| 释义 | labyrinthn.Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin labyrinthus.Etymology:  <  classical Latin labyrinthus maze, especially that built in Crete by Daedalus, place from which one cannot escape, in post-classical Latin also complicated idea (4th cent.), system of cavities present within the petrous portion of the temporal bone (1559)  <  ancient Greek λαβύρινθος maze, complicated question or argument, of unknown origin (see note); compare Mycenaean Greek da-pu2-ri-to-jo (genitive). Compare Middle French laberinth, laberinthe, labarinte, laborinth, Middle French, French labyrinthe (1418 as labarinte), Catalan laberint (14th cent.), Spanish laberinto (late 14th cent.), Portuguese labirinto (15th cent. as †laberinto), Italian labirinto, †laberinto (14th cent. with reference to a maze in classical antiquity, and also to a complex and confusing situation; a1502 with reference to such a maze in the form of a garden); also Middle Low German labyrinthus, German Labyrinth (c1510).The traditional association of ancient Greek λαβύρινθος   with the supposed Lydian word λάβρυς   ‘axe’ (see labrys n.) is highly doubtful and the origin of this word remains unclear. I.  Senses referring to a physical structure.  1.  A structure consisting of a complex network of tunnels, paths, etc., deliberately designed or constructed so that it is difficult to find one's way through; a maze.Sometimes distinguished from a maze as consisting only of one convoluted path to the centre and back, rather than containing a number of dead ends. the world > space > shape > curvature > series of curves > 			[noun]		 > winding curve(s) > thing having > a maze or labyrinth > with reference to antiquityβ. a1450						 (    tr.  Vegetius  		(Douce)	 		(1988)	 116  				Poetes seyn þat he [sc. Minotaurus] is hid priueliche in þe ynnermeste party of þe vncouþe place of priuete, þe whiche is cleped þe Laberynthe [L. labyrintho].c1550     		(1979)	 vi. 50  				Dedalus maid the laborynth to keip the monstir minotaurus.1591    E. Spenser Ruines of Rome in   22  				Crete will boast the Labyrinth.1601    P. Holland tr.  Pliny  II. 578  				This Labyrinth in Crete is counted the second to that of Ægypt: the third is in the Isle Lemnos: the fourth in Italy.1658    Sir T. Browne Garden of Cyrus ii, in   117  				The Labyrinth of Crete..containing five large squares, communicating by right inflections, terminating in the centre of the middle square.1712    J. Weaver  v. 102  				The various Windings of the Cretan Labyrinth, out of which Theseus..made his Escape.1745    J. Hewitt  		(ed. 5)	 159  				The Labyrinth of Egypt, built by Marus, or Menis, for his Tomb, in which 16 large Apartments, or sumptuous Palaces, were built..; there were in it so many Ways and artificial Walks, that it was no easy Matter to find the Way out of it.1836    C. Thirlwall  II. xii. 112  				Theodorus,..the builder of the Lemnian labyrinth.1847    A. C. Smeaton  		(new ed.)	 215  				The principal Egyptian buildings were the pyramids, obelisks, labyrinths, monolithal chambers, sphinxes, and temples.1962    M. Renault  		(1968)	 252  				To conceal his shame, Minos had an impenetrable Labyrinth made by Daidolas, where he withdrew from the world, and in the heart of the maze concealed the Minotaur.2002    N. Drury  215/2  				The minotaur was kept in the labyrinth at the Palace of Minos and was fed on the bodies of human victims.α.  a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden  		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1865)	 I. 9 (MED)  				Þis matir, as laborintus [L. labyrinthi], Dedalus hous, haþ many halkes and hurnes..wyndynges and wrynkelynges. c1450						 (c1380)						    G. Chaucer  		(Fairf. 16)	 		(1878)	 l. 1921  				An house, that domus dedaly That laboryncus [read laboryntus; c1475 Bodl. laboryncus, 1483 Caxton laborintus] cleped ys Nas made so wonderlych, y-wis Ne half so queyntlych y-wrought. 1533     		(new ed.)	 