papality1483 pontificationa1500 pontificacy?1530 power of the keys1536 Apostolic seat1560 Catholic Seat1570 papalty1577 popedomship1588 oecumenacy1649 vice-godhead1659 chairship1660 society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > priest > 			[noun]		 > dominion of priests > disciplinary power keya1400 OE    Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. 		(Royal)	 		(1997)	 xxvi. 391  				Nis seo cæig gylden..ne of nanum antimbre gesmiðod, ac is se anweald þe him Crist forgeaf, þæt nan man ne cymþ into Godes rice, buton se halga Petrus him geopenige þæt infær. OE    West Saxon Gospels: Matt. 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 xvi. 19  				Þe ic sylle heofona rices cægia [OE Lindisf. caegas, OE Rushw. kægen; c1200 Hatton kaigen; L. claves]. OE    Old Eng. Martyrol. 		(Corpus Cambr. 196)	 23 Nov. 255  				Þone Sanctus Petrus sylf gehalgode to papan and hym sealde þa ylcan myhte þe Dryhten Cryst hym sealde, þæt h[e] heofna rices cægan and helle geweald ahte. c1384    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Douce 369(2))	 		(1850)	 Matt. xvi. 19  				Thou art Petre... And to thee I shal ȝeue the keies of the kyngdam of heuenes. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 26150  				He mai þe noþer lese ne bind, For-qui þat kay es giuen to nan Bot preist. a1425						 (a1400)						    Prick of Conscience 		(Galba & Harl.)	 		(1863)	 l. 3838  				Þa cays er noght elles to se Bot playn power of his [sc. the Pope's] dignite. c1426    J. Audelay Poems 		(1931)	 18 (MED)  				Cale þe clarge to ȝour counsel, þat beryn Cristis kay. 1554    D. Lindsay Dialog Experience & Courteour l. 4820 in  Wks. 		(1931)	 I  				Those spiritual keis quhilkis Christ to Peter gaif. 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane Commentaries f. ccccxxxvij  				Whether Priestes onlye haue authoritye of the keyes. 1653    R. Baxter Christian Concord 43  				They that distinguish between the Key of Order and the Key of Jurisdiction, do without question allow the former to the Presbyters. a1711    T. Ken Hymnotheo  iv, in  Wks. 		(1721)	 III. 131  				Jesus to you the ghostly Keys commits, And those you here absolve, in Heav'n acquits. 1793    J. Barry Let. to President, Soc. for Encouragem. Arts 24  				Those temporalities and mere mundane grandeur..with which the spiritual exercise of the keys could have had no connection. 1821    Protestant 24 Feb. 848  				Christ himself hath the key of David. This prerogative he claimed for himself, after Peter was dead;..and he holds the key in his own hand still. 1870    M. J. Rhodes Visible Unity Catholic Church I.  i. 55  				It is not man, it is Christ Himself Who, in these His pastors, still holds the keys, and feeds and rules his flock. 1906    Dublin Rev. Apr. 277  				Peter's spiritual keys are still in the hands of every English priest. 2004    R. K. Rittgers Reformation of Keys iii. 56  				All Christians possessed the keys, all were equally able and obliged to preach the gospel of forgiveness to each other.  b.  gen. A key used to symbolize power, control, or authority, esp. over a particular place; a key as a symbol of office; a position of power or authority.See also Gold Key n. at gold n.1 and adj. Compounds 1e, cove and key at cove n.1 1b. ΘΚΠ society > authority > control > 			[noun]		 > symbol of control keyOE society > authority > office > symbol of office or authority > 			[noun]		 > specific keyOE sword?c1475 the seals?a1500 pillara1529 post1598 umbrella1653 akakia1731 OE    tr.  Vindicta Salvatoris 		(Cambr. Univ. Libr.)	 in  J. E. Cross Two Old Eng. Apocrypha 		(1996)	 269  				Ac uton ure heafdo ahyldan and þysse ceastre cægean [L. claues istius ciuitatis] þysum Romaniscan folce agyfan. c1200						 (?OE)						    Grave 		(1890)	 l. 14  				Ðær þu bist feste bidytt and dæð hefð þa cæȝe. c1225						 (?OE)						    Soul's Addr. to Body 		(Worcester)	 (Fragm. F) l. 16  				Noldest þu mid muþe bidden me none milts[unge]. Nu þu ert adumbed and deaþ haueþ þeo keiȝe. c1325						 (c1300)						    Chron. Robert of Gloucester 		(Calig.)	 l. 3848  				Þe conseil of france..ȝolde him vp al þat lond & þe keyen [a1400 Trin. Cambr. keyȝen, ?a1425 Digby keyes] of parys. a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  i. l. 2661  				His lose tunge..berth of his honour the keie. c1430						 (c1386)						    G. Chaucer Legend Good Women 		(Cambr. Gg.4.27)	 		(1879)	 l. 2298  				Myn ȝonge doughter..That beryth the keye of al myn hertes lyf. c1450						 (?a1400)						    Wars Alexander 		(Ashm.)	 l. 2147 (MED)  				Þai vnȝarked him þe ȝatis & ȝald him þe keys [a1500 Trin. Dubl. kees]. 1546    J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue  i. xi. sig. Div  				The kays hang not all by one mans girdill. 1548    Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. clxij  				All the townes in Acquitayne (except Bayon) deliuered their keyes, and became vassals. 1642    G. Mountagu in  Buccleuch MSS 		(Hist. MSS Comm.)	 		(1899)	 I. 299  				These Lords, Holland and Essex,..accordingly delivered their key and staff respectively to the Lord Falkland. 1676    C. Hatton in  E. M. Thompson Corr. Family of Hatton 		(1878)	 I. 138  				His office of Chamberlaine is here incompatible wth his other character. It is generally beleeved he will lose his Key. 1702    D. Jones Hist. France I.  vii. viii. 443  				Mortara capitulated, and Pavia sent them her Keys. 1796    R. Southey Joan of Arc  vi. 168  				Of every captured town the keys Restore to Charles. 1838    E. Bulwer-Lytton Leila  ii. i. 65  				That within two weeks of this date thou bringest me..the keys of the city. 1847    A. Swanwick tr.  F. Schiller Maid of Orleans  i. i, in  Wks. III. 341  				Cities, ancient as the monarchy, Deliver to the foe the rusty keys. 1923    E. Gepp Essex Dial. Dict. 		(ed. 2)	 68  				‘She's got the key’, said of a wife, means ‘she's the master’. 1990    A. Coleman tr.  H. Padilla Self-portrait of Other xvii. 176  				One of these days there will be no one left on the island, only me left to hand over the key of the city to a counterrevolutionary like Señor Rolando Masferrer.  c.  A key (real or notional) used to symbolize freedom of access to a particular place and presented ceremonially as a formal honour or mark of respect by a representative of a city, organization, etc. Frequently in  keys to the city. Cf. freedom n. 14b. ΚΠ 1669    London Gaz. 14 Oct. 1/1  				Upon his entry, His Majesties Lieu. Governour attended him, and as a mark of highest Honour, presented him with the Keys of the City. 1706    Post Man & Hist. Acct. 24 Oct. 1/1  				That Prince..was complimented by the Magistrates.., who presented him with the Keys of the City in a Gold Bason. 1818    Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. June 352/2  				The Lord Provost and Magistrates.., according to custom,..presented to his Grace the ancient silver keys of the city, in the usual form. 1922    Rotarian May 251/1  				The mayor, city commissioners.., and women's clubs paraded in honor of the contest and presented to the judges a three-foot bronze key to the city. 1972    Billboard 29 July 		(caption)	 35  				Motown's Jackson 5 are presented the ‘Key to New York City’ by Deputy Mayor Ed Hamilton..during their recent Madison Square Garden appearance. 2009    D. O'Briain Tickling Eng. iv. 39  				Having been made a Freeman of Newcastle and having received the Keys to the City in a formal ceremony, he turned to the crowd..and shouted, ‘Howay, the lads.’  4.   a.  Something likened metaphorically to a key in having the power to open or close something else; a thing which provides access or opportunity; a means to a desired objective.The interpretation of quot. OE1   is not certain; perhaps it should be taken as showing sense  A. 5a. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > instrumentality > 			[noun]		 > (a) means keyOE toolc1000 wherewithc1230 ministerc1380 meanc1390 instrumenta1425 organ?a1425 mesne1447 moyen1449 handlec1450 hackneya1500 receipta1500 operative1526 ingine1531 appliance1555 agent1579 matter1580 mids1581 wedge1581 wherewithal1583 shoeing-horn1587 engine1589 instrumental1598 Roaring Meg1598 procurement1601 organy1605 vehicle1615 vehiculuma1617 executioner1646 facility1652 operatory1660 instrumentality1663 expedient1665 agency1684 bladea1713 mechanic1924 mechanism1924 OE    Exodus 525  				Gif onlucan wile lifes wealhstod.., ginfæsten god gastes cægon. OE    Old Eng. Martyrol. 		(Corpus Cambr. 196)	 29 June 134  				Hig [sc. Peter and Paul] habbað swa mycele myhte þæt hig magon þone heofon belucan þam ðe hig wyllað.., forþam ðe hyra tungan syndon heofena rices cægan. a1225						 (c1200)						    Vices & Virtues 		(1888)	 7 (MED)  				Unhersumnesse..is kæie of alle oðre sennes; non senne ne mai bien idon bute ðurh unhersumnesse. 1450    in  3rd Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS 		(1872)	 App. 280 in  Parl. Papers (C. 673) XXXIII. 337  				And as for Maunce and Mayne, alle lordes and comons in Englonds knew well that it was the keye of well faire of alle the kynge's obeisaunces in Fraunce. c1450    in  Medium Ævum 		(1981)	 50 248  				Þe comaundementis þat God bede Þey bene þe lokkes of heuene ȝate, Seuene werkys of mercy & þe crede Þe keyes þat schal late vs inne þeratte. 1582    C. Carlile Disc. conc. Two Diuine Positions f. 2v  				Faith is the keye, that openeth the locke vnto euerlasting life. 1596    M. Drayton Tragicall Legend Robert Duke of Normandy sig. D7  				His victorious hand becomes the kay To let you in to famous victories. 1642    T. Fuller Holy State  iv. xxi. 352  				Love, the key of hearts, will open the closest coffers. 1656    N. Hardy First Epist. John: 1st Pt. (i. 3) vii. 104  				Faith is the key which opens the door, and admits us into the presence-chamber of the King of Glory. 1739    Burkitt's Expos. Notes N.T. 		(ed. 11)	 Matt. vii. 11  				Prayer is the Key that opens both his Heart and Hand. 1787    Walker's Hibernian Mag. Feb. 85/2  				‘I command a key to love?’ ‘Yes, fair one.—How many captives have you not locked in your affections?’ 1845    R. Ford Hand-bk. Travellers in Spain I. i. 58  				A supply of cigars, those keys to Spanish hearts. 1881    Sunday School Teacher 7 408  				Her example and childish longings have proved the key to my soul. 1919    R. Lynd Ireland a Nation 		(1920)	 ix. 113  				Federalism, I fear, is regarded by the majority of its supporters..not as a key to open the door to Irish liberty, but as a key to lock the door on Irish liberty. 1978    W. C. Curry tr.  F. Novak Surg. Gynecol. Techniques 334/1  				Division of the connective tissue on the midline between the urethra and the rectum is the key which opens the way to the correct plane. 2009    B. J. Berg Sexism in Amer. xviii. 239  				Consumption, more than romance, is the newly minted key to an adolescent girl's heart.  b.  A place or position with strategic advantages which give control over or access to a territory, sea, etc. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, passage, or means of access to a place > 			[noun]		 > through hills or difficult ground > place controlling keyc1450 key point1829 c1450    J. Capgrave Life St. Katherine 		(Arun. 396)	 		(1893)	  i. l. 71  				This kyng ryght as for a keye Of all hys kyngdam set hys tovn þer; Ho com to surre, mot come þat weye; There may no shyp this cours for-bere. 1548    Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. cliij  				Which towne was the kay and passage ouer the ryuer of Soame, from Fraunce to Normandy. 1581    R. Sempill Complaint vpon Fortoun 		(single sheet)	  				Marke Iames of Dowglas present Erle of Morton,..Danter of theuis..Key of this Countre that kepit vs from skaith. a1600    A. Montgomerie Misc. Poems xlviii. 115  				For these tua Castells ar the only kees Of all Turkie, and do divide the sees. 1684    London Gaz. No. 1954/3  				A very Important place, which is the Key of Sclavonia. 1735    G. Berkeley Querist §266  				Whether the sea-ports of Galway, Limerick, Cork, and Waterford are not to be looked on as keys of this kingdom? 1748    T. Dunckerley Let. 1 June in  Freemason's Mag. 		(1794)	 Aug. 117  				This place is the key to the Mediterranean. 1838    C. Thirlwall Hist. Greece 		(new ed.)	 II. xv. 291  				He had now the key of Northern Greece in his hands. 1869    T. H. Huxley in  Sci. Opin. 5 May 506/1  				And yet this is the key of the whole position. 1908    S. G. Fisher Struggle Amer. Independence II. lxxxvii. 338  				But it was Charleston, and not Virginia, that was the military key to the South. 2007    R. Moore  & M. Lennon Wars of Green Berets  v. 228  				Iraq is different. It's the key to the Middle East and it has oil!  c.   golden (also silver) key and variants: money as a means of acquiring something that one needs or desires; spec. a bribe or inducement. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > illegal payment or exaction > 			[noun]		 > bribe gift1382 handy-dandyc1390 pricec1400 bud1436 bribe?a1439 golden (also silver) keyc1450 fee1549 golden shower1589 oil of angels1592 sugar-plum1608 bribera1616 palm oil1625 greasinga1661 sop1665 sweetbreada1670 vail1687 douceur1739 sweetener1741 bonus1759 buckshee1773 smear-gelt1785 grease1823 boodle?1856 soap1860 ice1887 palm-grease1897 poultice1902 fix1929 dropsy1930 pay-off1930 drop1931 oil1935 squeeze-pidgin1946 sling1948 bung1958 back-hander1960 c1450						 (?a1422)						    J. Lydgate Life Our Lady 		(Durh.)	 		(1961)	  vi. l. 89  				Þouȝ þat sche bar of golde no keye, To by a lombe. 1567    G. Fenton tr.  M. Bandello Certaine Tragicall Disc. f. 215v  				No dore so stronge, but a golden keye myghte open his locke, nor fortresse of such strength but he wolde yelde to thoffer of monye. 1580    T. Churchyard Warning for Wise sig. C.viv  				The siluer key now opens euery gate. 1613    F. Mason Of Consecration Bishops  i. v. 28  				A Key of gold can open Saint Peters locke. 1679    tr.  Trag. Hist. Jetzer 2  				The Silver Key will open the strongest Gates of the strictest Monastery. 1705    E. Hickeringill Priest-craft 54  				Will Council open their Mouths without a Golden Key? 1798    W. Hutton Life 41  				I was given to understand that the door, contrary to other doors, would not open with a silver key. 1842    Ld. Tennyson Locksley Hall in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 II. 102  				Every door is barr'd with gold, and opens but to golden keys. 1845    R. Ford Handbk. Travellers Spain II. xi. 737/2  				There are also three rooms not shown to the public, which should be inspected: a silver key unlocks the doors. 1901    Macmillan's Mag. Sept. 396/2  				Men who required the door to favour, and even to justice, to be opened with a golden key. 1956    J. Brodrick St. Ignatius Loyola v. 140  				It is most extraordinary..this power of his by the mere appeal of his eyes to open doors barred to others unless they brought a key of gold. 2001    D. M. Gershten Kissing Virgin's Mouth 		(2002)	 112  				A key of gold can open any door, they say.  5.   a.  A means of understanding something unknown, mysterious, or obscure; a solution or explanation. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > meaning > explanation, exposition > 			[noun]		 keyeOE undoinga1330 expositiona1340 declarationc1374 declaringc1374 clearingc1380 expoundingc1380 explanationa1382 interpretation1382 exploitingc1390 unfolding1483 explicating1531 explication1537 clearance?1548 elucidation1570 explaining1576 manifestation1576 untwining1577 illustration1581 untwisting1591 eviscerating1599 unclouding1601 enodation1603 opening1611 dilucidation1615 unsnarling1640 declarement1646 enucleation1650 illumination1656 dilucidatinga1660 luciferousness1665 clarifying1677 unravelling1713 disentanglement1751 exegesis1770 disambiguation1827 evisceration1831 keyword1848 clarificationa1866 exponence1880 exponency1880 straightening1900 demystification1964 the mind > attention and judgement > answer > 			[noun]		 > solution, explanation > that which provides keyeOE explanation?a1475 master key1577 explanatory1650 cluea1665 clew1725 lead1851 solvent1865 accounting1885 the mind > attention and judgement > testing > resolving of problem, solution > 			[noun]		 > instance of keyeOE solutionc1384 resolutiona1542 salvea1628 solvent1865 eOE    Metrical Dialogue of Solomon & Saturn 		(Corpus Cambr. 422)	 ii. 184  				Ðeah ðe S[atu]rnus sumra hæfde, bald breosttoga, boca c		[æ]	g		[a]	, [le]ornenga locan. OE    Ælfric Gram. 		(St. John's Oxf.)	 2  				Stæfcræft is seo cæg, ðe ðæra boca andgit unlicð. OE    West Saxon Gospels: Luke 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 xi. 52  				Wa eow ægleawum forþam þe ge ætbrudun þæs ingehydes cæge [L. clavem scientiae]. c1384    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Douce 369(2))	 		(1850)	 Luke xi. 52  				Woo to ȝou, wyse men of lawe, for ȝe han take awey the keye of kunnynge. ?c1422    T. Hoccleve Ars Sciendi Mori l. 12 in  Minor Poems 		(1970)	  i. 178  				Thow of al science berst the keye. 1561    T. Norton tr.  J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig.  ii. xiii. f. 88v  				Let this therefore be vnto vs the keye of right vnderstandyng. 1597    A. Montgomerie Cherrie & Slae 397  				Every currage keipis the keyis, of knawledge be his belt. 1607    B. Jonson Volpone Ep. Ded. sig. ¶2v  				Application, is now, growne a Trade with many; and there are, that professe to haue a Key for the deciphering of euery  thing.       View more context for this quotation 1642    T. Fuller Holy State  iii. iv. 158  				Get the Language (in part) without which key thou shalt unlock little of moment. 1712    J. Addison Spectator No. 435. ¶6  				I have one general Key to the Behaviour of the Fair Sex. 1788    F. Burney Diary 21 July 		(1842)	 IV. 184  				I felt his meaning, though I had no key to it. 1835    W. G. Clark Let. Nov. in  Lit. Remains 		(1844)	 80  				I overheard a pair of them conversing not long ago in Broadway, and having previously acquired the key to their dialect, I understood it perfectly. 1883    S. C. Hall Retrospect Long Life II. 305  				It was the key to his success: he knew the value of time. 1948    A. C. Kinsey  et al.  Sexual Behavior Human Male i. 19  				Tennyson thought of the flower in the crannied wall as the key to the secrets of the universe. 1977    J. I. M. Stewart Madonna of Astrolabe i. 20  				I'll tackle Albert. I still think he's the key. 2004    D. Abulafia Italy in Central Middle Ages 21  				Community is the key to understanding the civilization of northern and central Italy in the central Middle Ages.  b.  A word or other device for encrypting or decrypting a code or cipher; something which enables the interpretation of an allegorical, cryptic, or otherwise obscure work; a means of translating a foreign text.Recorded earliest in key cipher n. at  Compounds 1b.cipher-, decryption, private, public key: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > code, cipher > 			[noun]		 > key countercipher1598 key1605 code book1703 keyword1762 cipher-key1834 key card1841 cipher1885 society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > parable, allegory, or apologue > 			[noun]		 > explanatory scheme of key1605 1605    F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning  ii. sig. Qq1  				The kindes of Cyphars..are many, according to the Nature or Rule of the infoulding: Wheele-Cyphars, Kay-Cyphars, Dovbles,  &c.       View more context for this quotation 1611    W. Sclater 		(title)	  				A key to the key of Scripture. 1675    in  O. Airy Essex Papers 		(1890)	 I. 290  				'Tis most of it in cypher, wch ye Key will unfolde. 1715    N. B. Clavis Ovidiana (title page)  				An numerical key to Ovid De tristibus. Shewing by Figures answering to each Word in every Line, in what Order every Word ought to be taken, so as to construe into good Sence. 1753    Scots Mag. Apr. 208/2  				A burlesque upon some late..transactions; but seems to want a key. 1800    Duke of Wellington Let. 16 June in  Dispatches 		(1837)	 I. 151  				I beg also that you will send me a key of the cipher. 1854    Punch 26 82/2  				A key to the next advertisement on our list would be very acceptable. 1910    Visual Signaling 		(Signal Corps U.S. Army)	 vi. 84  				In practice the key is usually applied directly in enciphering and reversed in deciphering messages. 1957    D. Burk London in Seven Days 76  				The Rosetta Stone is in fact a key to Egyptian picture writing. 2000    R. Collins John Fante 285  				Here is the key to Fante's tender roman à clef, My Dog Stupid: Harriet = Joyce; Tina = Victoria; [etc.]. 2003    M. Bishop Computer Security 		(2004)	 xi. 277  				Despite the use of sophisticated cryptosystems and random keys, cipher systems may provide inadequate security if not used carefully.  c.  A textbook or section of a textbook containing solutions to mathematical problems, translation exercises, etc. ΚΠ 1772    C. Vyse Tutor's Guide 		(ed. 2)	 Pref. p. iii  				I have not adjoined the Answers to the Questions, as I have published..a Key to the Tutor's Guide, wherein all the Answers are worked at Length. 1826    Edinb. Rev. June 63  				Some of the best Greek and Roman classics should be immediately published, with Keys. 1870    ‘A. R. Hope’ My Schoolboy Friends iv. 52  				The master used a Key to Henry's Exercises. 1906    Rev. of Reviews Apr. 415/2  				It would have afforded great help to students if an Esperanto version of some English book were prepared, so that students could practise composition with a ready-made key. 1912    T. Tapper Youth & Opportunity xi. 101  				I worked it [sc. a sum] out and found, on turning to the key at the back that my answer was right. 