I. ccxxxviii. f. clxv  				Thys house after some wryters was named Labyrinthus or Dedalus worke. ?1573    L. Lloyd  f. 178  				Theseus..slue Minotaurus in the dennes of Labirinthus. 1624    T. Heywood   iv. 168  				The caue was called Labyrinthus. 1828    A. Herbert  III. 265  				Constructing the famous and impenetrable Labyrinthus of the harlot Venus.the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > garden > division or part of garden > 			[noun]		 > labyrinth1549    W. Thomas  f. 138v  				A laberinth or mase of boxe full of Cypre trees. 1575    J. Turler   ii. xv. 169  				Labirinthes and Mazes of Box tree, Iuis, and Mirtles. 1611    T. Coryate  sig. Y6v  				I saw a fine Labyrinth made of boxe. 1666    S. Pepys  25 June 		(1972)	 VII. 182  				Here were also great variety of other exoticque plants, and several Labarinths. 1710     No. 120  				There was a particular Grove, which was called, The Labyrinth of Coquets. 1753     Suppl.  				Labyrinths are only proper for large gardens, and the finest in the world is said to be that of Versailles. 1787    A. Young Jrnl. 25 May in   		(1792)	  i. 7  				The labyrinth [at Chantilly] is the only complete one I have seen, and I have no inclination to see another: it is in gardening what a rebus is in poetry. 1872     18 Apr. 323/1  				This and every garden labyrinth is formed of walks about 5 feet wide, enclosed on each side by a hedge. 1924     12 51  				The clipped hedges forming the Labyrinth in the gardens of Hampton Court Palace are of Hornbeam. 2007    L. Impelluso  34  				The labyrinth of hedges in concentric circles with a May tree in the middle.1837    B. Winkles  81  				In the middle of the pavement of the nave is a plan of a labyrinth, a variety of intricate circles, executed in the blue stone of Senlis. 1894     3 101  				It was customary, in the Middle Ages, to insert in the floor of the nave of certain cathedrals a labyrinth of black and white stones or coloured tiles. 1922    W. H. Matthews  ix. 62  				A labyrinth of rather striking design..was formerly in the pavement of the old Abbey of St. Bertin. 1995     May 79/1  				All are ‘walking the labyrinth’, an ancient mystical practice that is now being rediscovered as a technique for exploring the spiritual and psychological challenges of contemporary life. 2005     		(Nexis)	 19 Dec.  f4  				The meditation with the labyrinth changed the surroundings and let people focus on themselves. 2010     		(National ed.)	 24 Mar.  a20 		(caption)	  				Based on a labyrinth in Chartres Cathedral in France, the canvas maze is a walking meditation and can be thought of as a questing pilgrimage.1902     3 243  				After two weeks several crabs were given on an average four trials per day in the labyrinth. 1941     10 Nov. 85/1  				I had no desire to spend the rest of my life studying the reactions of rats lost in labyrinths. 1961    W. Shepherd 		(title)	  				Mazes and labyrinths: a book of puzzles. 2007    C. Fernández-Vara in  F. von Borries et al.    i. 74  				Physically, labyrinths and mazes are bounded spaces to be traversed; their main purpose is to delay the walker as he goes from point A to point B. the world > space > shape > curvature > series of curves > 			[noun]		 > winding curve(s) > thing having > a maze or labyrinth1577    R. Stanyhurst Treat. Descr. Irelande iii. f. 12v/1, in  R. Holinshed  I  				In the further ende of this field is there a hole,..a Laberinth reachyng two large myles vnder the earth. 1596    W. Raleigh  		(new ed.)	 39  				We might haue wandred a whole yeere in that laborinth of riuers. 1615    H. Crooke  465  				A mazey laberynth of small veines and arteries. 1650    T. Fuller   ii. ii. 78  				Some were devoured by beasts, others famished as lost in the labyrinths of the forest. 1730    E. Wright  I. 7  				We pass'd along a perfect Labyrinth of winding Vales, which brought us to a little Town. 1777    R. Watson  I.  xiii. 413  				Leyden lies..in the midst of a labyrinth of rivulets and canals. 1843    E. Bulwer-Lytton  I.  i. iv. 60  				He suddenly halted..to find himself entangled in a labyrinth of scattered suburbs. 1873    J. A. Symonds  xii. 400  				The labyrinth of peristyles and pediments in which her children dwell. 1905    E. Wharton  viii. 139  				The representatives of the press were threading their way..through the labyrinth of wedding presents. 1963    P. White  14 May 		(1994)	 viii. 231  				Our first experience of monasteries was in a Russian one.., an enormous labyrinth of neglected buildings. 2001     Autumn 20/3  				The old walled parts..are labyrinths of small alleyways where most of the souks are found. 3. the world > life > the body > sense organ > hearing organ > parts of hearing organ > 			[noun]		 > labyrinth1578    J. Banister   viii. f. 105  				The fift payre of sinewes..entereth the blynd bone & laberinthe sited in the temporall bone. 1638    A. Read  		(new ed.)	 .iii. xi. 458  				About the end of this cavity directly against the tympanum, there are two perforations called fenestellæ, or little windowes: wherof the one is ovall, the entrance to the labyrinth. 1683    A. Snape   iii. xiv. 139  				The oval Window, by which sounds pass out of the first Cavity into the second called the Labyrinth. 1712    P. Blair in   		(Royal Soc.)	 27 125  				I search'd for the Labyrinth, or Lineæ Semilunares, but could find none. 1766    A. Walker  v. 28  				This vibration..is so increased, that in making its way up the labyrinth, it gives a shock to the auditory nerves inserted in it. 1803    tr.  J. Burdin  III. 253  				In the bodies of some old men, who had continued deaf for several years, the osseous labyrinth has been found empty. 1873    St. G. Mivart  ix. 393  				A labyrinth composed of three semicircular canals is also almost universal. 1913    J. W. Jenkinson  vii. 161  				The auditory vesicle—which will develop into the labyrinth or internal ear—is formed, like the lens of the eye, by invagination of the nervous layer of the ectoderm. 1954     		(News of World)	 217/1  				The sense of balance was acquired early in the history of creation through a tiny organ situated behind each ear and named the Labyrinth. 2011     Aug. 23  				The labyrinth (fluid-filled channels in the inner ear) gives the brain information about head movement to help us balance.the world > life > the body > structural parts > bone or bones > skull > parts of skull > 			[noun]		 > bones of nose1678     		(Royal Soc.)	 12 977  				These odorant particles, which run with the Air into the Nose, in smelling, might not all forthwith pass off from thence into the breast: Nature by this Labyrinth, made by the windings of the Lamellæ, hath taken care to give them an arrest and longer stay. 1686     		(Royal Soc.)	 15 1043  				I observed in this Bird..that they want that Vessel or Ampulla situate in the very Angle of the divarication of the Wind-pipe, which..we are wont to call the Labyrinth of the Trachea. 1774    O. Goldsmith  V. 13  				It is sometimes also seen that the wind-pipe makes many convolutions within the body of the bird, and it is then called the labyrinth. 1811     at Unguis Os  				It also covers part of the labyrinth of the nostrils. 1888      				Labyrinth, a name given to the cells in the lateral masses of the ethmoid bone... L., olfactory, the contorted structure formed by the upper end of the middle turbinate bones. 1916     16 Dec. 1028/2  				The kidneys on section are enlarged and icteric; the cortex bulges and the labyrinths are frequently conspicuously yellow. 1986    M. B. V. Roberts  		(ed. 4)	 xiv. 221  				Each gland..consists of a small end sac.., which is connected to a larger sponge-like cavity, the labyrinth. 2003    S. Donnelly in  R. C. Roach et al.   vi. 77 		(caption)	  				The production of erythropoietin is confined to a small area at the tips of the juxta-medullary region of the cortical labyrinth.1831    H. McMurtrie tr.  