2002    E. Penner Guide New Test. Greek p. ix  				Students are expected to discipline themselves by trying their best to do the work at hand before consulting the key.  d.  A list or diagram explaining the figures in a photograph or picture, the features of a map, or the symbols, abbreviations, colours, etc., used in a book, chart, or other work. Cf. legend n. 8c.See also pronunciation key n. at pronunciation n. Compounds. ΘΚΠ society > communication > writing > written text > 			[noun]		 > writing accompanying map or illustration key1797 legend1863 card key1890 1797    D. Orme Descr. Hist. Picture Lord St. Vincent's Victory 		(single sheet)	 		(heading)	  				Key to Mr. Orme's print & picture of Adml. Nelson's boarding the Spanish ships. 1845    Ann. Rep. Superintendent Common Schools N.-Y. 277  				Require them to..trace the principal rivers, mountains, gulfs, bays, &c., and mark down the characters for the principal cities, towns, and villages. They may now turn to the key and ascertain their names, and mark them also upon the slate. 1877    Notes & Queries 19 May 389/2  				I am anxious to know where I can see a key to Hodges's picture, of which I have a print, representing the death of Capt. Cook. 1904    Booklovers Mag. Nov. 713/1  				Whenever he wishes to ascertain the pronunciation of a word he has to consult the key at the bottom of the page or in the beginning of the book. 1952    G. H. Dury Map Interpr. xvi. 190  				A key should be given, including the commonest symbols used on a map and also the most obscure. 1973    Boys' Life Oct. 18/1  				Key to Abbreviations. R = Rook. N = Knight [etc.]. 2010    B. Strickland Tour de Lance 248  				Every kilometer of the climb is color-coded and the last four are almost solid black—‘percentage superior to 9 percent’, as the key explains.  e.  Botany and Zoology. A set of descriptive statements designed so that selecting those which apply to an unknown organism allows its identification or its attribution to a particular taxon. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > taxonomy > 			[noun]		 > identification or classification > key key1836 1836    G. Bentham Labiatarum Genera et Species Pref. p. xi  				The same object may..be better answered by an Analysis, or Conspectus Specierum, prefixed to each genus. This I have endeavoured to do, both as a key to the species and as a test of the validity of species. 1856    A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. 		(ed. 2)	 Pref. p. xi  				By means of an Analytical Artificial Key to the Natural Orders..I enable the student very readily to refer any of our plants to its proper Family. This Key is entirely remodelled in the present edition. 1872    E. Coues Key to N. Amer. Birds 53  				The key conducts to a genus, by presenting in succession, certain alternatives. 1928    Forestry 2 63  				Considerable experience is necessary in recognizing structural differences between woods and in the preparation of keys as an aid to identification. 1946    J. Hutchinson Common Wild Flowers 		(rev. ed.)	 Pref. p. vi  				We should be fairly well qualified to use the simple type of key beginning on page xi. 2010    J. Rukšāns Crocuses  ii. 51  				Sometimes it is difficult to find the simplest differences between two species, and preparing good keys for plant identification in the field and garden is not easy.  6.  A person who or thing which is central to a system, group, or organization; an essential or key element; a mainstay. Cf. sense  A. 10b   and key adj. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > importance > 			[noun]		 > that which is important > essential or central > upon which something depends harrec1000 pina1538 key1559 pinch1581 axle-treec1600 axlea1634 fulcrum1668 keystone1722 pivot1748 turning-point1836 landmark1859 axis1860 linchpin1954 the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > dog > 			[noun]		 > superior key1693 overdog1908 1559    W. Baldwin et al.  Myrroure for Magistrates Clarence xviii  				His brother also there with him was slayne, Where decayed the kayes of chiualrie. 1578    T. Nicholas tr.  F. Lopez de Gómara Pleasant Hist. Conquest W. India 319  				The key of all these wars consisted in this victory. c1620    A. Hume Of Orthogr. Britan Tongue 		(1870)	  i. vii. §6  				That general, quhilk I called the keie of orthographie,..that is the congruence of the symbol and sound symbolized. 1636    J. Trussell Contin. Coll. Hist. Eng.  iii. 185  				The Earle of Warwicke, relying vpon his brothers care of his charge, considering he was the Key of their worke [etc.]. 1693    J. Evelyn tr.  J. de La Quintinie Compl. Gard'ner  i. iii. ii. 103  				Which..are among our Fruits that which those called the Keys in a Pack of Hounds are in Hunting. 1724    tr.  J.-P. de Crousaz New Treat. Art of Thinking II.  ii. ii. 341  				Mathematicks are the Key of true Physicks. 1855    Hunt's Merchants' Mag. Aug. 186  				In our necessarily narrow limits, it is impossible to trace the history of these financial events. During the four years of Mr. Van Buren's administration, it was the key of party organization. 1890    M. Foster Text Bk. Physiol. 		(ed. 5)	 III. ii. 1024  				We may take perhaps as the key of the structure the fibrils of the molecular layer. 1950    Billboard 14 Jan. 20/2  				Decca..continues to be a key in the [gramophone record] standardization picture. 2003    J. F. Walsh Indispensable Staff Manager iii. 23  				Senior management focuses its time and energy on the keys of the business and usually has little tolerance for any complaints emanating from staff unless they are on point.  7.  Chess. The first move in the solution of a problem (problem n. 5); = key-move n. at  Compounds 3. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > 			[noun]		 > move > type of move neck1557 stroke1735 key1845 forced move1847 key-move1847 fianchetto1848 queening1860 pinning1900 mutate1922 valve1930 zwischenzug1941 society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > 			[noun]		 > problems > solutions key1845 cook1875 1845    Illustr. London News 8 Mar. 160/3  				You have not yet hit upon the key to No. 62. Try again. 1878    S. Loyd Chess Strategy 201  				There is always a great deal of chance in solving a problem, such as hitting upon the key by accident. 1890    J. Rayner Chess Probl. 12  				A really beautiful problem should be strong all round: it should have an elegant key, brilliant strategy, and pretty mates. 1938    C. S. Kipping Chess Probl. Sci. I. 51  				This was followed by six dis. checks..with a check key, and J. L. Millins showed that it could be done with a quiet key... Ua Tane, using White King diagonal battery and Pawn promotion key showed that six were possible. 1958    C. Mansfield  & B. Harley Mod. Two-move Chess Probl. 19  				The solver's attention is drawn to it, and Key possibilities are limited. 2000    P. J. Tamburro Learn Chess from Greats iv. 80/2  				The key is 1. Qc3.  8.  Advertising (originally U.S.). A method used to distinguish an advertisement so as to identify the publication generating any particular response. Cf. key v. 6. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > advertising > business of advertising > 			[noun]		 > device to measure response key1896 1896    Printers' Ink 14 Oct. 22/2  				An ad must be keyed in such a way that the key will not be apparent to the general reader. 1905    E. E. Calkins  & R. Holden Art Mod. Advertising xi. 266  				A variation of the ‘key’ in advertising is the coupon. 1957    D. T. Clark  & B. A. Gottfried Dict. Business & Finance 201/1  				The key may be a special street or box number, or a department to which the reply is to be addressed, or it may be a number or letter code included in the reply coupon if one is used. 2001    B. F. Schenck  & L. English Small Business Marketing for Dummies viii. 123  				For example, BG0214 might be the key for an ad that runs on Valentine's Day in The Boston Globe.  9.  Computing. Short for key field n. at  Compounds 3. More fully  primary key. ΚΠ 1963    Adv. in Electronics & Electron Physics 18 53  				Beyond the equipment required for the comparisons, a content-addressed memory has extra equipment in the capacity required for storing the keys. 1988    PC Mag. 17 May 218/3  				Numeric fields can be concatenated with alphanumeric fields to create a unique key for the file. 1990    E. Horowitz  & S. Sahni Fund. Data Structures in Pascal 		(ed. 3)	 xi. 646  				The physical sequence of records is ordered on some key, called the primary key. 2010    N. Conner  & M. MacDonald Office 2010 xxvi. 741  				If your database doesn't have an ID field..it's up to you to create one and set the primary key.  III.  Senses denoting objects which resemble a key in form or function, esp. in technical contexts.  10.   a.  Architecture. A central stone or boss at the summit of a vault, or at the intersection of a number of ribs. ΚΠ 1339–40    in  F. R. Chapman Sacrist Rolls Ely 		(1907)	 II. 98  				Item, solut. Johanni de Burwelle pro j imagine tallianda super le principale Keye volte superioris et ad mensam Dni. 2 s. 1371    in  J. Raine Fabric Rolls York Minster 		(1859)	 10 (MED)  				Operacio de keyes..operandis pro celura. 1418    Durham Cloister Roll in  J. Raine Fabric Rolls York Minster 		(1859)	 345 (MED)  				Nicolas Kervor, pro pictura ix keys xx s. 1427–8    in  J. A. Kingdon Arch. Worshipful Company of Grocers 		(1886)	 I. 167 (MED)  				Item, for making of the celour, the batauntes, and kerving of the keyys in the parlour. 1695    tr.  G. de Courtilz de Sandras Life John Baptist Colbert 69  				The height from the Key of the Vault on the inside, amounts to nine Toises and a half. 1785    F. de Tott Mem. II.  iii. 45  				The Basso-relievo, placed under the Key of the Vault. 1842    Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 5 279/1  				These keys enabled us..to set the ribs with great precision. 1875    H. Van Brunt tr.  E. E. Viollet-le-duc Disc. Archit. vii. 275  				In order to diminish the thrusts of the longitudinal and transverse arches of our vaults..elevate their summits to the level of the keys of the diagonal ribs. 1907    S. Baring-Gould Bk. Pyrenees iii. 32  				The arms of England..are emblazoned on the keys of the vaulting ribs. 1989    W. Weaver tr.  U. Eco Foucault's Pendulum i. 6  				The curve that rose from the capitals of the semicircle of columns and ran along the ribs of the vault toward the key.  b.  Architecture. A central stone at the summit of an arch, locking the whole together; the keystone of an arch. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > 			[noun]		 > parts of > keystone key1608 keystonea1637 key-piece1669 sagitta1703 key block1823 1608    B. Jonson Descr. Masque Vicount Hadington in  Characters Two Royall Masques sig. E4v  				Ouer-head two Personages..in flying postures, and twise so big as the life, in place of the Arch, and holding a gyrlond of Myrtle for the Key. 1624    H. Wotton Elements Archit. 103  				If the great Doore, be Arched, with some braue Head, cut in fine Stone or Marble for the Key of the Arch. 1696    in  D. Knoop  & G. P. Jones Sc. Mason & Mason Word 		(1939)	 83  				The key [is]..under a perpend esler and a green divot. 1723    E. Chambers tr.  S. Le Clerc Treat. Archit. I. 52  				Keys..ought to be..a real support, and not stand for mere Ornaments as they frequently do. 1751    C. Labelye Descr. Westm. Bridge 21  				This upper Arch is..thicker in the Reins, or towards the Bottom, than at the Key or Top. 1860    Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 23 362/2  				Our public works abound with cut stone arches having keys varying from ·36 to ·4 of the square root of the radius of the crown. 1879    Carpentry & Building Dec. 233/2  				Draw a parallel to the axis, at a distance equal to half the thickness of the center of the key of the arch. 1920    H. S. Hall Steel Preferred xvi. 238  				The arch needs a new key and that darned quick. 1978    R. T. Kreh Adv. Masonry Skills xxi. 293  				Construction of an arch is always begun at the two ends or piers, and laid up to the center or key of the arch. 2011    S. Piccolo tr.  A. Muttoni Art of Structures 75  				Thanks to the effect of the deck.., the reinforced concrete arch has sufficient stability, in spite of the thickness at the key of only 23 cm.  c.  Engineering. A final segment inserted at the top of a section of tunnel lining, which holds the other segments tightly in place. ΚΠ 1870    Van Nostrand's Eclectic Engin. Mag. Jan. 69/2  				This cast-iron is disposed in segments, each reaching 18 inches along the tunnel... At the top a key is inserted to tighten the segments into their places. 1895    Engineering 8 Feb. 167/2  				The key is slightly narrower at the outside of the lining than at the inside. 1923    Pop. Sci. Monthly May 46/2  				Each ring is made up of 14 segments at the crown of the arch, all bolted together with 160 10-pound bolts. 1995    B. Marshall in  C. J. Kirkland Engin. Channel Tunnel vi. 104  				The three lower segments of the leading ring being built after the five upper segments and key of the previous ring had been positioned and expanded. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > steering equipment > 			[noun]		 > helm > tiller steer-staffa1382 key?c1400 steer-tree1483 tillera1625 thwartship tiller1897 ?c1400						 (c1380)						    G. Chaucer tr.  Boethius De Consol. Philos. 		(BL Add. 10340)	 		(1868)	  iii. pr. xii. l. 2926  				He is a keye [L. clavus] and a stiere by whiche þat þe edifice of þis worlde is ykept stable. c1500						 (?a1437)						    Kingis Quair 		(1939)	 c  				O anker and keye of our gude aventure.  12.   a.  Mechanics. A piece of wood or metal which is inserted between other pieces to hold them or tighten them; a pin, bolt, or wedge inserted into a hole, or between parts, so as to lock parts together; spec. one for connecting a shaft to a rotating part of a machine. Cf. cotter n.1 ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > 			[noun]		 > pin or peg preenOE prickOE kevel1251 pina1275 prag1354 key1434 peg1440 tholec1440 thole-pinc1440 lock1514 cotterel1570 pivot1730 pinning1742 steady pin1791 gib1795 needle1811 lockdown1832 cotter1842 peglet1890 pushpin1903 society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > 			[noun]		 > key key1434 clavis1649 twister1939 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > other parts > 			[noun]		 > devices for securing or uniting parts key1434 chevel-bolt1480 strop1573 gimbals1577 gimmals1598 gimmera1603 strap1620 bridle1667 key band1735 screw-joint1810 locking plate1812 safety pin1822 king bolt1839 square coupling1845 holding-down bolt1846 ball joint1849 pinholder1854 knuckle-joint1860 bayonet-joint1870 elbow1874 fox-key1874 split-pin1875 cotter-pin1881 elbow-joint1881 banjo-frame1888 holding-down pin1892 holding-down ring1899 feather1908 banjo union1922 1434    in  L. F. Salzman Building in Eng. 		(1952)	 504  				Item vj keyis de elme long' iij xviij ped' cuiuslibet et iij long' cuiuslibet xxiiij ped'. ?1523    J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. iiii  				The body of the wayn..the crosse somer, the keys and picstaues. 1603–4    in  H. J. F. Swayne Churchwardens' Accts. Sarum 		(1896)	 152  				Boltes and kayes for the belles. 1660    R. Boyle New Exper. Physico-mechanicall ii. 37  				The brass Key (formerly described as a stopple in the brass Cover). 1787    G. Winter New Syst. Husbandry 312  				Take out the pins or keys which fasten the iron work of the brass collars. 1838    F. W. Simms Public Wks. Great Brit. 15  				Two wrought iron keys for fixing the rail in the chair. 1914    B. F. Fletcher  & H. P. Fletcher Carpentry & Joinery 		(ed. 4)	 xi. 100  				They are bound to the standards by rope, and tightened by wooden keys or wedges. 1960    New Scientist 22 Sept. 779/1  				Such a component..was generally made of at least three pieces: shaft, key and cam. 2004    A. Berrien Powerboat Care & Repair viii. 132/2  				Make sure the key in the shaft and the keyway in the coupling are properly lined up.  b.  Joinery. A piece of wood set across the grain into a recess in the back of a board or set of boards, or flush against the back, in order to prevent warping and bending. Now rare. ΚΠ 1774    T. Skaife Key Civil Archit. xxii. 129  				When you key your dado, leave the keys long enough at the broad end to reach the joists, or floor. 1823    G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict. at Key (Carpent.)  				Keys in joinery, pieces of timber let, transverse to the fibres, into the back of a board. 1875    Notes Building Constr. I. iv. 61  				The scarfs are frequently aided in their resistance to strains by the use of fish plates, of hard wood keys, and of wedges. 1904    A. C. Passmore Handbk. Techn. Terms Archit. & Building 199/2  				Keyed dado, that which has keys of wood grooved into it across the grain at the back to prevent it warping. 1945    Pop. Sci. Jan. 158/1  				Plank flooring. It was kept from spreading and warping by wooden keys that were shaped like butterflies.  c.  A piece inserted into a joint in order to make it more rigid; spec. (in some types of mortise and tenon joint) a piece of wood driven through a hole in a protruding tenon and fitted flush to the surface of the part bearing the mortise. ΚΠ 1791    J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse §45  				The iron stanchions..were not fixed into the rock in the method of Key and Dovetail..but were fixed in with club ends. 1801    Encycl. Brit. Suppl. I. 170/2  				Fig. 25. and 26. exhibit the most approved form of a scarf... The key will force the parts together with perfect tightness. 1854    U.S. Patent 10,819 1/2  				By the one operation of driving home the key..the one stone of one course, and the two stones of the adjoining course have been tightly drawn together. 1870    D. Craik Pract. Amer. Millwright & Miller xvi. 270  				A piece is cut out about two inches deep and a foot wide, into which the step for the spindle foot is placed, and fastened by four dovetail tapering keys. 1927    Pop. Sci. Monthly Dec. 94/3  				Insert tenon through mortise, mark location of key as shown, and chisel a mortise for it. 1991    Amer. Woodworker Jan. 25/2  				Assembling the keyed mortise-and-tenon joint is as easy as a couple of solid raps on the key. ΚΠ 1793    J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse 		(ed. 2)	 §147  				A method sometimes used..for the division of hard stones, called the Key and Feather..The Key is a long tapering wedge..The Feathers are pieces of iron, also of a wedge like shape. 1888    Engin. News 16 June 484/2  				The stones are quarried both by steam drills (blasting) and by the ‘key and feather’ method, mostly by the latter.  e.  Bookbinding. A U- or H-shaped or slotted piece used to secure the bands of a book in a sewing press or sewing frame. ΚΠ 1818    H. Parry Art of Bookbinding 1  				Sewing-frame, with brass or iron keys, to fasten the cords or bands. 1901    D. Cockerell Bookbinding & Care Bks. vii. 102  				The key is then turned over, winding up a little of the string, and the prongs slipped over the main cord. 1986    A. A. Watson Hand Bookbinding 		(new ed.)	 38  				Cut three tapes about 14 inches long and attach them to keys as shown. 2005    J. Cambras Compl. Bk. Bookbinding ii. 23/1  				Sewing keys keep the supports under tension in the setup of the sewing frame.  13.  A dry fruit of certain kinds of tree, such as the ash and sycamore, having a thin membranous wing and usually growing in bunches. Cf. samara n.Recorded earliest in ash-key n. at ash n.1 Compounds 2a.maple, sycamore key: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > fruit or reproductive product > 			[noun]		 > indehiscent fruit or achene key1440 samara1577 achenium1819 achene1825 caryopsis1830 key fruit1849 tetrachaenium1856 cremocarp1861 Cypsela1861 achaenocarp1874 triachaenium1882 pseudospermium1890   Promptorium Parvulorum 		(Harl. 221)	 143  				Esch key, frute, clava. 1523    J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng xxix. f. 46v  				Ye may gette the keys of asshes, nuttes, and suche other. 1562    W. Turner 2nd Pt. Herball f. 6  				They are called in Englishe ashe Keyes, because they hangh in bunches after the maner of Keyes. 1664    J. Evelyn Sylva 		(1679)	 4  				Oaklings, young beeches, ash, and some others, spring from the self-sown mast and keys. 1741    B. Langley Landed Gentleman’s Useful Compan. v. 83  				The Ash is raised from Seed, (called Keys) which are to be gathered when they begin to fall, about the end of November. a1793    G. White Observ. Veg. in  Nat. Hist. Selborne 		(1802)	 II. 249  				Many ash trees bear loads of keys every year. 1838    J. C. Loudon Arboretum II. iii. 1224  				The seeds [of the ash] (which are included in what are commonly called keys, but botanically samaras,) are generally ripe in October. 1898    Intelligence 15 Sept. 540/2  				The wings of the ‘keys’ slightly diverge and are about one inch long. 1903    Gardener’s Chron. 19 Dec. 415/1  				Let the keys therefore be gathered from free-growing and vigorous specimens if the best results are looked for. 1929    Times 3 Oct. 17/6  				Briar-hips, the waxen clusters of the guelder-rose, the keys of the mountain ash, have put on their several tones of winter red. 2005    C. Tudge Secret Life Trees ix. 226  				Maples are easily recognized for their fruits: paired keys, which spin helicopter-style in the wind.  14.  An instrument shaped to fit or grasp a peg, screw, etc., so that it may be turned.  a.  Music. An instrument for turning the tuning pegs of a stringed instrument.tuning-key: see the first element.In quot. a1616 figurative, with admixture of sense  A. 3b. ΚΠ 1612    H. Peacham Minerua Britanna 45  				Thou..with Ivorie key, Didst tune my stringes, that slackt or broken lay. a1616    W. Shakespeare Tempest 		(1623)	  i. ii. 83  				Thy false vncle..hauing both the key, Of Officer, and office, set all hearts i'th state To what tune pleas'd his eare. 1727    A. Boyer Dictionaire Royal 		(rev. ed.)	 at Clef  				A Key to turn the Pins of a Hapsecord [sic]. 1799    Crit. Rev. Feb. 238  				Some of the pins being turned by the fingers and others by the key. 1825    W. Scott Talisman xiii, in  Tales Crusaders IV. 216  				About his neck there hung in a scarf of sky-blue silk a wrest, as it was called,—that is, the key with which a harp is tuned. 1842    Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 18 June 176/2  				Iron pegs, which can be turned round by a key to tune the instrument [sc. a dulcimer]. 1902    Catal. Crosby Brown Coll. Musical Instruments 		(Metropolitan Mus. Art)	 I. 42  				Seven brass pins inserted from behind and tuned with a small key. 1992    C. Taylor Exploring Music 		(1994)	 iii. 124  				The basic tuning is by tightening or slackening the end pins with a key.  b.  An instrument for winding a clock, watch, or other clockwork device. Also in figurative contexts.bench-, pistol-, tipsy, watch-key: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > time > instruments for measuring time > clock > 			[noun]		 > instrument for winding key1631 clock winder1889 1631    J. Done Polydoron Ep. Ded. sig. A3  				Reason..[is] the key to wind up the small portative watch of our own Microcosme. 1677    J. Phillips tr.  J.-B. Tavernier Persian Trav.  v. iv. 207 in  tr.  J.-B. Tavernier Six Voy. 		(1678)	  				One day the King happening to wind up his Watch, and turning the Key the wrong way, broke the Fusil. 1709    London Gaz. No. 4599/4  				It had a black Ribbon tied to it, and the Key of the Watch fastened to that. 1771    Encycl. Brit. III. 934/2  				When the cord..is entirely run down from off the barrel, it is wound up again by means of a key. 1853    Anglo-Amer. Mag. Aug. 179/1  				We insert a tiny key into a tiny key-hole, wind up our musical box, and thereby coil up a spring. 1884    F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. 		(new ed.)	 131  				Capable of being wound without a key. 1900    Every other Sunday 23 Sept. 10/1  				Sam muttered on his way to the clock; and, turning the key,..he wound up the heavy weights. 1962    E. Bruton Dict. Clocks & Watches 		(1963)	 99  				Having to wind a watch by a separate key was a nuisance as the key was easily lost. 2001    A. Reynolds Chasm City 		(2003)	 i. 7  				You wound it up with a key, like a clockwork mouse.  c.  gen. An instrument which grips or fits the head of a screw, bolt, nut, etc., so that it may be turned; an instrument or component which opens or closes a valve.Allen, bed-, box-, brace-, nut-, radiator, screw-, skate key, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > screwdrivers, wrenches, spanners > 			[noun]		 > spanner or wrench turn-bolt1596 wrenching-iron1597 key1659 screw key1742 spanner1790 screw wrench1791 wrench1794 screw spanner1831 wrencher1832 1659    J. Leak tr.  I. de Caus New Inventions Water-works 14  				The Cock D; whose barrel is pierced..to the end that the key C turning either one way or the other,..the Water..may run when the hole of the key C shall agree with one or the other of them. 1660    R. Boyle New Exper. Physico-mechanicall 16  				If..the Key of the Stop-cock be so turn'd, as that..a free passage be opened betwixt the Cylinder and the Receiver. 1688    R. Holme Acad. Armory  iii. 436/1  				A Key for a Screw Head. 1745    J. Swift Direct. to Servants 20  				Hide the Key of the Jack. 1783    Philos. Trans. 		(Royal Soc.)	 73 443  				Those stop-cocks must be turned by means of a key adapted to their square tops. 1808    Jrnl. Nat. Philos. 20 Suppl. 345  				You are then to adjust the level by turning with a key the screw, which moves the balance contained in the bottom of the inner tube. 1854    R. S. Burn Colonist's & Emigrant's Handbk. Mech. Arts v. 91  				The key is sometimes made bent, having holes of different sizes at the ends, so as to take in nuts of two sizes. 1902    Daily Chron. 27 June 2/6  				Push-tap valves..do not require a key, the driver simply having to press the push and the water runs off. 1954    Pop. Sci. Sept. 260/1  				A long key made from hex rod is used to lock the stop in the approximate position in the spindle. 1995    I. Rankin Let it Bleed 		(1996)	 xiii. 93  				He twisted the key as hard as he could, but the drip remained.  d.  Dentistry. An instrument for extracting teeth, consisting of a shaft with a transverse handle at one end and a pivoted claw, beak, or hook at right angles to it at the other. Cf. key instrument n. at  Compounds 3. Now historical.See also tooth-key n. at tooth n. Compounds 1b. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > dentistry > 			[noun]		 > instruments for extracting teeth tooth-iron1483 pelican1598 tooth-drawer1598 dog1611 snap1611 plychon1688 pullikins1688 screw pelican1688 tooth-wrest1706 pounce1742 key instrument1762 key1774 punch1826 tooth-key1827 tooth-forceps1844 turnkey1855 1774    N. D. Falck Seaman's Med. Instructor ii. 67  				Teeth Instruments: Of the whole tribe there is certainly none more universal than the key. 1787    B. Bell Syst. Surg. 		(ed. 2)	 IV. xxx. 276  				For a considerable time past, an instrument termed a Key has been almost the only one employed in Britain for extracting firm teeth. 1849    C. A. Harris Dict. Dental Sci. & Med. Terminol. 426/1  				Since the time of Garengeot, the key has underwent a number of improvements..almost every dentist has felt the necessity of modifying the instrument. 1856    R. Druitt Surgeon's Vade Mecum 		(ed. 7)	 450  				The key is..often employed for the extraction of the biscuspides and molars. 1915    W. Leaf Homer & Hist. i. 9  				The waste-paper basket in the library, the scrap-heap in the factory, are not perhaps very pleasant objects of contemplation; nor is the dentist's key. 1966    J. M. Campbell Catal. Menzies Campbell Coll. 12  				The original dental keys, constructed entirely of metal, had a straight shaft. 2000    J. Druett Rough Med. iii. 74  				A few lancets, a key for extracting teeth, and a simple medical guide.  15.  The part of a first coat of plaster on a wall which passes between the laths and secures the rest; (hence) the hold which plaster has on a surface; the roughness of a surface which enables plaster or some other material to adhere to it. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > surfacing or cladding > 			[noun]		 > bricklaying and plastering > plastering > rough surface to give better hold key1813 tie1873 1813    ‘T. Martin’ Circle Mech. Arts 486/2  				After the plaster has been put by in this method, it is crossed all over with the end of a lath which has the effect of giving a key or tie to the finishing coats. 1867    W. Papworth Gwilt's Encycl. Archit. 		(rev. ed.)	  ii. iii. 553  				A better key is obtained upon the bricks and mortar. 1888    C. F. Mitchell Building Constr. 		(1889)	  i. vii. 104  				Tredgold recommends the arrises of wide timbers to be taken off, so as not to interrupt the key for plaster. 1944    J. B. Parry in  R. Greenhalgh Pract. Builder viii. 282/1  				Owing to lack of key presented by such hard glossy surfaces, the usual procedure is to apply a thin, sharp..priming coat prepared from white lead. 1965    I. H. Seeley Building Quantities Explained v. 54 		(heading)	  				Key for plaster, asphalt, etc. 1990    Do it Yourself Apr. 43/1  				Gloss paint should be sanded to provide a good key.  16.  Basketball. The area bounded by the (originally narrow) free-throw lane and free-throw circle together, formerly resembling a key or keyhole in shape; = keyhole n. 3b. Also: the free-throw lane alone (used esp. with reference to a rule prohibiting players from occupying this space for more than three seconds at a time). ΚΠ 1946    Washington Post 25 Dec. 8/5  				Always try to meet the ball when thrown in by a teammate, but stay as deep in the key as you can. 1948    Boys' Life Dec. 6/1  				The second-string squad set up a zone defense, and Art Ribbons planted himself in the key, back to the basket, while he watched the ball. 1965    J. McPhee Sense of where you Are v. 135  				He made two foul shots and a jumper from the top of the key. 1977    Nevada State Jrnl. 20 Jan. 11/2  				The wheelchair variety is played much the same way leg basketball is played. The only rules applying especially to that mode of travel are..you are allowed five seconds, not three, in the key. 2004    Sporting News 19 Jan. 23 		(caption)	  				He made only one shot from inside the key—a wide-open, highlight-reel dunk in the closing seconds.  IV.  Senses relating to pitch or tone.  17.  Music. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > system of sounds or intervals > 			[noun]		 > diatonic scale series > notes in diatonic scale keya1450 seventh1591 fifth1597 final1609 octave1656 sub-octave1659 keynote1677 mediant1721 sensible note?1775 subdominant?1775 submediant?1775 medius1782 leading note1786 nominal1786 subsemitone1799 superdominant1806 supertonic1806 tonic1806 subtonic1817 dominant1823 sensitive note1845 nominal note1884 a1450    Musical Treat. in  Speculum 		(1935)	 10 262 (MED)  				This same rwle may ye kepe betwene Dsolre, Dlasolre, & al oþer base keyys, whan þe countersight goþ low. 1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus Apophthegmes  i. f. 87v  				The maister chauntres that sette the kaye, or take the first parte of a song to begynne it in a quiere. 1597    T. Morley Plaine & Easie Introd. Musicke 4  				Now I praie you shew me all the seuerall Keyes wherein you may begin your sixe Notes [i.e. hexachords]. 1609    J. Dowland tr.  A. Ornithoparchus Micrologus 7  				A Key is the opening of a Song, because like as a Key opens a dore, so doth it the Song. 1694    W. Holder Treat. Harmony vi. 156  				Draw a Second Scale..but let the Key, or First Note, be D. Sol re Proper, on the same Organ standing tuned as before. 1730    A. Bedford Script. Chronol.  v. iv. 579  				The full Close or Period ending in the Key it self, in which the Chanting Tune is set. 1776    W. Emerson Miscellanies xv. 360  				Key or key note, is the lowest or ending note of a piece of music.  b.  A system of notes comprising a scale, regarded as forming the tonal basis of a piece or passage of music.A key is named after its keynote (keynote n. 1), so a passage of music based on the major scale of C is described as being ‘in the key of C’ (or ‘C major’); a passage based on the C minor scale is ‘in the key of C minor’. Cf. major adj. 7b, minor adj. 6b. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > system of sounds or intervals > 			[noun]		 > key key?1533 mode1667 ?1533–4    R. Saltwood Compar. bytwene iiij. Byrdes sig. Aiv  				Ful meryly in tyme it recorded Swete, swete, iug, iug ryght meruelus And in another key streyght reported In manyfold notes lyke wonderus. 1579    S. Gosson Schoole of Abuse f. 10  				How many keyes, how many cliffes, howe many moodes. 1600    W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream  iii. ii. 207  				Both warbling of one song, both in one key .       View more context for this quotation a1704    G. Keller Compl. Method Thorough Bass 		(1707)	 11 		(heading)	  				Example in a sharp key. 1787    J. Wolcot Ode upon Ode 		(ed. 5)	 46  				To hear her pompously demand the Key Of ev'ry Piece Musicians play. 1826    Baroness Bunsen in  A. J. C. Hare Life & Lett. Baroness Bunsen 		(1879)	 I. vii. 268  				I have often practised writing out parts in the different keys. 1898    J. Stainer Stainer & Barrett's Dict. Musical Terms 		(rev. ed.)	 253/2  				The key of C requires no flats or sharps for this purpose, hence it is called the normal key. 1932    B. Davis Saxophone xxx. 154  				Because it is not necessary to change the key when reading for the C Melody, this instrument has come to be regarded as non-transposing, in order to differentiate it from those for which it is necessary to change key. 1961    A. Hopkins Talking about Symphonies i. 22  				Certain keys have emotional connotations in composers' minds. 1997    Classical Music Mag. Dec. 32/2  				Purcell..could always turn out a pensive sarabande or a nostalgic chaconne, and make a major key sound as serious as a minor. 2011    Boston Globe 5 Apr.  g6  				He restarted the coffeehouse-gospel ‘Cup of Sorrow’ with good humor after the band came in and he realized that he had been playing it in the wrong key.  c.  The sum of melodic and harmonic relations existing between the tones of such a system; tonality. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > system of sounds or intervals > 			[noun]		 > key > tonality modulation1721 tonality1838 key1841 1841    Musical World 13 May 313  				This is quite enough to destroy the ear, and all feeling for key. 1884    Encycl. Brit. XVII. 99/1  				A special plan for each, which has frequent variations of tempo but always coherence of key. 1918    M. V. O' Shea et al.  World Bk. V. 4019/1  				They knew nothing about key—not even the facts which the youngest beginner learns to-day. 1921    G. Overton Answerer  ii. xix. 258  				Disordered music, without key, without tonality. 1990    C. L. Krumhansl Cognitive Found. Musical Pitch iv. 77  				Pattern-matching to tonal hierarchies may be one mechanism through which listeners arrive at a sense of key.  18.  figurative.  a.  The tone or tenor of a piece of writing, situation, etc.; the intensity or force of a feeling or action. Cf. low key adj. 2. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > 			[noun]		 > tone keya1530 humoura1568 style1567 strain1622 tone1765 a1530    T. Lupset Compend. Treat. Dyenge Well 		(1534)	 sig. E.iiii  				In this tenor and key sowneth al our holy scripture. 1594    T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. F3v  				As for my carryage hee knew hee was to tune it at a key, eyther high or low, or as hee list. 1599    S. Daniel Musophilus in  Poet. Ess. sig. D2  				His passions set to such a pleasing kay. 1621    F. Quarles Hadassa sig. K3v  				Let peace and loue exalt your key of mirth. 1646    D. Evance Noble Order 16  				Which is the right Key of obedience. 1723    Mem. Cardinal de Retz  ii. 104  				We thought our selves, that we had touch'd too high a Key; but a lower Note had not awaken'd or kept awake Men, whom fear had perfectly stupified. 1774    J. Langhorne  & W. Langhorne tr.  Plutarch Lives 		(ed. 2)	 V. 52  				The key of politics, which he first touched, he kept to without variation. 1816    M. Keating Trav. 		(1817)	 I. 234  				He returned in a high key of spirits in consequence of the reception he was favoured with. 1875    W. Stubbs Constit. Hist. 		(ed. 2)	 I. xiv. 129  				The writs to the barons..are shorter but in the same key. 1927    H. Crane Let. 7 May 		(1965)	 295  				Your Foreword set the key..for most of Gorham's comments. 1951    Billboard 19 May 10/3  				Emily Lawrence's portrayal of the wife was in such an overstated hysterical key as to make for more neurotism. 1991    C. Brooke in  C. Brooke et al.  David Knowles Remembered iii. 65  				The account is formal and strictly economical. But on St Bernard's entry the author changed to a new key.  b.  The pitch or tone of a person's voice. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > 			[noun]		 pitch1597 key1600 tune1694 keynote1762 1600    T. Dekker Shomakers Holiday sig. F  				Tis her worship speakes so, and not she, no faith mistresse, speake mee in the olde key. 1601    B. Jonson Fountaine of Selfe-love  iv. i. sig. G2  				Theres one speakes in a Key: like the opening of some Iustices gate, or a Post-Boyes  horne.       View more context for this quotation 1623    P. Massinger Duke of Millaine  ii. i. sig. D4  				Ile speake to her And in a high Key too. 1709    G. Berkeley Ess. New Theory of Vision §46  				Men speak in a high or a low key. 1748    J. Mason Ess. Elocution 10  				Carefully to preserve the Key (that is, the Command) of your Voice. 1855    Chambers's Jrnl. 9 June 355/1  				I repeated what I had said in a louder key. 1877    H. Sweet Handbk. Phonetics  iii. 96  				Each sentence, or sentence-group, has a general pitch, or ‘key’ of its own. 1902    Education Apr. 503  				Mothers are largely to blame by allowing baby voices to be pitched at a high, harsh key, full of whining and falsetto notes. 1987    W. Just Amer. Ambassador  i. iii. 56  				Carruthers's voice changed key, and he sighed. 2008    S. Simon Windy City 		(2009)	 xii. 125  				‘These are emotional times’, he said in a quieter key.  c.  Art. The prevailing range of tones in a painting; the relative intensity of a particular colour scheme. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > colour > quality of colour > 			[noun]		 > shade or tone shadowing1580 shade1690 key1713 nuance1823 colour tone1853 colour value1857 hue1857 neutral1859 shadow-script1898 value1902 1713    Ld. Shaftesbury Notion Hist. Draught Judgm. Hercules v. 30  				The Harmony of Painting requires, that in whatever Key the Painter begins his Piece, he shou'd be sure to finish it in the same. 1778    Gentleman's Mag. Nov. 527/1  				The picture may justly be said to be a fair and true representation of nature, though in a lower key. 1851    H. Wilson Compos. Light & Shade 65  				Pictures, painted in a ‘light key’, possess many advantages. 1876    J. Ruskin Arrows of Chace 		(1880)	 I. 174  				Their harmonies of amber-colour and purple are full of exquisite beauty in their chosen key. 1927    Burlington Mag. Apr. 202/1  				His Allegory of Vanity..is a good example of the semi-genre Caravaggio school product, painted in a vivid key, without forced contrasts. 2006    W. Baron Sickert xvi. 117/2  				Sickert used this rehearsal to work out, in a more muted key, the bold colour scheme of the final version.  V.  Senses relating to a lever or button.  19.  Music.  a.  On an organ, piano, or similar instrument: each of the levers pressed by the fingers or (on an organ) the feet in order to produce a note; cf. keyboard n. 1a. Also: each of the bars on a xylophone or similar instrument.foot-, organ, pianoforte, piano key, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > 			[noun]		 > keyboard of > key key1513 note1697 tasto1740 ivory1818 digital1878 manual1882 touch key1891 1513    in  C. Kerry Hist. St. Lawrence, Reading 		(1883)	 60  				Payd for ye lokks to the same organs, one for the stopps and the oþer for the keyes. a1527    W. Peeris Prov. in  Anglia 		(1892)	 14 478  				He..must handill the keyes all lyke. 1626    F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §158  				In Clericalls, the Keyes are lined. 1632    F. Quarles Divine Fancies 1  				The unseen Bellows, nor the hand that plays Upon th' apparant note-dividing Kayes. 1664    S. Pepys Diary 5 Oct. 		(1971)	 V. 290  				The new instrument..the Arched Viall..played on with Kees like an Organ. 1740    J. Grassineau tr.  S. De Brossard Musical Dict. 169  				The keys of an Organ are usually divided into four octaves. 1785    F. Burney Diary 16 Dec. 		(1842)	 II. 381  				Are you sure you never play?—never touch the keys at all? 1866    Athenæum 7 Apr. 470/3  				A machine of wooden keys, called the ‘xylophone’. 1896    A. J. Hipkins Descr. & Hist. Pianoforte 28  				The lower keys are called the naturals and, where seen, are covered with ivory; the visible ends of the shorter upper keys, called sharps, are raised to the height required by blocks of ebony glued upon them. 1939    Hopewell 		(New Jersey)	 Herald 31 May 2/1  				The harpsichord has two banks of keys. 1953    J. Baldwin Go tell it on Mountain  i. 65  				He touched a black key on the piano and it made a dull sound. 1997    N.Y. Times 2 May  b40/3  				A xylophone with half its keys missing. 2003    F. Shaw Sweetest Thing 16  				She lifted the lid on a piano and ran her hand down the keys.  b.  On some wind instruments, as the flute, clarinet, trumpet, concertina, etc.: each of the small levers or buttons pressed by the fingers in order to vary the pitch.octave, speaker-key: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > wind instrument > 			[noun]		 > parts generally > key stopc1500 key1754 octave key1866 speaker-key1890 touch key1891 1754    New & Compl. Dict. Arts & Sci. II. at Flute  				Stopt and opened by the little finger's pressing on a brass, or sometimes, a silver key, like those in hautboys, bassoons, &c. 1829    Specif. Patent 5803  				Finger keys have also been added to such instruments [as the concertina]. 1851    Official Descriptive & Illustr. Catal. Great Exhib. IV. 1105  				D flute of ebony, with keys..Clarionets in B and D, in German silver, with all the keys. 1921    S. Greenbie Pacific Triangle xv. 241  				Her stiff fingers worked upon the keys of an accordion in a sluggish fashion. 1973    R. Russell Bird Lives! xi. 142  				A key on his saxophone broke. 2003    G. Rucka Fistful of Rain 		(2004)	 x. 89  				Fiddling the keys on a trumpet.  c.  Each of the resonant metal strips in a musical box which are plucked in order to produce a tune. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > musical box > 			[noun]		 > part of key1823 roller1875 1823    J. Badcock Domest. Amusem. 67  				Long bits of steel called the keys of the instrument. 1880    Horological Jrnl. Aug. 164/1  				The cylinder which works the keys. 1914    M. Almon tr.  R. Huch Recoll. Ludolf Ursleu xxvi, in  German Classics of 19th & 20th Cent. XVIII. 417  				A kind of music-box with metal keys, on which she produced little, ringing tones. 1999    G. Summit  & J. Widess Making Gourd Musical Instruments  i. 39  				Pegs on the drum selectively pluck the tiny metal keys to produce a melody.  d.  In plural and usually without article. Keyboard instruments as a class; the music or sounds produced by these. Cf. keyboard n. 1b. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > 			[noun]		 clavier1845 keyboard instrument1850 keyboard1969 key1973 1973    San Antonio 		(Texas)	 Express & News 30 Dec. 17/3 		(heading)	  				Kooper on Keys. 1982    Winnipeg Free Press 24 Feb. 26/1  				The best number is an almost all-instrumental... It indicates where Destri belongs—playing keys for Blondie. 1991    Billboard 		(Nexis)	 14 Dec. 29  				Insistent and impaling keys are tempered with a hypnotic melody and perky vocal sound bites. 2011    I. Marion Warm Bodies 152  				He was a musician back then, played keys in a rock band.  20.  On a telegraph, typewriter, computer, or other device: a lever or button pressed in order to transmit, produce, or enter an item of data, typically a particular letter or number; each of the buttons on a keyboard or keypad.control, curb-, escape, function, hot, Morse, return, shift-, space-, telegraph key, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > lever > 			[noun]		 > others hammer1546 pawl1730 swinger1825 key1837 throw lever1866 sweep-rod1867 bell-crank1881 control lever1887 touch key1957 1837    Specif. Patent 7390 4  				Giving signals..by..pressure of his..fingers upon suitable buttons or finger keys. 1867    R. Sabine Electr. Telegr. 41  				The transmitting key used by Morse in his later apparatus..consisted of a lever. 1875    Ladies' Repository Nov. 470/2  				It consists of keys and a lever very much like the desk of the type-writer. 1919    C. Morley Rocking Horse 87  				I heard the quick staccato click Of the typist's pounding keys. 1966    D. Bagley Wyatt's Hurricane i. 19  				Wyatt drew a desk calculator and, after checking figures marked on the photographs, began to hammer the keys. 1973    U.S. Patent 3,920,926  				The pad provides keys for numerals 0 to 9, while..the octothorp (#) key generates a command to send the contents of the memory into the telephone line. 2002    H. Holt Leonora 		(2003)	 iii. 26  				I went back to the computer and tried to work, but I must have hit a wrong key or something.  B. adj.   Of paramount or crucial importance; dominant, chief, essential.Before the mid 20th cent. often hyphenated and probably construed as an attributive use of the noun. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > importance > 			[adjective]		 > of high or great importance worthlyeOE mickleeOE greatc1225 right hand?c1225 solemna1387 materialc1475 superior1526 grand1542 weighty1558 main1581 pregnant1591 pregnate1598 materious1611 moliminous1642 momentous1656 magic1696 all-important1748 big1748 eventful1756 colossal1775 bread and butter1822 bada1825 key1832 all-absorbing1834 earth-moving?1834 earth-shaking1835 earth-shatteringa1859 high-ranking1874 beaucoup1917 major league1951 earth-stopping1956 crucial1957 the mind > attention and judgement > importance > 			[adjective]		 > most important mosteOE foremostc1000 headOE headlyOE nexta1200 umest1513 primary1565 headest1577 ruling1590 forward1591 capital1597 of the first magnitude1643 palmary1646 top1647 prepondering1651 headmost1661 home1662 life-and-death1804 palmarian1815 bada1825 key1832 première1844 the mind > attention and judgement > importance > 			[adjective]		 > essential or central cardinal1440 material1603 primal1619 real1620 centrical1659 vital1659 essential1770 nucleal1826 key1832 pivotal1837 keystone1846 pivot1861 quintessential1901 central1902 core1962 1832    Libr. Fine Arts May 396  				All these materials might be described or delineated as required; leaving the composition, point of time, and action of the leading group and key-figure to the artist. 1865    Proc. Amer. Philol. Soc. 10 139  				The water-symbol..stands out clearly as the key element in all the compound symbols. 1877    Methodist Q. Rev. Oct. 740  				The definition of ‘the strength of a motive’ is key to several of our chapters. 1919    National Builder Jan. 97/1  				Many of these [industries] are ‘key’ or ‘pivotal’ upon which other industries depend. 1928    J. Boon Victorians, Edwardians & Georgians I. 203  				There had been considerable difficulty in getting hold of a key witness. 1930    New Statesman 30 Aug. 637/1  				The Centre is the great opportunist party..never missing a chance to capture key-positions in the bureaucracy. 1934    C. Lambert Music Ho!  ii. 110  				It is Stravinsky who is the key-figure of our times. 1959    Times Rev. Industry June 		(London & Cambridge Econ. Bull.)	 p. i/1  				The key factor in an assessment of the economic position and prospects of the country is Mr. Amory's Budget. 1970    Physics Bull. Nov. 493/1  				Two ideas were key in the discovery of the kinoform. 1995    N.Y. Times 27 Aug. 34/3  				The fact I was a judge gave me credibility with the Haitians... It was absolutely key. 2001    B. Geddes World Food: Caribbean 63  				Herbs & spices still play a key role in the character of Caribbean cuisine. Phrases P1.    under key: = under lock and key at lock n.2 Phrases 1. Frequently in  to keep under key. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > in confinement			[phrase]		 in mewa1375 under keya1393 under lock and key1585 behind bars1951 a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  v. l. 1834 (MED)  				The Priest Thoas..the Palladion of Troie Kepte under keie. a1425						 (?a1350)						    Gospel of Nicodemus 		(Harl.)	 		(1907)	 l. 831  				Yhe keped him vnder kay [rhymes yhisterday, oway, may]. a1439    J. Lydgate Fall of Princes 		(Bodl. 263)	  iii. l. 4314  				His cofres cloos be shet so vndir keye. a1542    T. Wyatt Coll. Poems 		(1969)	 ccx. 15  				What vailith undre kaye To kepe treasure alwaye, That never shall se daye? 1597    R. Tofte tr.  L. Ariosto Two Tales  ii. sig. Mv  				Such iewels and gold, as he had vnder key. 1651    J. Saint-Amard tr.  F. Micanzio Life Father Paul sig. G6  				He..kept under key all his life long even to the least bolletines and short notes that he made. 1715    R. Bentley Serm. Popery 27  				The whole Warehouse, now kept under Key, will again be set wide open. 1793    Archaeologia 11 131  				It was as requisite to keep the holy as the baptismal water under key. 1862    C. E. Wilbour tr.  V. Hugo Les Misérables ix. 125/2  				She had in a closet, under key, a mysterious object, which she cherished very highly. 1869    Solicitors' Jrnl. & Reporter 31 July 813/2  				And you ask a witness to produce those documents, which are under key in another man's house? 1910    Amer. Tyler-Keystone 20 June 552/1  				Religion is not something to be kept under key all week, then to be brought out and brushed up for Sunday. 1993    R. Lourie tr.  H. Grynberg Victory in  Jewish War & Victory 		(2001)	  i. 85  				My little drawer is kept under key.  P2.    the king's keys: implements for forcing open a door, as used by officials with a legal right to do so; the right to open a door in this way. Now rare. ΚΠ a1475    Sir Gawain & Carl Carlisle 		(1951)	 l. 203 (MED)  				The kyngus keyis woll we tane And draw hem doun cleyn. 1679    J. Somerville Memorie Somervilles 		(1815)	 II. 396  				Cambusnethen persists in his resolutione, and myndes to make use of the king's keyes, if the kirk-warden refuise to delyver the keyes. 1761    J. Lauder Decisions Lords of Council & Session 1678–1712 II. 577  				The messenger makes the king's keys to the doors. 1824    W. Scott Redgauntlet III. vi. 194  				Constables..considered as worthy to use what are called the King's keys. 1904    Everybody's Mag. July 41/1  				The missionaries rescued a few girls from brothels by force and the ‘king's keys’. 1992    F. R. P. Akehurst tr.  P. de Beaumanoir Coutumes de Beauvaisis liv. 580  				The ‘king's keys’ should be used, which means that the officer who is going to make the seizure on the order of the lord can and should break into what is closed against him.   key of the foot  n. Falconry Obsolete rare one of the principal claws of a hawk's foot. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > order Falconiformes (falcons, etc.) > family Accipitridae (hawks, etc.) > 			[noun]		 > hawk > parts of > toe or claw pouncea1475 key of the foot1486 single1486 stretcher1486 pounce joint1614 pouncer1704 1486    Bk. St. Albans sig. aviij  				Understond ye also that the longe Senclees be calde the key of the fote, or the Closer. For what thyng som euer it be yt yowre hawke strenyth: open that Sengle, and all the fote is oppen, for the strength ther of fortyfieth all the fote.  P4.   Kit has lost her key: see Kit n.4 1.  P5.    as cold as a key: extremely cold; (figurative) devoid of warmth or feeling; = key-cold adj. ΚΠ a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  vi. l. 244 (MED)  				Ther was nevere keie..More inly cold than I am al.]			 1542    Dyalogue Defensyue for Women sig. B.ii  				Women in theyr nature, be colde as a kay. ?1553						 (c1501)						    G. Douglas Palice of Honour 		(London)	  i. l. 674 in  Shorter Poems 		(1967)	 48  				Wyth quakand voce and hart cald as a key [rhymes fey, pley, etc.]. a1598    A. Montgomerie Poems 		(2000)	 I. 120  				[Ker MS] My lyfe..from my body fled And left my Corps als cold as ony Kie [rhymes thee, ee, thrie]. 1702    G. Farquhar Inconstant  iv. 55  				Till they be cold as a Key, there's no trusting them. 1833    H. Smith Gale Middleton I. vii. 153  				His mug and his mauley are as cold as a key. 1905    Good Words 46 148/2  				I'm very hot, too, that comes of racing with wrens in this weather, but wait a minute and you'll be as cold as a key. 1982    G. Ewart Coll. Poems 		(1991)	  i. 33  				As warm as a wasp's nest, As cold as a key, That is the way, That is the worrying way You've been to me.  P6.    to put (also lay, leave, etc.) the key under the door: to quit a house, premises, or employment, esp. with unpaid debts; to cease residing or working in a place.				 [In later use chiefly in translations from French, after French mettre la clef sous la porte.]			 ΚΠ 1548    N. Lesse Apol. or Def. Worde of God in  tr.  P. Melanchthon Iustif. Man by Faith Only f. lxxxivv  				The pore tenantes or theyr yeres be halfe expyred shall be glad to lay the keye vnder the dore and runne theyr wayes. ?1576    A. Hall Let. touchyng Priuate Quarell sig. F.ii  				Such seldome sights of that comfortable gentleman Maister Phebus would make a man lay the key vnder the dore. 1677    A. Yarranton England's Improvem. 126  				The Tenant lays the Key under the Door. 1724    J. Swift Let. to Shop-keepers of Ireland 		(new ed.)	 15  				The Shop-keeper will advance his Goods accordingly or else he must break and leave the Key under the Door. 1729    T. Sheridan Answere to Christmas-box 7  				By squand'ring his Mony in Dribs to the poor, He's ready to leave the key under the door. 1800    J. J. J. Aimé Narr. Deportation to Cayenne 51  				If the gendarmerie did not bring us some deported persons, we must put the key under the door. 1898    F. Lees tr.  P. Margueritte  & V. Margueritte Disaster  vi. iv. 380  				I thought that Jarras had put the key under the door? 1919    Belgian Bull. 2 Jan. 2/1  				Spontaneously, with a unanimous movement..all locked their presses and put the key under the door. 1999    N. le Feuvre in  R. Crompton Restructuring Gender Relations & Employment viii. 173  				I say to myself that if I really get fed-up, I can put the key under the door.  P7.    key and book (also Bible) and variants: a key and a Bible (or other book) used for divination. Now historical.This method of divination involved observing the turning of a key placed on a Bible, or the turning of a Bible suspended from a key. ΚΠ 1619    T. Gataker Of Nature & Use Lots xi. 315  				The finding out of a Theife by a key and a booke, or a paire of sheeres and a siue. 1637    F. Rous Archæologia Atticæ vi. 51  				To take councell of an hatchet, taking it & laying it on a peece of timber flatwaies, which did the feat by turning round. Like to which is that naughty use of a key and Bible. 1704    Athenian Oracle III. 139  				Finding out Thieves by the Turn of the Key and Bible. 1853    Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 2 July 14/2  				In a subsequent communication, M. P. R. gave the following, as a book-and-key experiment. 1880    W. Jones Credulities Past & Present v. 228  				She and her neighbours, after a consultation, agreed to have recourse to the key and Bible to discover the thief. 1900    A. M. Earle Stage Coach & Tavern Days vii. 157  				Divination by Bible and key has ever been as universal in America as in England. 1999    R. E. Guiley Encycl. Witches & Witchcraft 		(ed. 2)	 21/1  				A method of Bibliomancy to determine guilt in a crime was the ‘key and book’ method, still used in some rural parts of Britain as late as the 19th century.  P8.    to hold (also have) the keys of: to have in one's control or power, to have authority over. Cf. sense  A. 3b. ΚΠ 1625    R. Marshe Serm. Consecration Richard Senhouse 27  				Some should have the keyes of discipline, to see that holy things be not cast to Dogs. 1741    Gentleman's Mag. Aug. 496/2  				Paying court to a female favourite, who at that time held the keys of promotion. 1870    J. K. Medbery Men & Myst. Wall St. 11  				Its loan market holds the keys of trade. 1913    A. L. Benson Truth about Socialism xi. 179  				We feel that the capitalists have the keys of our happiness. 1922    D. H. Lawrence England my England 234  				She would follow her own way just the same. She would always hold the keys of her own situation. 2010    N. Capponi Unlikely Prince vi. 89  				These were the same people who ultimately held the keys of his employment.  P9.    a.    to lock (a thing) up and throw away the key and variants: to consign (a thing) to oblivion; to abandon and forget; to confine permanently. Frequently as part of an extended metaphor. ΚΠ a1655    S. Simpson Not going to Christ viii. 73 in  Two Bks. 		(1658)	  				When God brings him [sc. a man] into his treasury, for him to lock it up, and to throw away the key, as it were, and to make himself rich in the things of this life... is a great sin. 1790    E. Tatham Chart & Scale Truth I. xv. 353  				Aristotle locked up the temple of Knowledge and threw away the key, which, in the..veneration of his authority, was lost for many ages. 1867    N.Y. Times 12 Apr. 2/2  				They should shut up sectionalism in their darkest and strongest cellar and throw away the key. 1889    A. Sergeant Under False Pretences xl. 331  				I have locked up my lesson books and thrown away the key. 1927    R. A. Taylor Leonardo the Florentine  i. v. 51  				It is as if..he had..put his secret soul in prison and thrown away the key. 2002    Mercury 		(Hobart)	 		(Nexis)	 27 Apr.  				Locking up an area of land and trees and throwing away the key is not the answer to maintaining conservation values.  b.   Originally U.S. to lock (a person) up and throw away the key and variants: to commit (a person) to prison, esp. for life; to punish severely for a crime. Also simply  to throw away the key. ΚΠ 1908    Washington Post 21 June 4/2  				In Europe they round up the masses and lock them in the corral and throw away the key. 1911    N.Y. Times 7 Dec. 4/3  				If Gompers is arrested on this contempt charge..it will be in the interest of organized labor—decent labor—to lock him up and throw away the key. 1949    S. Kingsley Detective Story  i. 35  				We're gonna get the D.A. to throw away the key. 1982    R. L. Woodson in  J. A. Meyer Meeting Human Needs  iv. 407  				As a result of past failures to reach these youths, a consensus appears to be forming toward hard-core offenders—to ‘lock them up and throw away the key’. 1996    Times 26 Apr. 3/2  				I'd say ‘Throw away the key’ if I thought he'd done it. 2003    N.Y. Mag. 17 Nov. 14/1  				Enough with liberal guilt; let's just lock 'em up and throw away the key!  c.    (lock-them-up-and-)throw-away-the-key: designating an approach to law enforcement characterized by the imposition of severe penalties, esp. long custodial sentences, for many offences; relating to or advocating such an approach. ΚΠ 1969    Greeley 		(Colorado)	 Daily Tribune 26 May 4/4  				Society is wasting its time keeping these people locked up, unless, of course, it chooses to treat first offenders on a throw-away-the-key-basis. 1978    Contemp. Sociol. 7 579  				They ascribe such limited prospects for a ‘lock-them-up-and-throw-away-the-key’ policy to the small proportion of violent crimes cleared by arrest or conviction. 1997    New Yorker 24 Feb. 70  				The throw-away-the-key fever really took off in 1988. 2001    Nation 		(N.Y.)	 8 Jan. 16/2  				When you start passing throw-away-the-key bills, you're effectively eliminating the death penalty.  P10.   slang.  to have the key of the street and variants: to be shut out for the night, to have no home to go to. ΚΠ 1837    C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xlvi. 499  				It's too late now. You can't get in to-night; you've got the key of the street, my friend. 1894    G. Parker Transl. Savage 161  				A crossing sweeper early to his task, or holding the key of the street. 1929    E. Paul  & C. Paul tr.  H. de Man Joy in Work vi. 213  				The wage worker knows that from day to day or from week to week he may be given the key of the street. 1969    W. H. Auden City without Walls 11  				A key to the street each convict has. 1992    K. Roberts Kaeti on Tour 161  				The key of the street, that's what she'd be getting.  P11.    a.    out of key: off-key, with inaccurate pitch; (figurative) out of harmony, not in agreement (with something else). Cf. out-of-key adj. at out of prep. Compounds 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > disharmony or incongruity > unsuitability or inappropriateness > unsuitable or inappropriate			[phrase]		 out of the waya1450 out of my (your, etc.) way1555 out of place1560 in (or out of) one's line1886 out of key1920 1725    G. Odingsells Bath Unmask'd  i. iii. 9  				L. Wisem. Cruel! Spri. Insolent! L. Wisem. Charming! Spri. Hold hold my Lord!—quite out of key and tune.—Let me set you right again.—Libertine! 1837    Knickerbocker July 52  				I never saw an unpleasing expression upon the face of this gentleman, except when some one of the choir got out of key in church. 1887    Bk. News Aug. 410/2  				The reply was out of key with the placid mood in which the conversation had hitherto been conducted. 1920    E. Pound Hugh Selwyn Mauberley  i. 9  				For three years, out of key with his time, He strove to resuscitate the dead art Of poetry. 1934    H. G. Wells Exper. in Autobiogr. II. vii. 489  				That was entirely out of key with James's assumptions. 1989    Sound Choice Autumn 49/1  				Many chords contain a certain ‘wrongness’ without being out of key. 2005    D. Cowie Owen Noone & Marauder 43  				The lyrics, sung out of key by Noone, were anachronistic.  b.    in key: in tune, with accurate pitch; (figurative) in harmony or agreement (with something else). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > in agreement or harmony (with)			[phrase]		 in onea1400 according1523 in unison1604 of a piece1607 in concert1618 in consort1634 in tone1647 at unison1661 of a piece with1665 true1735 in suit with1797 in harmony1816 of a suit with1886 in tune1887 in key1919 tuned in1958 all-of-a-piece1960 1834    ‘P. Reedpen’ Our Town II. 171  				I dare say you would like to have a good deal of music, and I should be hardly in key. 1881    Brit. Architect 23 Sept. 473/2  				The tone of the comedy was not at all in key with the habits and thoughts of an English audience. 1919    B. Ruck Disturbing Charm  ii. xiv. 287  				Everything in that drawing-room was in key with that mantelpiece. 1963    N. Coward Diary 17 Mar. 		(2000)	 530  				The few lines they have had to interpolate are completely in key. 1994    Guitarist Sept. 117/1  				With the past two albums..I took the time to purposely play in key.   key of the sea  n. Obsolete rare the pelican's foot shell,  Aporrhais pespelecani. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Gastropoda > 			[noun]		 > superorder Branchifera > order Prosobranchiata > section Holostomata > member of family Aporrhaidae pelican's foot1815 key of the sea1854 1854    Zoologist 12 4425  				Aporrhais pes-pelecani..This common shell is popularly known as the ‘key of the sea’. Compounds C1.   General attributive.  a.   (In sense  A. 1a.)   key basket  n. ΚΠ 1827    Correspondent 3 Mar. 91/2  				The ex-brother fixed his eye on the key-basket of the Superior, and, yielding no doubt to Satanic influence, took one of the keys. 1889    Cent. Mag. Apr. 841/1  				A mob-cap covering her gray hair, and key-basket in hand. 2006    Plain Dealer 		(Cleveland, Ohio)	 		(Nexis)	 26 Aug.  b10  				The trouble with a key basket is that it will hold enough other junk to make your keys hard to find.   key rack  n. ΚΠ 1856    Daily National Intelligencer 		(Washington)	 6 Oct.  				Superior Iron Safe, Key Rack. 1882    R. L. Stevenson New Arabian Nights II. 186  				The landlord..rose from a business table under the key-rack. 1999    Chicago Tribune 22 Feb.  ii. 3/1  				We have a key rack next to the front door that holds five sets.   key safe  n. ΚΠ 1900    Rep. Commissioners Prisons 50 in  Parl. Papers (Cd. 380) XLI. 1  				A key safe has been provided for the female prison. 1905    To-day 21 June 238/2  				There's only one key in the key-safe,..the renter's key. 2011    Plymouth Herald 		(Nexis)	 16 Dec. 9  				She allegedly made a false complaint..that a key had been stolen from a key safe.  b.   (In sense  A. 5.)   key book  n. ΚΠ 1806    Anti-Jacobin Rev. & Mag. Feb. 133  				They proceed in a mechanical way by means of key-books, which they are required to follow exactly. 1826    E. Irving Babylon I.  i. 54  				These two key-books [sc. Daniel and Revelations] and the treasure-books, which they unlock. 2002    S. J. Cannell Viking Funeral xix. 116  				I think I maybe found the code they're using. It's a key book.   key cipher  n. ΚΠ 1605    F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning  ii. sig. Qq1  				The kindes of Cyphars..are many, according to the Nature or Rule of the infoulding: Wheele-Cyphars, Kay-Cyphars, Dovbles,  &c.       View more context for this quotation 1867    Proc. Royal Irish Acad. 1864–6 9 166  				They are all..resolvable into the original key-cipher. 1901    L. L. Pimenoff-Noble  & E. Noble Before Dawn xiv. 252  				Platónov copied out each row of figures, and wrote under them his key cipher. 2001    D. Pirie Patient's Eyes 		(2007)	 129  				In that kind of key cipher..what the creator does is to utilise an entire manuscript and number each word.   key list  n. ΚΠ 1845    W. B. Fowle  & A. Fitz Elem. Geogr. for Mass. Children  i. 28  				Let each pupil have his map, but do not let him refer to the key-lists while he is reciting. 2008    S. C. Jersey Hell's Islands x. 187  				Station NGK, using a hand-operated paper-strip cipher system and key lists, took over the radio guard for all message traffic.   key map  n. ΚΠ 1816    J. Melish Geogr. Descr. U.S. 13  				A key map to the local maps of the several states and territories. 1895    Bookman Oct. 26/2  				Single page plans of small districts on a fair scale with a key-map for reference. 2000    G. C. McIntosh Piri Reis Map of 1513 iii. 22 		(caption)	  				Figure 7. Key map of place-names in South America.  c.   (In sense  A. 12a.)   key beam  n. ΚΠ 1849    Gen. Descr. Britannia & Conway Tubular Bridges 27  				These key-beams are each twenty-four feet long by four feet high, and weigh eleven tons. 1865    R. Hunt Pop. Romances West of Eng. (1st Ser.) 107  				They were playing all sorts of pranks on the key-beams and rafters. 2009    C. Kostick Siege of Jerusalem 21  				The key beams were dislodged from their bindings and the entire structure collapsed.   key pile  n. ΚΠ 1839    W. Turnbull Let. 31 Dec. in  Rep. Secretary of War 21 in  U.S. Congress. Serial Set 		(1841)	 (26th Congr., 2nd Sess.: Senate Doc. 718) IV  				A wedge, or key-pile, in the centre of each panel. 2003    M. Puller Deep Excavations 		(ed. 2)	 vi. 256  				Additional key piles may be needed to stiffen the sheeting during pitching and subsequent driving.  d.   (In senses  A. 17   and  A. 18.)   key centre  n. ΚΠ 1909    J. Klauser Nature of Music v. 220  				These bytones..shift the key-centre and change the mode from minor to major. 1940    Scrutiny Sept. 122  				Without establishing a key-centre the fluctuating basses eventually soar..into another homophonic passage. 2002    N.Y. Times 2 June  ii. 27/2  				Many passages anchor 12-tone melodies on sustained pedal tones that establish a point of reference if not a key center.   key change  n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > system of sounds or intervals > 			[noun]		 > key > alteration from prevailing key changingc1475 change1574 modulation1696 key change1877 transition1877 1877    H. Sweet Handbk. Phonetics  iii. 96  				Progressive change of key is indicated by prefixing / or \\ to the signs of key-change. 1885    Folio July 9/3  				Note-reading, key-changes, and other rudimental matters. 1959    ‘F. Newton’ Jazz Scene 115  				The free and continual key changes. 1973    J. Wainwright Pride of Pigs 175  				He rippled through a key-change bridge passage, then moved into the beat. 2008    Liverpool Echo 		(Nexis)	 24 May 27  				Extra points are always awarded for flag waving, peasant outfits, explosions,..and the obligatory key change. It simply wouldn't be Eurovision without these staples.   key relationship  n. ΚΠ 1848    J. Curwen Singing for Schools & Congregations 		(ed. 2)	 p. xx  				But this principle of key-relationship, so essential for the practice of ‘Interval’, is the very thing which is rendered the least obvious in the Old Notation. 1881    J. Broadhouse Student's Helmholtz 371  				So many stumbling-blocks, in the way of understanding key-relationship. 2006    Jrnl. Aesthetic Educ. 40 7  				A freer multi-movement form in which pieces are linked thematically in terms of key relationships.   key system  n. ΚΠ 1873    W. K. Sullivan in  E. O'Curry On Manners & Customs Anc. Irish I. Introd. p. dcxv  				He has not scrupled to employ all the apparatus of the modern key system. 1934    C. Lambert Music Ho!  i. 28  				His [sc. Debussy's] destruction of the key-system. 2002    New German Critique 86 66  				The key system imposes oppressive limits on subjective expression.   key tonality  n. ΚΠ 1874    Choir 17 Oct. 241/1  				Old devices of counterpoint were not imcompatible [sic] with modern key-tonality. 1879    J. Stainer Music of Bible 164  				The different versions begin and end in the same key-tonality. 2005    W. A. Sethares Tuning, Timbre, Spectrum, Scale 		(ed. 2)	 xi. 232  				There is no difference between various musical keys, there are no restrictions on modulation, and key tonality is not a significant structure in music.  C2.   Parasynthetic. ΚΠ 1854    C. Forster Monuments Assyria in  One Primeval Lang. 13  				Clavi-formed or nail-headed, cludi-formed or key-headed, cunei-form or wedge-shaped. 1904    Patents for Inventions: Abridg. Specif. Class 86 1867–76 73  				The head is formed hollow, and the back of it with a hole corresponding to the key-headed shank.  C3.   Many of the formations listed here are compounds of the noun, but some may alternatively be interpreted as compounds of the adjective.   key action  n. Music the mechanism by which sounds are produced in keyboard instruments; the action of such an instrument's keys. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > 			[noun]		 > mechanism mechanism1834 piano action1853 pianoforte action1856 key action1857 1857    Dwight's Jrnl. Music 10 Oct. 236/1  				The prompt yet silent working of the pedal and key action. 1880    C. A. Edwards Organs  ii. vi. 67 		(heading)	  				Key Action. 2009    H. Pinksterboer Tipbk. Keyboard & Digital Piano 		(ed. 2)	 v. 40  				You'll find that the key action may feel very different from one keyboard to another, or from one piano to another.   key bed  n. 		 (a) Mechanics = keyway n. (a)   (now rare);		 (b) Geology = marker bed n. (a) at marker n. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > shaft > 			[noun]		 > parts of > key > part on which key rests key bed1835 key seat1843 1835    Repertory Patent Inventions 4 324  				On this projecting part is a longitudinal rib or key fitting into a key bed. 1903    Jrnl. Geol. 		(Chicago)	 11 764  				After its stratigraphic position has been definitely fixed in a number of exposures, it becomes a key bed to the whole series. 1923    Locomotive Apr. 165  				The key was fitted so that it pressed hard on the top of the key bed in the coupling. 1967    Jrnl. Paleontol. 41 176/2  				Successful correlation of the Gray-red bentonite bed would establish a most helpful key bed in interpreting the biofacies. 2007    G. R. Thompson  & J. Turk Earth Sci. & Environment 		(ed. 4)	 iv. 84/1  				The thin, sooty, iridium-rich clay layer deposited 65 million years ago from debris of a giant meteorite impact..is a classic example of a key bed.   key bit  n. the part of a key that engages with the lever of a lock; = bit n.1 7. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > 			[noun]		 > key > parts of key > bit bit1644 key bit1699 web1754 1699    A. Boyer Royal Dict.  				Key-bit, paneton. 1875    R. Hunt  & F. W. Rudler Ure's Dict. Arts 		(ed. 7)	 III. 142  				By turning the handle, the key-bit..is brought into contact with the works of the lock, so as to shoot and withdraw the bolt. 2007    G. W. Pulford High-security Mech. Locks v. 378  				In mortice locks designed to be operated from either side of the door, the center step of the key bit operates the bolt.   key bolt  n. Mechanics a bolt which is secured by a key or cotter, rather than by a thread and nut. ΚΠ ?1740    P. Bouguer Relation Observ. Quito 34  				The several parts were held together by screws and key-bolts. 1800    J. Williams tr.  H. O. Scheel Treat. Artillery i. 35  				The trunnion plates are grooved to receive the chin of the second bolt. The forward one is the key-bolt, preferable in this place to the skrew. 1840    Mechanics' Mag. 8 Feb. 330/1  				The connexion between the strings, main and counter braces, may be effected by means of keybolts of suitable size. 2003    R. Rocco In Owl's Eye vi. 21  				The easiest way to do this, he thought, would be to saw through the tongue from the bottom and at the point of the key bolt.   key-bone  n. 		 (a) the clavicle (now rare);		 (b) a bone that occupies a place or serves a function resembling that of the keystone of an arch. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > structural parts > bone or bones > types of bones > 			[noun]		 ossicle1578 ossiculum1578 sucking-bone1648 master-bone1677 key-bone1791 bonelet1833 bladelet1859 interhaemal1880 the world > life > the body > structural parts > bone or bones > collarbone > 			[noun]		 cannel-bonea1325 collara1475 shears1503 furcule?1541 channel-bone1587 clavicle1615 collarbone1615 patel1615 cane1621 jugulum1706 cannon bone1730 key-bone1791 1791    W. Cowper tr.  Homer Iliad in  Iliad & Odyssey I.  v. 171  				One with his huge falchion smote Fast by the key-bone. 1836–9    Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. II. 506/2  				This bone is..principally characterized by its excess in size over the other carpal bones, and from the number of bones with which it is connected, it may be regarded as the key-bone of the carpus. 1854    R. Owen Struct. Skeleton & Teeth in  Orr's Circle Sci.: Org. Nature I. 206  				The spine of the parietal vertebra..completes the neural arch, as its crown or key-bone. 1939    G. B. Bridgman Human Machine 143  				The leg bones rest on the arch where it articulates with the astragalus, the key-bone or keystone of the arch. 2003    E. von Kuehnelt-Leddihn in  H.-H. Hoppe Myth National Def. iii. 105  				Could one imagine..Francis Joseph using a thighbone of a Prussian grenadier as a paper-knife? Or Queen Victoria in such a delicate way the key-bone of a Boer sharpshooter?   key box  n. 		 (a) Music a box-like compartment on various musical instruments in which the keys are housed;		 (b) a box, cabinet, or case in which keys are kept. ΚΠ 1786    Morning Herald 29 Dec. 1/2  				Guitars..divested of that awkward appearance which the temporary key box forms on the belly of the instrument. 1838    Age 29 July 233/3 		(advt.)	  				Key boxes, in morocco, lined with velvet and wadded, 12s. 6d. 1888    Musical World 27 Oct. 832/1  				The keybox [of an organ], which is a marvel of compactness, will extend downward to the basement floor beneath. 1904    F. Lynde Grafters xx. 264  				Kent found a note in his key-box at the Clarendon. 1995    R. A. Green Hurdy-gurdy in 18th-cent. France iii. 56  				The vielle has six strings. Two are melody strings which run through the key box on top of the instrument. 2000    L. Ruby Soon be Free 		(2002)	 xxiii. 107  				The key box opened with such force that keys flew off their hooks and clattered against the wall. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > stringed keyboards > 			[noun]		 > pianoforte > hammer > device for holding it after striking key-check1855 check1879 tape-check1929 1855    E. J. Hopkins Organ x. 45  				These two rails are strongly united to two pieces of wood, called key-checks. 1882    Cassell's Encycl. Dict. II.  i. 168/3  				A projection called a key-check was fixed on the end of the key to catch the end of the hammer as it fell, and prevent it from rising.   key chord  n. Music a chord having a keynote as its root; = tonic chord at tonic adj. 3a. ΚΠ ?1775    J. C. Heck Short Instr. for learning Thorough Bass 12  				The Key Chord both above and below has its own proper Chord. 1876    J. Stainer  & W. A. Barrett Dict. Musical Terms 250/1  				C, E, G is the key-chord of C. 1998    Early Music 26 679/2  				Is it really necessary to add a minim D minor chord at the end of bar 6..when the key chord has already been more than generously established? ΚΠ 1577    B. Googe tr.  C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry  ii. f. 95  				The Pine..is planted not muche vnlike to the Almond, the kernelles of the key clocks being set as the Almond is.   key-clog  n. a piece of wood tied to a key to prevent it from being easily lost.In later use only with reference to the work cited in quot. c1450. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > 			[noun]		 > key > devices to prevent loss of keys key band1446 key-clogc1450 key chain1652 key ring1743 keyholder1837 c1450						 (c1400)						    Sowdon of Babylon 		(1881)	 l. 1603 (MED)  				With the keye cloge..Such a stroke she hym ther raught, The brayne sterte oute of his hede. c1555    R. Smith Let. in  J. Foxe Actes & Monuments 		(1563)	 1267/1  				I haue sent you a keyclog for a token. 1632    T. E. Lawes Womens Rights 19  				She is able..to have the key clog at her girdle. 1736    R. Ainsworth Thes. Linguæ Latinæ I. (at cited word)  				A key clog, tigillum clavi affixum. 1805    G. Ellis Specimens Early Eng. Romances II. 381  				The active princess..seized the key-clog which hung from his shoulder. 1999    M. Kahf Western Representations of Muslim Woman ii. 35  				The Sultan..forgives her for smashing the jailer's skull with a key-clog.   key colour  n. the dominant or base colour in a picture or colour scheme. ΚΠ 1838    J. Clark Elem. Drawing & Painting in Water Colours 4  				A leading or key-colour gives the tone to a picture. 1997    A. Stoddard Decoration of Houses 		(2002)	 xi. 263  				Be careful that the key color you choose lends itself to complementary shades and hues.   key course  n. Building and Architecture (now rare) a course containing a keystone or consisting of keystones. ΚΠ 1700    Moxon's Mech. Exercises: Bricklayers-wks. 41  				The middle of the Key-course will be the middle of the Arch. 1835    Penny Cycl. III. 485/2  				A stone high up in the arch (for instance, a part of the key-course). 1977    C. M. Harris Hist. Archit. Sourcebk. 315/2  				Key course, a course of keystones in an arch; used in a deep archway where a single keystone will not suffice.   key cutter  n. 		 (a) a person who cuts piano keys from larger pieces of ivory (obsolete);		 (b) a device or machine for cutting keys from metal;		 (c) a person whose occupation is cutting keys; a shop or business at which keys may be cut. ΚΠ 1842    Penny Mag. Monthly Suppl. Apr. 173/2 		(caption)	  				Key-cutter at work. 1878    Bristol Mercury 21 Feb. 4/3 		(advt.)	  				Situation Wanted, by a young Man, as Key-cutter and Locksmith. 1912    Pop. Mech. Sept. 161/1 		(advt.)	  				The ‘American’ Key-Cutter..—the only machine for cutting Keys with either square or any other shape slots. 1973    R. L. Robinson Compl. Course in Professional Locksmithing 		(1983)	 227/1  				Key cutters of the side milling type..may be used to produce lever cuts,..or cylinder key cuts. 2012    Northern Echo 		(Nexis)	 19 Mar. 33  				The five-generation family business is the country's largest shoe repairer, key cutter, engraver and watch repairer.   key desk  n. Music a case enclosing the keys and stops of an organ; = console n. 3a. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > organ > 			[noun]		 > console key desk1854 console1880 1854    Dwight's Jrnl. Music 9 Dec. 75/1  				The key desk will be in the large square corner pew on the left side. 1899    Westm. Gaz. 21 Jan. 4/2  				The console or key-desk is movable. 2004    R. Smith Stokowski & Organ ii. 34  				The pedalboard was hinged so that it could be folded up and hooked to the key desk. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > 			[noun]		 > wooden structures or wooden parts of > means of fitting together > methods of mortising1589 notching1599 scarfing1644 tabulation1658 mitringc1664 tenoning1678 dovetailing1703 cocking1710 tabling1717 cogging1823 foxtail-wedging1825 mitre dovetailing1825 halving1842 key-dovetailing1847 boxing1874 1847    A. C. Smeaton Builder's Pocket Man. 		(new ed.)	 90  				The first method..is called, amongst workmen, keying together; the second..key-dovetailing.   key drop  n. 		 †(a) a keyhole guard which rotates about a pivot above the keyhole (obsolete rare);		 (b) (esp. in a hotel) a secure box in which keys can be deposited in the absence of a member of staff. ΚΠ 1857    N.Y. Herald 19 Feb. 7/1 		(advt.)	  				A stock of porcelain goods, embracing clock fronts, clock dials, door and drawer knobs, key drops, &c. 1980    Washington Post 14 Feb. (Maryland Weekly section) 10/4 		(advt.)	  				Our [car repair] Service Department now offers self-service write-up for before or after hours with instruction envelope and key drop. 1992    J. Wheatcroft Killer Swan 25  				A counter with a key drop in it. 2011    S. Sparling Wire to Wire ix. 105  				The service window was dark; beneath it, a wooden box was fixed to the wall—a key drop.   key escrow  n. Cryptography the holding, by an independent agency, of decryption keys to encrypted data, for controlled access by authorized people (frequently attributive); a system of encryption involving this; cf. Clipper n.3 ΚΠ 1993    N.Y. Times 17 Apr.  i. 36/3  				Clipper would have two keys and..they would be kept separate in two ‘key-escrow’ data bases to be established by the Attorney General. 1994    Internet World July 92/3  				To understand how the chip works, you need to look at what officials call its key escrow encryption method. 2003    P. Todd  & J. Bloch Global Issues ii. 52  				A further measure proposed was ‘key escrow’—the holding of encryption keys in a secure storage which could be accessed by court order. Both of these measures were strongly resisted by the US business community. ΚΠ 1861    E. H. Bailey U.S. Patent 31,939 1  				Key Fastener... My invention consists of a device..for so securing the keys of locks to the handles of the same, that the locks cannot be picked through the key-holes on the outside of the door. 1881    W. W. Greener Gun & its Devel. 256  				Another modification of the grip-fastener is the key-fastener. 1916    Illustr. World Nov. 444/1  				A novel key-fastener for preventing any person outside from inserting a wire and turning the key after the door is locked.   key field  n. Computing a field or set of fields in a database which constitutes a unique identifier for a record. ΚΠ 1963    Adv. in Electronics & Electron Physics 18 53  				The utility and cost of a content-addressed memory are greater if the key field can lie anywhere in each word. 1986    InfoWorld 6 Oct. 55/4  				We encountered several difficulties trying to add a key field to a database containing data. 2007    N. Conner Quickbase iii. 103  				Even if two Sara Smiths work for your company, each Sara has her own Employee ID number. So this number makes a good—and meaningful—key field.   key file  n. a thin flat file for filing incisions in keys; a warding file. ΚΠ 1846    Hilpert's Englisch-Deutsches u. Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch II. 486/2  				Key-file. 1870    H. M. Hart Elem. Chem. iv. 23  				Take a key file..and make a mark across the tube with the edge of the file. 1995    J. E. Rathjen Locksmithing vi. 52  				Locksmiths must know how to duplicate keys by using a key file.   key fob  n. a tab or decorative object attached to a key chain or key ring; (now) spec. a device for initiating electronic processes remotely, esp. locking or unlocking a vehicle. ΚΠ 1912    Fort Wayne 		(Indiana)	 Daily News 12 July 17/4  				Lost—Kappa Alpha Key fob, marked ‘W. Hoagland’. 1965    Billboard 7 Apr. 123/3 		(advt.)	  				Snake key fobs with round or clover disc. 1982    Pop. Mech. Oct. 201/1  				The Infrawave Locking System gives you a key fob with a tiny battery inside it. When you point the fob at the car and push a button..solenoids lock or unlock the doors. 1998    T. Wolfe Man in Full xi. 270  				The huge bare flaccid arms, the enormous ruff of keys protruding from his belt, the novelty key fobs. 2009    Liverpool Echo 		(Nexis)	 31 Jan. 12  				He..used the key fob to turn off the alarm and sneak into the premises in the middle of the night.   key fruit  n. Botany = sense  A. 13. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > fruit or reproductive product > 			[noun]		 > indehiscent fruit or achene key1440 samara1577 achenium1819 achene1825 caryopsis1830 key fruit1849 tetrachaenium1856 cremocarp1861 Cypsela1861 achaenocarp1874 triachaenium1882 pseudospermium1890 1849    A. Gray Genera Floræ Americæ II. 150  				The winged key-fruit..resembles that of the Elm. 1919    I. N. McFee Tree Bk. vii. 61  				Slowly the stem lengthens and shortly two crimson-winged key fruits, or samaras, swing gracefully where once the little pistillate flower bloomed. 2000    D. Briggs  & S. M. Walters Plant Variation & Evol. 		(ed. 3)	 1  				Pinnate leaves are correlated with opposite arrangement and a winged 'key' fruit in Ash.   key grip  n. originally U.S. the technician in a film or television crew who acts as chief of the grips (grip n.1 Additions), typically assuming primary responsibility for the adjustment and maintenance of production equipment on the set, esp. the camera tracks and dollies. ΚΠ 1952    Billboard 14 June 13/3  				Prop shopper, best boy, key grip [etc.]. 1984    S. King Thinner 		(1985)	 xviii. 168  				He had a feeling that he could look behind things and see the lights, the cameras, the key grips, and some unimaginable ‘real world’. 2001    D. Mitchell Number 9 Dream 362  				The movie finishes and the audience files out. I stay and watch the credits. The key grips, the animal trainers, the caterers.   key groove  n. Mechanics = keyway n. (a). ΚΠ 1835    A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 21  				The dexterous hands of the filer and driller are now superseded by the planing, the key-groove cutting, and the drilling machines. 1868    W. H. Northcott Treat. Lathes & Turning 177  				All the cutters should be made with the same sized hole and key groove. 1909    Motor Age 17 June 40/1  				The key-grooves in the shaft and wheel are dressed down until perfect contact occurs between key and groove throughout their entire length. 2007    M. Narazaki  & G. E. Totten in  G. E. Totten Steel Heat Treatm. 		(ed. 2)	 x. 626  				One of techniques for design symmetry is to add dummy holes, key grooves, or other shapes to steel parts. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > 			[noun]		 > pistol > types of dag1587 key gun1607 pocket pistol1612 key pistol1663 holster-pistol1679 troop pistol1688 horse pistol1704 screw-barrel1744 saddle pistol1764 air pistol1780 Wogdon1786 belt pistol1833 dueller1835 Colt1838 tickler1844 Derringer1853 cocking pistol1858 belt size1866 bulldozer1880 saloon pistol1899 Luger1904 Police Positive1905 Steyr1920 Saturday-night pistol1929 muff pistol1938 PPK1946 Makarov1958 Saturday-night special1959 puffer1963 snub nose1979 snubby1981 1607    ‘W. S.’ Puritaine  i. sig. B  				Now keies, are your onely Guns, Key-guns, Key-guns, & Bawdes the Gunners. a1652    R. Brome New Acad.  iv. i. 66 in  Five New Playes 		(1659)	  				All my..tops, gigs, balls, cat and catsticks, pot guns, key guns, trunks, tillers, and all. 1673    Siege in  W. Davenant Wks.  i. 65/2  				I hope he wears no charms About him, Key Guns or Pistols charg'd with White Powder. 1834    A. Watts New Year's Gift 5  				We made key-guns by filing touch-holes in the backs of large keys, tying them to sticks, charging them with gun-powder, ramming it down with all our might, and letting it off with a fire-stick, or a hot cinder. 1905    A. Stringer Lonely O'Malley ix. 277  				If you have never used or known a key gun, of course you cannot understand just how deadly it is.   key hammer  n. 		 (a) Music each of the hammers which strikes the strings in a piano; = hammer n.1 2f(b);		 †(b) a hammer for driving in keys (sense  A. 12a) (obsolete). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > driving or beating tools > 			[noun]		 > hammer > other hammers hand-hammereOE maulc1225 plating hammer1543 bucker1653 axe-hammer1681 brick hammer1688 chipping hammer1783 tup1848 clinch-hammer1850 tack-hammer1865 bucking hammer1875 bloat1881 ringer1883 key hammer1884 peen hammer1885 straight pein1904 toffee hammer1958 1846    Ann. Rep. Commissioner Patents 1845 37 in  U.S. Congress. Serial Set (29th Congr., 1st Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc. 140) IV  				The first key hammer of the bass operates upon one, two, or more strings, a a, in the usual manner. 1884    Instr. Mil. Engin. 		(ed. 3)	 I.  ii. 59  				The tools required are..1 rammer, 1 key-hammer, 2 beaters. 1894    Standard 7 July 11/3  				Ten doz. pickaxes and key hammers. 1900    E. Gray Nature's Miracles II. ix. 81  				A certain string of the piano, called middle C, vibrates at the rate of 256 times per second when struck with the key-hammer corresponding to it. 2009    D. Chaytor It's not always Dark at Seven o'Clock 109  				Tom Barber would lift the lid of the piano, stick drawing-pins into the key hammers, and I'd sit down and tinkle the ivories. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > care, protection, or charge > 			[noun]		 > one who looks after > guardian or custodian > keeper of keys keyherdeOE key-keeper1473 claviger1606 keyholder1814 eOE    Corpus Gloss. 		(1890)	 33/1  				Clauicularius, caeghiorde. a1200    MS Trin. Cambr. in  R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies 		(1873)	 2nd Ser. 193 (MED)  				Ðe heuenliche keiherde sainte peter iseih þat ure elderne hadden fele fon. 1256    in  Eng. Stud. 		(1952)	 33 18  				Walt. le Keyhirde. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > dentistry > 			[noun]		 > instruments for extracting teeth tooth-iron1483 pelican1598 tooth-drawer1598 dog1611 snap1611 plychon1688 pullikins1688 screw pelican1688 tooth-wrest1706 pounce1742 key instrument1762 key1774 punch1826 tooth-key1827 tooth-forceps1844 turnkey1855 1762    Brit. Mag. Nov. 564/1  				The key-instrument almost always breaks the external side of the socket. 1845    C. A. Harris Princ. & Pract. Dental Surg. 		(ed. 2)	  iii. iv. 276  				The author has tried almost every variety of key-instruments that have been used in this country. 1922    Dental Digest Aug. 516  				A few months ago a key instrument bearing the date 1824 was in use near Shanghai.   key light  n. originally U.S. the main source of lighting in a photograph or film. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > action of taking photograph > technical factors > 			[noun]		 > type of light raking light1857 contre-jour1921 key light1941 back-lighting1950 1941    Pop. Sci. Monthly June 208/2  				Double source lights should be avoided... It is much better to use a single-source key light, with a back light high-lighting the hair. 1986    K. Malkiewicz Film Lighting 		(1992)	 iv. 92 		(caption)	  				The actress's profile is delineated by a rim light. Her key light comes from the right. 2006    HD/Studio 		(Nexis)	 22 Aug.  				In addition to the key light, I use a back light at about 45 degrees to the subject's head and shoulders. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > making or fitting instruments > 			[noun]		 > instrument makers or fitters > keyboard maker or fitter stringer1842 bellyman1845 key loader1886 1886    Reynolds's Newspaper 9 May 8/1  				He had worked..as a key loader.   key lock  n. a lock operated by a key, rather than a bolt or other device. ΚΠ 1709    Cotton's Scarronnides 		(ed. 9)	 3  				And here in House with her own Key locks [1664 which her own key-locks], She us'd to keep her Coach and Peacocks. 1835    T. Mitchell Wasps of Aristophanes 52  				Κατακλεὶς, a sort of lock or key-lock. 2006    J. Herbert Secret Crickley Hall 		(2007)	 xxvii. 205  				He went to the hall's front door, which did have bolts top and bottom, although so far they had relied only on its key lock.   key log  n. 		 (a) a log which when removed or dislodged enables the loosening of a logjam;		 (b) Computing a record of every keystroke made by a user, typically produced by means of a keylogger. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > 			[noun]		 > transport of logs > log-jam > key-log key log1838 1838    Farmers' Reg. Sept. 378/1  				One of the most usual modes of work has been to place the laborers on the rail, who saw all key logs, or such as seemed most to confine others to their places. 1902    S. E. White Blazed Trail xxxii. 211  				By pulling out or chopping through certain ‘key’ logs which locked the whole mass. 1992    Re: Limits on Use of Cryptogr.? in  sci.crypt 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 17 Nov.  				If the government were to regulate the use of cryptography.., keeping key logs could well be a condition for obtaining..a license. 2010    E. E. Brown Commerce Early Amer. Waterways ix. 171  				The log drivers tried to find the key log which would break the jam, but failed. 2012    ReadWriteWeb 		(Nexis)	 30 May  				When Flame retrieves data, be it key logs or screen shots, it uses high- and low-level encryption.   keylogger  n. Computing a program or device for recording every keystroke made by a user; spec. one used to record passwords or other confidential information without the user's knowledge. ΚΠ 1993    Re: Several Questions about Unix in  comp.unix.questions 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 17 Nov.  				Is there a way to switch off the keylogger without detonating alarms which are attached to it? 2000    E-mail Virus Protection Handbk. 		(Syngress Media)	 iv. 137  				In order to implement a keylogger, a malicious user must have access to the target user's system. 2010    Daily Tel. 4 Nov. 35/2  				Search YouTube for videos on how to create ‘keyloggers’—the applications that will record every keystroke you type without your knowledge—and you'll find hundreds of ‘how-to’ guides.   keylogging n. Computing the recording of every keystroke made by a user, typically by means of a keylogger; frequently attributive. ΚΠ 1993    Re: Summary of ST-Magazines (Paper/Disk) in  comp.sys.atari.st 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 15 Apr.  				Password protected key logging. 2000    S. A. Redick Windows Syst. Policy Editor v. 121  				Keylogging programs can be used to record usernames and passwords. 2010    N.Y. Times 		(National ed.)	 18 Feb.  b8/3  				Many PCs do not have important software fixes or security programs with current updates. They could even have physical keylogging devices fitted onto the back. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > 			[noun]		 > lock > and key key lokeOE key and lockc1275 lock and key1413 OE    Laws of Cnut 		(Nero)	  ii. lxxvi. §1. 362  				Butan hit under þæs wifes cæglocan [lOE Harl. cæglocum] gebroht wære, si heo clæne.   key maker  n. a person who makes a key or keys (in various senses of the noun). ΚΠ ?c1475    Catholicon Anglicum 		(BL Add. 15562)	 f. 68v  				A kay maker, clauicularius. 1772    C. Reeve in  tr.  J. Barclay Phoenix I. Pref.  				The key-makers could never find out exactly, whom the author designed by Archombrotus. 1893    J. H. Treat Treat Family 376  				He was a key maker in the lock factory of Levis & McKee. 1914    Piano Mag. Feb. 94/2  				The cause of such discoloration is not with the key maker. 2007    N. Pellegrini Beijing 33/2  				Every neighbourhood has bicycle repairmen, tailors, cobblers, and key makers who work on the sidewalks.   key money n. an (illegal) payment made to a landlord, agent, or tenant, for the right to rent a property. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > hire or rent > rent (land or real property) > 			[noun]		 > initial payment by tenant out-toll1283 gersum1389 warisonc1450 fine1804 key money1832 in-toll1872 ingoing1905 1832    J. A. Diezmann Vollständiges Taschenwörterbuch 113/2  				Key-money. 1898    Daily News 19 Dec. 6/7  				The rent was higher than was stated on the rent book and the key money exorbitant. 1906    Westm. Gaz. 28 Mar. 5/2  				Some house-agents would still extort ‘key-money’ from tenants. 2006    New Yorker 5 June 34/1  				I had to pay the previous tenant twenty-four thousand dollars in key money (as it's known in New York City) for the right to move in.   key-move  n. Chess the first move in the solution of a problem (problem n. 5); = sense  A. 7. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > 			[noun]		 > move > type of move neck1557 stroke1735 key1845 forced move1847 key-move1847 fianchetto1848 queening1860 pinning1900 mutate1922 valve1930 zwischenzug1941 1847    Illustr. London News 30 Oct. 283/1  				The key move in Enigma 213 is, Kt takes P. 1878    S. Loyd Chess Strategy 60  				Key-moves which threaten an easy mate. 2004    Chess Jan. 40/2  				White's key-move must be a blockading move thus making sure that the Black King cannot ever move at all!   key movement  n. Music the mechanism by which the keys of an organ operate the valves. ΚΠ 1820    Q. Musical Mag. & Rev. 2 421  				The several parts of an organ are the bellows,..the keys and key movement. 1880    C. A. Edwards Organs  ii. vi. 67 		(heading)	  				The Claviers and Key Movement. 2006    P. Johnson Creators 		(2007)	 v. 88  				The key action or Klavier and key movement, which the organist controlled directly.   key-operated adj. that is locked and unlocked by means of a key; (also of a device) operated by a key or keyboard. ΚΠ 1886    Sci. Amer. 31 July 74/2  				A lock wherein there are arranged a knob latch, a key-operated bolt, and a bolt operated by a cam-faced manipulating knob. 1890    Official Gaz. 		(U.S. Patent Office)	 11 Mar. 1407/1  				Registering apparatus for key-operated machines. 1963    Financial Times 15 Oct. 17/4  				A thief-proof feature is that the ordinary key-operated ignition is replaced by a safe-type combination lock. 1986    National Surv. Professional, Admin., Techn., & Clerical Pay 		(U.S. Dept. Labor)	 84/2  				[A] keyboard-controlled data entry device such as..key-operated magnetic tape or disc encoder. 1993    Collins Compl. DIY Man. 		(new ed.)	 iv. 249/1  				A burglar only has to break a pane to reach the handle inside. Key-operated locks are essential to prevent a break-in.   keypal  n. a person with whom a friendship is established and maintained mainly or exclusively by the exchange of emails; a penfriend with whom one communicates by email; cf. pen pal n. ΚΠ 1991    Globe & Mail 		(Toronto)	 13 Mar.  a7/2  				His students each paid $1.25 to a Finnish organization to set them up with pen-pals around the world, but are also hoping to communicate via computer with ‘key pals’ at a computer club in Vilnius, Lithuania. 2003    Mod. Lang. Jrnl. 87 507/1  				During two 3-hour sessions in which her language students prepared and input email messages for ‘keypal’ exchanges, they were ‘so concentrated and engaged’.   key pattern  n. an ornamental pattern composed of continuous combinations of straight lines; a fret or meander. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > ornamental art and craft > pattern or design > 			[noun]		 > geometric checkingc1440 checkc1450 chequer-work1519 pane?a1549 diaper-work1602 chevron1605 diapery1631 fret1664 tooth-work1681 polygram1696 chequer1779 reticulum1797 Grecque1832 checkery1837 gammadion1848 diaper1851 key pattern1853 diapering1866 Greek fret1872 rangoli1884 geometric1894 Greek key1897 step pattern1908 Mondrian1964 1853    H. N. Humphreys Coin Collector's Man. I. iv. 28  				The figure known in Greek ornament as the ‘key pattern’. 1887    J. R. Allen Early Christian Symbolism 111  				The cross..is enclosed in a rectangular frame of key-pattern. 2003    D. James Draw your own Celtic Designs 66  				As with the knotwork and spiral designs, the Irish monks working in their Scriptoriums developed the use of key patterns.   key performance indicator  n. a quantifiable measure used to evaluate the success of an organization, employee, etc., in meeting objectives for performance; abbreviated KPI. ΚΠ 1970    Calif. Managem. Rev. Fall 77/1  				Until recently, the Soviet Union and similar countries used as a key performance indicator, upon which bonuses depended, the gross value of output with prices given. 1992    Trans. Amer. Assoc. Cost Engineers 2 L.7.6  				The mere fact of setting up production targets as key performance indicators..can improve construction cost control. 2019    Mercury 		(Hobart, Austral.)	 		(Nexis)	 18 Aug. 65  				I call on the Premier to initiate an independent review of the university to ensure..the university is fulfilling its key performance indicators in education and research.   key phone  n. a telephone operated by means of buttons on a keypad rather than a dial; (now) spec. one of several such phones forming an interconnected system in a business, etc.; = key telephone n.; frequently attributive, esp. in  key phone system. ΚΠ 1958    Pop. Sci. Sept. 140/1  				After experience with key phones, over 99 in 100 prefer them to dial phones. 1972    Oxf. Times 28 Apr. 5/8  				The Oxford area will be getting keyphones—with pushbuttons instead of a rotating dial—next year. 1986    G. Langley Telecommunications Primer 		(ed. 2)	 xvi. 44  				Intelligence is distributed out to the telephones themselves; they have to be able to do more than just dial out digits. This was the origin of the keyphone system. 2000    R. Grigonis Computer Teleph. Encycl. 306/1  				You can hang off a PC, fax machine or other analog devices from your key phone. 2008    National Post's Financial Post & FP Investing 		(Canada)	 		(Nexis)	 8 Dec.  fp4  				The key phone systems most small businesses use today. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > 			[noun]		 > parts of > keystone key1608 keystonea1637 key-piece1669 sagitta1703 key block1823 1669    W. Fisher tr.  V. Scamozzi Mirrour of Archit. 4  				The Key-piece in the Arch is fifty minutes high. 1751    Gentleman's Mag. 21 Suppl. 580/1  				On the key-piece a cherub. 1863    Builder 28 Feb. 150/3  				Properly-moulded pieces of terra-cotta, of large size, which are alternately deep brown and pale cream colour, the key-piece being brown. 1870    Nature 13 Jan. 281/1  				Each ring being composed of thin segments with a key piece. 1915    Engin. News 1 Apr. 635/2  				The cumbersome method of placing the blocks by hand and holding them thus until temporarily propped by sticks until the keypiece was placed.   key pin  n. 		 (a) a pin or thin rod used to hold something in place; cf. sense  A. 12a;		 (b) Music a pin passing through the key of a piano, organ, or similar instrument, in order to maintain and control its downward movement; cf. pin-rail n. 1. ΚΠ 1830    J. Milne Pract. View Steam Engine 72  				When the piston descends too far, the end of the key-pin..comes in contact with the tail of the catch. 1838    Vermont Watchman & State Jrnl. 30 July  				A large quantity of Hardware for Piano making, such as..Key Pins, Pedal Rods, Feet &c. 1920    E. K. Williams Digest Canad. Case Law IX. 673  				A key-pin had fallen from the steering gear of one of the tugs. 1982    O. Untracht Jewelry Concepts & Technol. x. 485/2  				The pressure on the mold parts has forced the metal key pins..into the opposite mold half. 2008    P. Knize Grand Obsession 		(2009)	 xii. 122  				He levels the strings, checks hammer travel, and lubricates the key pins. ΚΠ 1827    Trans. Soc. Arts, Manufactures, & Commerce 45 115  				The chief novelty of this lock consists in introducing a barrel which turns with the key, and keeps the hole shut up, all but the thickness of the key-pipe. 1901    Chambers's Encycl. 		(new ed.)	 VI. 680/1  				Different webs are supplied which fit on the key-pipe to form the key.   key pistol  n. now historical and rare = key gun n. (b). ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > 			[noun]		 > pistol > types of dag1587 key gun1607 pocket pistol1612 key pistol1663 holster-pistol1679 troop pistol1688 horse pistol1704 screw-barrel1744 saddle pistol1764 air pistol1780 Wogdon1786 belt pistol1833 dueller1835 Colt1838 tickler1844 Derringer1853 cocking pistol1858 belt size1866 bulldozer1880 saloon pistol1899 Luger1904 Police Positive1905 Steyr1920 Saturday-night pistol1929 muff pistol1938 PPK1946 Makarov1958 Saturday-night special1959 puffer1963 snub nose1979 snubby1981 1663    Marquis of Worcester Cent. Names & Scantlings Inventions Index p. iv  				A Key-pistol [article 44..a Key of a Chamber door, which..shall become a perfect pistol]. 1955    L. Winant Firearms Curiosa viii. 157  				An early Spanish key pistol is shown in figure 178.   key point  n. = sense  A. 4b   (also figurative). ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, passage, or means of access to a place > 			[noun]		 > through hills or difficult ground > place controlling keyc1450 key point1829 1829    Augusta 		(Georgia)	 Chron. 14 Jan. 118/4  				The great key point of entry and outlet for all the produce that will ever descend the two rivers. 1870    J. R. Lowell My Study Windows 256  				They have not learned the art of concentrating their force on the key-point of their hearers' interest. 1982    Uniform Sept. 9  				Country commandos will be applied to protect their own districts. Other responsibilities are the protection of national key points.   key seat  n. Mechanics = keyway n. (a). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > shaft > 			[noun]		 > parts of > key > part on which key rests key bed1835 key seat1843 1843    Jrnl. Franklin Inst. 5 232  				The eye of this wheel was accurately bored out..to fit the cast-iron upright shaft of the turbine, and a key seat being cut in it, opposite to an arm, to correspond to that designed to secure the bevel pinion. 1926    Ann. Amer. Acad. Polit. & Social Sci. 123 65/2  				These rules deal with power control transmission;..control of set screws, keys and key seats; [etc.]. 2010    U. C. Jindal Machine Design xiv. 403  				Woodruff key is self aligning but the semi-circular shape of key creates a deeper key seat in shaft.   key-seated adj. Mechanics (of a shaft) provided with a key seat. ΚΠ 1847    Engineer & Machinist's Assistant 132/1  				The ribs on the interior of the shaft..are correspondingly key-seated. 1874    R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 509  				Over this sleeve a pinion..also key-seated, is slipped. 2007    M. D. Zoback Reservoir Geomechanics iv. 252  				Deviated wells are usually key-seated.   key screw  n. a key (sense  A. 14c) used for gripping and turning screws; (also) a screw that can be turned by means of a separate key, or by an integral key-like head. ΚΠ 1827    W. Grier Mechanic’s Pocket Dict. 287  				Key Screw, see Screw key [1837 (ed. 2) a lever used for turning screws]. 1861    U.S. Patent 1,367 2  				By making the key screw without a head, it is not only rendered less liable to be injured while the shoe may be in use, but it admits of the calk being used to the best advantage. 1913    A. S. Faulkner What we Hear in Music 159  				Kettles..covered with vellum heads, which can be controlled to pitch by means of a tension of this head, which is applied with key screws, working through iron rings. 2001    W. R. Dempsey 101 Projects Porsche 911 34  				The pressure plate is attached using hex-cap key screws and should come off quite easily when they are removed.   key sentence  n. a sentence which enables decryption or decipherment of a text; cf. keyword n. 1a. ΚΠ 1822    Q. Jrnl. Jan. 292  				When the despatch is composed, write the key-sentence underneath the text. 1854    C. Forster Monuments Assyria in  One Primeval Lang. 207  				The inscriptions terminated with their key-sentence. 2007    B. Connor Dead Past l. 348  				I went nine lines down from the key sentence and nine words over. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > missile > ammunition for firearms > 			[noun]		 > bullet or shot collectively > shot > small pellet1372 die?c1390 hail-shot1485 die-shot1581 dice-shot1588 birdshot1626 key-shot1648 mould shot1675 cartridge-shot1690 small shot1727 drop1753 shot-cornc1792 dust-shot1800 sparrow-hail1859 steel1898 scattershot1961 1648    New Declar. Ld. Gen. Hamilton 4  				The Captain of the Guard, discharged a Drake laden with key shot at them. 1652    Sea-fight between Eng. & Dutch 30 Nov. 4  				So close and thick did they ply the enemy with Key-shot, long Chains, and Bolts of Iron.   key signature  n. Music a combination of sharps or flats after the clef at the beginning of each stave, indicating the key in which a piece of music is to be performed. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > written or printed music > notation > 			[noun]		 > signature signature1721 key signature1843 time signature1843 1843    Minutes Comm. Council Educ. 1842–3 126  				The staff, the cleff, and key-signature. 1876    J. Stainer  & W. A. Barrett Dict. Musical Terms 396/2  				The key signatures, including the clefs, are usually written on every stave. 1998    Strings Apr. 71/1  				The key signature remains stubbornly in the four flats of the opening, while the music wanders into A minor and even D major.   key stage  n. Education each of four age-related stages (more fully  key stage 1,  key stage 2, etc.) into which a child's compulsory education is divided under the national curriculum for state schools in England and Wales. ΚΠ 1987    Guardian 21 Nov. 4/4  				There will be learning targets for children to achieve during four ‘key stages’ of compulsory school life. 1988    Eng. for Ages 5 to 11 		(Dept. Educ. & Sci.)	 p. i  				The four consecutive key stages are the years of compulsory schooling which end when pupils in a class are 7, 11, 14 and 16. 1991    B. Moon Guide to National Curriculum 		(ed. 3)	 iv. 30  				To avoid overloading teachers, the tests at Key Stage 3 are being marked by external assessors. 2012    Church Times 10 Feb. 13/3  				Some C of E schools did not reach the 70-per-cent target for pupils obtaining the expected levels at Key Stage 2 in English and maths. ΚΠ 1853    Evening Mirror 		(N.Y.)	 1 Aug.  				A finger-board made of ebony, with thirty-three stops, called key stops, which stand above the strings. 1897    T. Baker Dict. Musical Terms 		(ed. 3)	 109/1  				Key-stop, a key (digital) attached to the fingerboard of a violin so as to replace the fingers in stopping the strings. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > stringed keyboards > 			[adjective]		 key-stringed1783 1783    G. W. Lemon Eng. Etymol. at Clavi-chords  				A key-stringed instrument, like a spinnet. 1876    J. Stainer  & W. A. Barrett Dict. Musical Terms 249/2  				The striking apparatus of a key-stringed instrument. 1911    A. Dolge Pianos & Makers I. iii. 77  				After the 15th century nearly all the makers of key-stringed instruments used the chromatic scale practically as we find it in the modern pianos.   key tail  n. Music (on a piano, organ, or similar instrument) the part of the key which lies behind the key pin. ΚΠ 1855    E. J. Hopkins Organ x. 47  				The stickers..reach from the key-tails to the backfalls. 2003    E. L. Kottick Hist. Harpsichord xviii. 427  				The keys of the two pianolike manuals were..weighted at the key tails to overcome that built-in friction.   key telephone  n. a telephone operated by means of buttons on a keypad and connected to several telephone lines to form an interconnected system, typically in a business or other organization; originally and frequently attributive, esp. in  key telephone system; cf. key phone n. ΚΠ 1952    Bell Lab. Rec. Jan. 18/2  				During the last half century,..some of the subscriber needs have become very complex, and a wide variety of PBX's, order turrets, key telephone systems, and key equipments are now available. 1976    National Observer 10 Apr. 9/2  				Key-telephone systems (phones with push buttons for such purposes as putting a call on ‘hold’). 1998    L. Deixler Which Phone Syst. should I Buy? 111  				The Basic model is a 14-button key telephone that provides features like Call Announce Intercom, Paging and On Hook Dialing. 2009    ENP Newswire 		(Nexis)	 30 Nov.  				‘IPstage 1000’ enables typical business networks, incorporating key telephone systems, the Internet and printers, to be set up with ease.   key trumpet  n. Music a trumpet fitted with keys to enable it to produce additional tones; cf. key bugle n. ΚΠ 1826    Monthly Mag. Suppl. No., 1 Jan. 553/2  				Properly employed, key-trumpets are capable of producing an admirable effect. 1976    Early Music 4 38/2  				Meinl und Lauber also make a key-trumpet in the Weidinger system. 2004    C. Ammer Dict. Music 		(ed. 4)	 443/2  				Attempts to expand the use of the trumpet included the addition of keys (key trumpet).   keyway  n. Mechanics 		 (a) a slot cut into the surface of a shaft, workpiece, etc., into which a key (sense  A. 12a) fits;		 (b) a shaped hole in a lock through which a key enters the lock; a keyhole of a cylinder lock. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > an opening or aperture > 			[noun]		 > keyhole keyhole1504 lock hole1592 keyway1835 the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > an opening or aperture > 			[noun]		 > hole into which a peg, pin, knob, etc., fits scaffold holec1568 pinhole1659 scaffolding hole1663 keyhole1703 keyway1835 winder-hole1840 knob hole1851 wall-box1875 1835    Jrnl. Franklin Inst. 15 New Ser. 193  				To this key-way, or groove, was fitted a steel key, which might be moved easily. 1893    Pall Mall Gaz. 2 Jan. 5/2  				He drilled three keyways out of solid steel in the collars and fitted steel bolts into them. 1912    C. E. White Successful Houses & how to build Them xxv. 441  				Grooved or corrugated keys..are flat keys wrought with grooves or corrugations on the sides corresponding with grooves at the sides of the keyway. 1990    G. G. Liddy Monkey Handlers iii. 36  				There's no indication of it being forced at all, but there are tool marks on the keyway of your front-door lock. 2003    Stationary Engine Mag. Nov. 20/3  				This problem was overcome by having a suitable length of oversize steel welded into place, machined to the correct size and to finish off, a new keyway cut.   key-winding adj. (of a watch or other clockwork device) that is wound up with a key. ΘΚΠ the world > time > instruments for measuring time > watch > 			[adjective]		 > of types of watch jewelled1786 Nuremberg1847 open-faced1855 stem-winding1867 pendant winding1868 key-winding1870 split-second1884 stem-wind1900 1870    Wisconsin State Reg. 10 Dec. 		(advt.)	  				In fine gold and silver cases, stem and key winding.., from $6.50 to $300.00. Ladies' watches. 1884    F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. 		(new ed.)	 240  				The square in key-winding watches by means of which the hands are set to time. 1995    W. D. Edmonds Tales my Father never Told 159  				I could not afford the key-winding spring motor that Meccano offered for boys who had financial means. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2012; most recently modified version published online June 2022). keyn.2  A low-lying island or reef, esp. in the Caribbean or off the south coast of Florida. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > land mass > reef > 			[noun]		 skelly1513 reef1579 rockray1582 head1584 skerry1612 key1693 ridge1695 cay1707 1693    Let. 3 July in  Philos. Trans. 1694 		(Royal Soc.)	 		(1695)	 18 91  				The place whereon Port-Royal was since built, was like one of the Keys or little Islands that lie off this Harbour. 1715    F. Fernando Let. 7 Jan. in  Articles against Ld. A. Hamilton 		(1718)	 vii. 21  				About eight Leagues from the Florida-Keys. 1726    Four Years Voy. Capt. G. Roberts 345  				The Rock is..flat on the Top like a Key, which the Inhabitants call Kaay. 1829    W. Irving Life C. Columbus 		(abridged ed.)	 xxii. 150  				He soon got entangled in a complete labyrinth of small islands and keys. 1885    C. F. Holder Marvels Animal Life 22  				The group, comprising seven or eight Keys, made up of coral, is surrounded by a long reef. 1939    Florida: Guide to Southernmost State 		(Federal Writers' Project)	  i. 11  				No railways or highways link these keys. 1960    H. S. Zim Guide to Everglades 45  				Conch chowder, a typical dish of the Florida Keys. 1973    T. McGuane Ninety-two in Shade 		(1974)	 47  				They glided among the little hammocks and mangrove keys of Saddlebunch. 2008    Edmonton 		(Alberta)	 Jrnl. 		(Nexis)	 8 Mar. (Travel section)  l1  				Competing for attention are the world's largest sand islands, low-lying coral keys and beach-fringed peaks of rugged sunken mountains. Compounds  Key deer  n. a white-tailed deer of the small subspecies  Odocoileus virginianus clavium, confined to the Florida Keys and now endangered. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > types of deer > 			[noun]		 > genus Odocoileus > Odocoileus virginianus (white-tailed deer) fallow deer1584 red deer1584 whitetail1805 white-tailed deer1829 flagtail1895 Key deer1922 1922    Jrnl. Mammalogy 3 74  				The antlers..according to local hunters, are of record size for Key deer. 1955    Sci. News Let. 29 Oct. 277/2  				The Key deer is the smallest of all North American deer, only about 26 to 29 inches tall. 2007    Sunday Times Trav. May 56/2  				These are the supposedly rare and ultra-shy Key deer.   key lime  n. chiefly U.S. a variety of lime naturalized in the Florida Keys and distinguished by its small size, greenish-yellow colour, high acidity, and strong aroma; (also) the tree bearing this fruit,  Citrus aurantifolia. ΚΠ 1905    Country Gentleman 28 Dec. 1198/1  				The key lime is the finest on the market. It is aromatic, juicy, and highly superior to the lemon. 1948    N.Y. Times 29 July 18/1  				The small Key lime has more bouquet. 2000    R. McFarland Stranger in Town 14  				You can imagine..the humid air heavy with key lime blossoms or nightblooming cereus if in season.   Key lime pie  n. originally and chiefly U.S. an open pie with a lime-flavoured filling typically containing lime juice (traditionally from key limes), egg yolks, and sweetened condensed milk, often served in a crust made of crushed biscuits and with a whipped cream or meringue topping. ΚΠ 1940    N.Y. Times 14 July  x. 11/2  				We have eaten lobster and crabs in New England, albacore in Los Angeles, turtle steak and lime pie in Key West.]			 1942    House & Garden Jan. 24/2  				Before us stood a tiny whitewashed board shack, plastered with neatly lettered signs advertising the specialties of the house: turtle soup and steaks, stone crabs, Key Lime Pie. 1946    Amer. Naturalist 80 215/2  				A small hotel on Great Pine Key where..the preparation of Key lime pies was a highly developed art. 1970    Times 30 June 3/4 		(advt.)	  				Discover turtle steaks and Key lime pie. 2003    K. Lederer Poker Face xii. 130  				The fluorescent Key lime pie, the dripping, fresh-hewn steak, even the boatloads of wilted pink shrimp were off-limits to us. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2012; most recently modified version published online March 2022). keyn.3α. 1900s– ki. β. 1900s– key.  U.S. slang.   A kilogram of an illegal drug. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement by weighing > 			[noun]		 > unit or denomination of weight > metric gram(me) > kilogram > kilogram of a drug key1966 1966    J. L. Simmons  & B. Winograd It's Happening v. 95  				It's more than connecting a ki for $90 or bagging lids to raise some bread. It's being high all the time. 1972    J. Wambaugh Blue Knight 		(1973)	 iv. 45  				On her coffee table she had at least half a key and that's a pound of pot and that's trouble. 1990    S. Turow Burden of Proof  ii. xxix. 331  				They get a warrant, knock down the door of a stash house, find ten keys of cocaine and no one inside it. 2010    D. Easton Samurai Code xix. 203  				Jojo just got busted with a key of smack. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2012; most recently modified version published online March 2022). keyv. 1.   a.  transitive. To lock with a key (chiefly regional in later use). Now more usually: to unlock with a key; to open by unlocking. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > closed or shut condition > close or shut			[verb (transitive)]		 > close (a door, window, etc.) > bolt, bar, or lock sparc1175 pena1200 louka1225 bara1300 shutc1320 lockc1325 clicketc1390 keyc1390 pinc1390 sneckc1440 belocka1450 spare?c1450 latch1530 to lock up1549 slot1563 bolt1574 to lock to?1575 double-lock1594 stang1598 obserate1623 padlock1722 button1741 snib1808 chain1839 c1390						 (a1376)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Vernon)	 		(1867)	 A  vi. l. 103  				Þe dore I-closet, I-keiȝet and I-kliketed, to [kepe] þe þer-oute. a1450    Dispute Mary & Cross 		(Royal)	 l. 241 in  R. Morris Legends Holy Rood 		(1871)	 205 (MED)  				Heuene gate was keiþed [read keiyed] clos Til lambe of love now he deyede. 1635    J. Hayward tr.  G. F. Biondi Donzella Desterrada  i. 105  				I went my wayes, keying fast after me the doore that had the lock on it. 1780    Newgate Cal. V. 201  				Mrs. Penleaze swore that the windows were constantly barred and keyed every night. 1791    W. Cowper tr.  Homer Odyssey in  Iliad & Odyssey II.  xxi. 286  				Be the palace-door Thy charge,..key it fast. 1859    E. Proby Dennes of Daundelyonn I. v. 47  				I had keyed the door, look you. 1898    W. F. Clark Northern Gleams 94  				He ax'd me if I'd key'd da door o' my room. 1934    L. T. White in  Dime Detective Mag. 1 Dec. 121/2  				He..hurried across the sidewalk and keyed open the front door. 1965    in  P. Jennings Living Village 		(1968)	 36  				Many old words [in the South Pembrokeshire dialect]..still remain in current use, such as to key instead of to lock. 2004    E. Reid D.B. 129  				Clare keyed the door and continued inside without him.  b.  transitive. To lock up; to place under lock and key. Chiefly figurative. Now rare (Scottish in later use). ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > enclosing or enclosure > enclosing or confining > enclose or confine			[verb (transitive)]		 pena1200 bebar?c1225 loukc1275 beshuta1300 parc1300 to shut in1398 to close inc1400 parrockc1400 pinc1400 steekc1400 lock?a1425 includec1425 key?a1439 spare?c1450 enferme1481 terminea1500 bebay1511 imprisona1533 besetc1534 hema1552 ram1567 warda1586 closet1589 pound1589 seclude1598 confine1600 i-pend1600 uptie1600 pinfold1605 boundify1606 incoop1608 to round in1609 ring1613 to buckle ina1616 embounda1616 swathe1624 hain1636 coopa1660 to sheathe up1661 stivea1722 cloister1723 span1844 a1439    J. Lydgate Fall of Princes 		(Bodl. 263)	  iii. l. 3147 (MED)  				Froward lust was vnder lok weel keied. a1450						 (c1435)						    J. Lydgate Life SS. Edmund & Fremund 		(Harl.)	 l. 1072 in  C. Horstmann Altengl. Legenden 		(1881)	 2nd Ser. 396 (MED)  				Cloos in his herte ech uertu was I-keied [a1500 Ashm. ykeyed]. ?1567    M. Parker Whole Psalter cxix. 352  				Keyd fast thy word: was so to me: in hope that I have done. 1771    W. Evans tr.  R. Prichard Welshman's Candle 462  				Then let the Pope in Purgatory key my soul. 1851    H. Melville Moby-Dick xli. 206  				With the mad secret of his unabated rage bolted up and keyed in him. 1960    Sc. National Dict.  				Key,..II. To lock,..to lock up, put under lock and key.  2.   a.  transitive. To fasten by means of a pin, wedge, bolt, etc. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > fasten			[verb (transitive)]		 > with pins or pegs biprenec1275 pinc1390 pin1449 key1577 peg1598 cotter1649 writhe1683 nog1711 cotterel1747 1577    W. Harrison Descr. Eng.  iii. vi. f. 107v/2, in  R. Holinshed Chron. Eng. I.  				An Axe keyed or fastened wyth Iron into the wood. 1639    R. Ward Animadversions of Warre  i. xiv. cclxv. 382  				These Bordes have foure flat Irons goes thorow them, to each corner goes one, these are keyed together. 1653    B. Whitelocke Jrnl. 7 Dec. in  Jrnl. Swedish Ambassy 		(1772)	 I. 196  				The bodyes of great trees squared, and..keyed togither by other great pieces of timber. 1793    J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse 		(ed. 2)	 §302  				To key home the plates of the cupola to the ribs. 1839    R. S. Robinson Naut. Steam Engine Explained 57  				It is keyed or wedged in, and rusted in so as to be immoveable. 1881    F. Young Every Man his own Mechanic §550  				Immovably keyed upon the cranked shaft is a heavy wooden cone pulley. 1913    Official Gaz. 		(U.S. Patent Office)	 25 Nov. 997/1  				A draft pin removably inserted through said telescoping parts and keying the parts together. 1967    M. Chandler Ceramics in Mod. World v. 153 		(caption)	  				The blocks, largest of which weighed about 3600 kg, were keyed in place with carbon rods. 2009    Gold Coast 		(Austral.)	 Sun 		(Nexis)	 29 Apr. 91  				The blocks of sandstone were keyed together using tongue-and-groove construction.  b.  transitive. To cause (plaster) to adhere to laths. In later use also more generally: to cause (a substance) to adhere to a surface. Cf. key n.1 15. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > surfacing or cladding > clad or cover			[verb (transitive)]		 > plaster > processes involved in plastering litter1559 gauge1686 to prick up1779 key1837 stab1846 1837    Mechanics' Mag. 9 Dec. 148/1  				The workman cannot see whether the first coat is well keyed, (or run over upon the top of the laths) upon which depends all the strength of the ceiling thus constructed. 1881    F. Young Every Man his own Mechanic §1383  				When the mortar is put over the laths, part of it penetrates between them, and when hard keys, as it were, the plaster to the laths and renders it difficult of removal. 1904    Carpentry & Building Sept. 40/3  				The metal punched from each hole being struck up so as to form projecting surfaces to assist in keying the plaster. 1963    R. R. A. Higham Handbk. Papermaking ix. 226  				Adhesives are used in coating to ‘key’ the pigment to the surface of the paper. 1970    H. Braun Parish Churches xii. 157  				Plaster will not adhere to wood. It requires a system of thin laths round which it is ‘keyed’ by the skill of the plasterer. 2006    P. Sunshine Wattle & Daub 26  				Laths of oak or wattles of hazel would have been used to key the plaster on to the timber frame.  c.  transitive. To prepare (a surface) to make it receptive to the application of a coating. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fact or action of being joined or joining > attachment > attach or affix			[verb (transitive)]		 > adhere to > cause to adhere stickc1425 clam1598 cling1606 plaster1623 beglue1658 adhere1845 clitch1863 paste1863 key1923 1923    Jrnl. Royal Soc. Antiquaries Ireland 53 16  				The ground being made ready by keying the surface to receive the enamel. 1965    M. J. Langford Basic Photogr. ix. 161  				The manufacturer first ‘keys’ both sides of the film base or coats them with a foundation layer of gelatin and cellulose ester. 1995    K. McCloud Techniques of Decorating 		(1998)	 64/1  				If the piece is varnished or painted, sand it well to remove most of the finish and key the surface.  3.   a.  transitive. To alter the pitch of (the strings of a musical instrument) by means of a key. Cf. key n.1 14a. rare.In quot. 1636   in figurative context; cf. sense  4. ΚΠ 1636    T. Heywood Challenge Prol. sig. A3  				And Poets strive to key their strings more loud. 1894    Lippincott's Monthly Mag. Sept. 383  				He took an instrument from it, and with a reverential air keyed the strings into tune. 1909    R. A. Bennet Volunteer with Pike xxiv. 324  				I keyed my strings, and..began to sing that love ditty I had sung beneath my lady's window at Natchez. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > making or fitting instruments > accessories			[verb (transitive)]		 > fit strings string1530 key1872 1872    W. Skeen Early Typogr. 90  				They were as useless to him as unstrung harp-strings are unmusical until they are keyed and stretched and tuned.  4.  transitive. figurative. To affect (a person) emotionally; to give a particular tone or intensity to (feelings or thoughts). In later use usually: to put (a person) into a state of excitement, anxiety, or tension, esp. in expectation of, or in preparation for, a particular event or course of action. Cf. to key up at  Phrasal verbs 1.Frequently as part of an extended metaphor. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > quality of affecting the emotions > affect with emotion			[verb (transitive)]		 > give a tone or intensity to an emotion accent1595 key1650 1650    H. Vaughan Silex Scintillans 84  				Thus doth God key disorder'd man..Tuning his brest to rise or fall. 1846    G. W. Henry Incidents iii. 25  				With spirits buoyant as air and keyed on a high note, full of hope and animation, I was never troubled with what is sometimes called ‘the blue devils’. 1866    W. R. Alger Solitudes Nature & Man  iv. 257  				The fervid quickness and strength of Rousseau's feelings keyed him on so high a pitch that [etc.]. 1897    Atlantic Monthly Sept. 396/2  				His aversion to the creatures keyed him to his task. 1919    S. J. Weyman Great House xi. 94  				The sermon had keyed her thoughts to a high pitch. 1935    Boys' Life Aug. 26/2  				On the home stretch Bob lengthened his stride and keyed himself for the final dash. 1971    A. Slaughter  & M. Goodman Every Man should have One viii. 43  				Athletes run their best race when they use their natural anxiety to key them to a more stylish finish. 1997    F. McLynn Napoleon viii. 139  				Napoleon's military maxims presuppose an army keyed to the highest pitch of élan and commitment.  5.  transitive. To insert the keystone in (an arch). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > insert keystone into key1735 to key in1751 1735    J. Price Some Considerations Stone-bridge Thames 8  				After the Arches are thus turn'd and key'd. 1751    C. Labelye Descr. Westm. Bridge 91  				To frame and set up a wooden Frame, called a Center, under every Arch..and to ease and strike none of them till they are all built, or at least keyed. 1837    Railway Mag. Dec. 459  				The second arch, over the deepest part of the Ribble, will be keyed before Christmas. 1882    Trans. Engineers' Soc. W. Pennsylvania 1 141  				This defect I remedied by cutting an opening in the movable neck and connections on the top side of the arch, so as to key the arch from above. 1917    Railway Age Gaz. 16 Feb. 277/1  				The concrete was shoveled and rammed into place to key the arch. 2002    Biogr. Dict. Civil Engineers I. 635/2  				Three weeks after the arch had been keyed and before the centring had been eased, the arch collapsed.  6.  transitive. Advertising (originally U.S.). To distinguish (an advertisement in a periodical), typically by varying the form of the address given for customer responses, so as to identify the publication generating any particular response. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > advertising > business of advertising > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > target specific audience or reader key1896 1896    Printers' Ink 14 Oct. 18/2  				If you do not key your ads how do you tell which mediums are paying you? 1927    Daily News 7 June 5/5  				Advertisers who key their advertisements report their best results from the ‘Daily News’. 1943    ‘C. S. Forester’ Ship 56  				How often had he devised ingenious methods by which to ‘key’ advertisements to discover which had the greatest pulling power. 1967    Times Rev. Industry Oct. 82/2  				One keys advertisements and measures returns. 1998    D. L. Yadin Creative Marketing Communications 		(ed. 2)	 xviii. 216  				Unless you key an advertisement, you may have no idea where the replies are actually coming from.  7.  Chiefly Botany.  a.  transitive. To identify (a plant or animal) using a key (key n.1 5e). Also: to devise a key for the identification of (a plant or animal). Usually with out. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > taxonomy > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > devise a set of statements for classification key1905 1905    Contrib. U.S. National Herbarium 8 317  				When keyed out in the synopsis above referred to it [sc. Heliocarpus velutinus] comes nearest H. glanduliferus, but is of course abundantly distinct from that species. 1925    A. S. Hitchcock Methods Descr. Systematic Bot. v. 25  				Out of the numerous characters pertaining to the several species to be keyed out, an author, in devising a key, strives to select constant characters, and, as a rule, relatively conspicuous ones. 1954    Proc. Bot. Soc. Brit. Isles 1 202  				Two species and one variety are recognised in Belgium, keyed as follows. 1972    Watsonia 9 197  				Confusion often arises..because specimens are carelessly keyed and compared with descriptions. 2007    A. F. Rhoads  & T. A. Block Plants Pennsylvania 		(ed. 2)	 2  				Make your observations carefully and thoroughly. Take your time, especially if you are new to ‘keying out’ plants.  b.  intransitive. Of a plant or animal: to be identified or assigned to a particular taxon by the use of a key. Usually with out. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > taxonomy > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > be identified by a key key1921 1921    Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 14 296  				The specimen keys out to that species in Stein's key..to the females of European Anthomyidæ. 1961    Watsonia 4 277  				A. clementii, although it keys out near A. quitensis H.B.K. on account of the leafless apical part of its inflorescence.., is probably not at all closely related. 1964    C. M. Jones  & D. W. Anthony Tabanidae of Florida 24/2  				The specimen keys to vittatus in Philip's key to males. 1979    Bot. Soc. Brit. Isles News Oct. 16  				V. hirsuta (beware how this Br. species tends to key out as V. vicioides in the Flora Europaea 2 key). 2003    I. Clarke  & H. Lee Name that Flower 		(ed. 2)	 68  				Such a plant may key out easily to an incorrect answer, so it is important to check identifications.  8.   a.  transitive. Electronics. To switch (an electronic device) from one state to another, typically on or off, esp. (in early use) by means of a key or relay in telegraphic transmission. Also: to provide (electronic equipment) with a means for doing this. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > circuit > device to open or close circuit > connect or disconnect			[verb (transitive)]		 to turn on1824 disconnect1826 to turn down1855 switch1881 to put on1892 to turn off1892 key1929 the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electronics > electronic devices or components > operation of electronic devices > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > initiate change to turn on1824 key1929 trip1936 trigger1937 to turn down1941 1929    K. Henney Princ. Radio xvii. 443 		(heading)	  				Keying a transmitter. 1943    F. E. Terman Radio Engineers' Handbk.  ix. 629  				Unless the oscillator is keyed, the low-power portions of the transmitter operate continuously. 1961    L. F. Gray  & R. Graham Radio Transmitters vi. 137  				Where ‘break-in’ is needed it may be necessary to key the transmitter oscillator to avoid generating an interfering signal..in the receiver. 1966    M. Schwartz  et al.  Communication Syst. & Techniques vii. 280  				The carrier is ‘keyed’ on and off to describe the two telegraph states. 2004    H. P. A. Ketterling Introd. Digital Professional Mobile Radio v.159  				In TDMA systems..the carrier is periodically keyed on and off many times during one message.  b.  transitive. colloquial (originally U.S.). To switch on (a radio transmitter or microphone); to set to transmit. ΚΠ 1978    R. Burns Speak for Dead ii. 16  				He keyed the G.E. radio pack holstered on his belt and sent the code for an ambulance. 1988    ‘J. Norst’ Colors xiii. 171  				Hodges keyed the mike: One CRASH Thirty-two, we're southbound on Avalon from Vernon. 1991    Prairie Fire Dec. 78  				The Fire Boss..picked up his radio transmitter and keyed the handset. 2010    S. J. Schwartz Beat 		(2012)	 315  				One of them keyed a radio mike as they ran to her side. ‘Code Three! We've got a breach in the barracks on set eighteen!’ he yelled.  9.  transitive. U.S. Sport colloquial. Of a player, action, quality, etc.: to be a dominant or key element in (a team, game, etc.); to be crucial to (a victory, etc.). Also intransitive. Also in extended use. ΚΠ 1948    Washington Post 21 Mar.  c1/7  				Harrison was Michigan's steadying man in the first half but it was..Elliot..who keyed the Wolverines in the big second frame. 1950    Washington Post 24 Sept.  c2/7  				Cox's passing keyed the drive. 1969    Evening Standard 		(Uniontown, Pa.)	 21 Oct. 12/3  				Bob Dice, Harry Miller, Guy Rider, and Bod Dice keyed in the victory. 1998    Tampa 		(Florida)	 Tribune 		(Nexis)	 15 Apr. 2  				Dennis, a retired teacher, said experience keyed his victory over Creech [in the election]. 2003    D. Finoli  & B. Rainer Pittsburgh Pirates Encycl. ii. 128/2  				Stuart contributed a three run 450-foot triple to dead center to key a victory over the Cubs.  10.  transitive. Computing. To enter or produce (text or other data) using a keyboard; to type. Cf. to key in 3 at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > hardware > peripherals > use keyboard			[verb (transitive)]		 keyboard1906 key1964 society > computing and information technology > data > database > data entry > enter data			[verb (transitive)]		 punch1910 input1946 to key in1963 key1964 keystroke1966 capture1971 1964    C. Dent Quantity Surv. by Computer vii. 100  				Reading over the print-out against the dimensions..has the advantage of requiring the data to be keyed only once, instead of twice. 1978    Computerworld 27 Mar.  s7/1  				Data from the file folders was keyed at each reservations center. 1984    J. Grant  & C. Grant ZX Programmer's Compan. ix. 159  				It is very easy to forget to look at the display..to check that the number has been keyed correctly. 1997    ABA Jrnl. May 90/2  				An Auto-Recognition feature allows users to key the initial characters of a client's name or ID for an instant search-and-find of that record. 2005    M. G. Dareau in  C. J. Kay  & M. A. Mackay Perspectives Older Sc. Tongue 33  				An important consequence of keying the material at a relatively early stage in the process was the capacity gained to sort the quotations electronically.  11.  transitive. To vandalize (a vehicle) by scraping the paint with a key. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > damage > damage or injure			[verb (transitive)]		 > damage deliberately or vandalize demolish1646 to knock abouta1817 vandalize1845 distress1943 trash1970 key1987 1987    Chicago Tribune 12 Nov.  i. 28/1  				Say your car was ‘keyed’—you know, the paint job marred by some jerk running a set of car keys across the finish. 1998    Independent 		(Nexis)	 23 July 9  				It wasn't just the unwanted attention of the traffic cops that got Barlow down. Hardly a week went by when the car was not keyed. 2001    C. Fowler Devil in Me 		(2005)	 107  				It was New Year's Eve, and the three of us had blazed a trail of destruction down Ferris Road, doing the jeeps, keying the sides of BMWs. Phrasal verbs PV1.   With adverbs in specialized senses.  to key down    transitive. To lower in level, pitch, or intensity; to tone down. Cf. to key up at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > decrease or reduction in quantity, amount, or degree > reduce in quantity, amount, or degree			[verb (transitive)]		 > tone down temperc1000 modifyc1385 softenc1410 tame?a1500 qualify1536 temperatea1540 extenuate1561 supple1609 dilute1665 palliate1665 weaken1683 subdue1723 lower1780 modulate1783 to shade away1817 to water down1832 to water down1836 sober1838 veil1843 to tone down1847 to break down1859 soothe1860 tone1884 to key down1891 soft-pedal1912 1891    R. Kipling in  Lippincott's Monthly Mag. Jan. 25  				If you try to give these people the thing as God gave it keyed down to their comprehension [etc.]. 1921    Everybody's Dec. 77/1  				He began speaking in a low tone, merely to test his voice. He keyed it down until it had no stridency. a1930    D. H. Lawrence Phoenix II 		(1968)	 251  				Everything that everybody feels is keyed down, and muted, so as not to impinge on anybody else's feelings. 2008    R. Owen  & A. Rucker Born Country x. 241  				I was taking medication that keyed me down and probably, to some, gave the appearance that I was distant and uninvolved.  1.  transitive. To insert the keystone in (an arch). Cf. sense  5. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > insert keystone into key1735 to key in1751 1751    C. Labelye Descr. Westm. Bridge 75  				The last Arch was key'd in. 1771    Ann. Reg. 1770 97/2  				The new bridge..fell down after it was key'd in. 1815    J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art. I. 213  				To key the arch in, it is usual, to have a brick, and not the joint between two bricks, in the centre. 1880    Carpentry & Building Feb. 38/3  				What is the best method, or correct method, of keying in a pointed arch with brick? 1911    H. S. Watson Sewerage Syst. 275  				Great care is to be taken in keying in the arch. 1961    J. Fitchen Constr. Gothic Cathedrals 233/1  				The brick-layer whose duty it is to key-in the arch stands with his head and shoulders between the brick-work.  2.  With with (also to).  a.  intransitive. To cohere or be in keeping with something else. Cf. to key into —— 2b at  Phrasal verbs 2. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > suitability or appropriateness > be suitable, appropriate, or suit			[verb (intransitive)]		 > fit a certain environment, etc. to key in1921 to key into ——1947 1921    Continent 31 Mar. 369/1  				The churches..bother him. They don't exactly key in with his framework thesis—that there is nothing both decent and sensible anywhere along ‘Main Street’. 1960    E. Bowen Time in Rome i. 14  				Lean young skyscrapers..key in with Rome's general virtuosity. 1979    M. C. Bateson in  M. Bullowa Before Speech ii. 68  				What is learned at one stage keys in to what is learned at the next stage. 2007    Wire May 61/3  				Andrew Pekler's music has keyed in with the times at various points during his decade-long career.  b.  transitive. To cause to cohere or fit in with something else; to link or relate closely. Frequently in passive. Cf. to key into —— 2a at  Phrasal verbs 2. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > adaptation or adjustment > adapt or adjust			[verb (transitive)]		 > fit in or into something to fay in1847 to key in1922 1922    Electr. World 25 Nov. 1190/2  				In some cases local newspaper advertising is keyed in with the inauguration and maintenance of the displays. 1958    Times Lit. Suppl. 14 Mar. 133/3  				It [sc. the Book of Mormon] is much longer than the New Testament. Moreover, it is elaborately ‘keyed-in’ to the Bible. 1975    Evening Observer 		(Dunkirk, N.Y.)	 31 Oct. 16/2  				The room has a great amount of high interest material, some of which is keyed in with tapes and student instructional magazines. 2002    M. C. Mckenna F. Roosevelt & Great Constit. War ii. 60  				By 1935, the country's entire financial structure was keyed in with the newly devalued currency.  3.  transitive. Computing. To enter or produce (text or other data) using a keyboard; to type in. Cf. sense  10. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > data > database > data entry > enter data			[verb (transitive)]		 punch1910 input1946 to key in1963 key1964 keystroke1966 capture1971 1963    R. H. Gregory  & R. L. Van Horn Automatic Data-processing Syst. 		(ed. 2)	 v. 145  				The user makes an inquiry by keying in an address in high-speed or bulk storage. 1972    Physics Bull. Sept. 531/3  				Instead of manually selecting individual type slugs from a case..the compositor keys in the copy at a specially laid out keyboard. 1990    InfoWorld 19 Mar.  s4/3  				Errors such as keying in the wrong data type produce squawks and a helpful diagnostic error window. 2003    Daily Tel. 26 Aug. 28/6  				The spyware will also log the..full details of the data you are keying in, such as your user ID and password.  4.  intransitive. Originally and chiefly U.S. With on. To pay particular attention to a person or thing; to focus or concentrate. Cf. to key on —— at  Phrasal verbs 2. ΚΠ 1967    Black World Dec. 91/1  				The new theater..is keying in on black theater for Harlem, black plays by black writers. 1977    M. Torres in  R. P. Rettig et al.  Manny ii. 43/2  				We keyed in on big-volume grocery stores. They were the easiest marks. 2003    M. Gilfillan Rivers & Birds 120  				Another good-sized bird farther off on a power pole, keying in on us.   transitive. To stimulate, raise to a high pitch; to cause to be excited or tense. Cf. keyed-up at keyed adj. 5. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > excitement > exciting > excite			[verb (transitive)]		 astirc1000 stir?c1225 araisec1374 entalentc1374 flamec1380 reara1382 raisec1384 commove1393 kindlea1400 fluster1422 esmove1474 talent1486 heavec1540 erect?1555 inflame1560 to set on gog1560 yark1565 tickle1567 flesh1573 concitate1574 rouse1574 warmc1580 agitate1587 spirit1598 suscitate1598 fermentate1599 nettle1599 startle1602 worka1616 exagitate1621 foment1621 flush1633 exacuatea1637 ferment1667 to work up1681 pique1697 electrify1748 rattle1781 pump1791 to touch up1796 excite1821 to key up1835 to steam up1909 jazz1916 steam1922 volt1930 whee1949 to fire up1976 geek1984 1835    J. Todd Student's Man. 165  				You would wish to stimulate your mind, and key it up to the highest point. 1888    W. H. Hurlbert Ireland under Coercion I.  i. 46  				If Mr. Balfour keys up the landlords to stand out. 1945    S. O'Casey Drums under Windows 223  				The tramway workers..were trying to key themselves up to make a fight of it. 1964    F. Chichester Lonely Sea & Sky 		(1967)	 xii. 135  				I was getting intensely excited, but it did me good by keying me up for the vital work ahead. 1999    C. Holz Semi-detached ix. 141  				The chomp she made as she chewed and the crinkling of the popcorn bag keyed him up even more.  PV2.   With prepositions in specialized senses.  to key into ——   1.  transitive. To put (a person) into (a particular emotional state), esp. in expectation of, or in preparation for, an event or course of action. ΚΠ 1887    A. B. Dodd Cathedral Days iv. 84  				We were keyed into an emotional feeling before we entered the temple. 1911    E. H. Abbott Sick-a-Bed Lady 16  				The Sick-A-Bed Lady's fragile childishness keyed the Young Doctor into an almost uncanny tenderness and restraint. 2009    J. Grady in  J. Deaver et al.  Watchlist 		(2011)	 iii. 47  				Middleton's jagged nerves keyed him into a detached hyper-vigilance he'd not felt since returning to the Balkans' slaughterhouse.  2.   a.  transitive. To cause to cohere or fit in with; to link or relate closely to. Frequently in passive. Cf. to key in 2b at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > adaptation or adjustment > adapt or adjust			[verb (transitive)]		 > cause to correspond or agree reciprocate1620 match1680 answer1726 to key to ——1910 to key into ——1931 1931    Oakland 		(Calif.)	 Tribune 15 Apr.  d22/7  				Keyed into a setting of wild, mountain magnificence is Harrison Hot Springs Hotel, remindful of some English manor. 1949    Sun 		(Baltimore)	 14 Feb. 8/4 		(heading)	  				Keying labor law into the facts of life. 1999    D. Phillips et al.  Writing Well x. 126  				A simple structure for an exercise can be organised around a set of questions that are keyed into a central theme.  b.  intransitive. To cohere or be in keeping with. Cf. to key in 2a at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > suitability or appropriateness > be suitable, appropriate, or suit			[verb (intransitive)]		 > fit a certain environment, etc. to key in1921 to key into ——1947 1947    Sun 		(Baltimore)	 13 Nov. 18/2 		(heading)	  				Mr. Reuther's victory keys into a world-wide pattern. 1969    Guardian 21 July 1/4  				A carefully planned schedule which keys into the two-hourly orbit of their mother craft. 1989    M. Barret in  E. A. Meese  & A. Parker Difference Within 45  				This keys into a well-trodden debate about women's studies. 2003    G. Palmer Discipline & Liberty viii. 176  				This keys into a burgeoning cultural movement which promises empowerment through self-belief.   intransitive. North American (originally and chiefly Sport). To focus or concentrate on; to pay close attention to. Cf. to key in 4 at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΚΠ 1966    Boys' Life Aug. 6/3  				Pros..can't devote defenses strictly to Sayers,..but they will be keying on him. 1989    Peterson's Hunting Ann. 1990 30/2  				I key on high spots in the deep swamps because deer will go to them to rest. 1996    Ice Hockey News Rev. 21 Dec. 4/1  				We really tried to key on Scott Young; make sure every time he picked up the puck he had a Panther in his face. 2004    E. Kelly Winning the Game 		(2010)	 iv. 48  				This is so unfair... I wonder why he doesn't like me... I bet he is going to key on me for the rest of the game.   transitive. Chiefly U.S. = to key into —— 2a at  Phrasal verbs 2. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > adaptation or adjustment > adapt or adjust			[verb (transitive)]		 > cause to correspond or agree reciprocate1620 match1680 answer1726 to key to ——1910 to key into ——1931 1910    Lyceumite & Talent Nov. 9/1  				The popular lecturer..tries to compress his life-observations into one address, [and] key it to the average intelligence of his audience. 1925    Scribner's Mag. Oct. 441/1  				He..into the fibre of his work put something..which they can understand, something keyed to the rhythms of American life. 1976    National Observer 27 Nov.  ii. 4/1  				Almost everything in the center is keyed to families with young children. 2009    G. McDonald Frommer's Amsterdam 32/2  				Floats keyed to a different floral theme each year parade..through Sassenheim..to Haarlem. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2012; most recently modified version published online March 2022). > see alsoalso refers to : kaykeyadj. < see also  | 
	
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