G. Cuvier  II. 166  				Family X. This family is distinguished by labyrinthiform pharyngeals... Anabas, Cuv. It is in this genus that we find the greatest degree of complication in these labyrinths. 1847     III. 986/1  				This bony labyrinth, therefore, so carefully enclosed on all sides,..receives water equally with the branchiæ whenever the fish opens it mouth. 1920     Nov. 222/1  				Day..thoroughly examined both the climbing fish Anabas and other fin bearers having a labyrinth organ. 1966     No. 3. 606/2  				This ‘labyrinth organ’ comprises a chamber containing four bony lamellae covered highly vascularized, modified branchial epithelium. 2005     Jan. 11/1  				The anabantids..have gills, but can also breathe air, using a lung-like organ called a labyrinth. 1839    A. Ure  727  				Labyrinth, in metallurgy, means a series of canals distributed in the sequel of a stamping-mill; through which canals a stream of water is transmitted for suspending, carrying off, and depositing, at different distances, the ground ores. 1856     7 230  				The basins of classification..comprise..a recess (labyrinth) consisting of twelve or fifteen basins in masonry 1 metre in length. 1938     28 May 1166/1  				The latest method [of sampling industrial dusts]..is called the labyrinth, and consists of an assembly of baffles in a conduit through which the dusty air is drawn. 1973     20 962  				An electrode having an appearance similar to a rat-maze in which the fluid passed through a labyrinth in contact with a circular gold electrode. 2005     340 260/2  				Baffle plates are fitted to the lid of the condenser to make a labyrinth for Cd vapor.  II.  Figurative senses. the world > action or operation > difficulty > types of difficulty > 			[noun]		 > difficulty or complexity > instance of the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > entanglement or entangled state > complication or complexity > 			[noun]		 > a complicated state of affairsc1450						 (    J. Walton tr.  Boethius  		(Linc. Cathedral 103)	 204  				Do ȝe skorne or elles play, And haue [me] to þis laberynt [L. labyrinthum] ibroght? Youre resouns weyuen [y]e so wondirly, In maner like þe hous of Dydalus. 1548     f. xlvij  				When the Earle was thus..escaped all ye daungerous labirinthes and snares that were set for him. ?a1560    L. Digges  		(1571)	  i. xxx. sig. Iivv  				The Geometer..without practise..shall fall into manyfoulde errours, or inextricable Laberinthes. 1609    W. Shakespeare   ii. iii. 2  				How now Thersites? what lost in the Labyrinth of thy  furie?       View more context for this quotation 1642    E. Dering  xvi. 74  				We shall run our selves into a..Labyrinth of words, and lose the matter. 1703     II.  viii. 434  				Till they could find some expedient to explicate and disintangle themselves out of this Labyrinth, they made no advance towards the recruiting or supplying their Armies. 1756    E. Burke  79  				The more deeply we penetrate into the Labyrinth of Art, the further we find ourselves from those Ends for which we entered it. 1828    T. B. Macaulay Hallam's Constit. Hist. in   Sept. 100  				In this labyrinth of falsehood and sophistry, the guidance of Mr Hallam is peculiarly valuable. 1885     79 130/1  				To thread the labyrinth of the statutes under which London is governed. 1924     2 191/1  				In the endeavor to avoid the morass of sentiment too much of our thinking has slipped into the labyrinth of over-intellectualization. 1967    W. S. Graham Let. 24 Jan. in   		(1999)	 207  				What man are you this morning as you read this and the labyrinth of your day complexes itself before you? 2003    M. Bronski  Introd. 9  				The fictional characters find their way through the emotional and psychological labyrinth.Compounds1699    T. Edwards  220  				The Baxterian..with his Labyrinth-windings to evade thy full view of him. 1748    W. Melmoth  I. xx. 94  				This little plantation I have branched out into various labyrinth-walks. 1801    J. Jones tr.  T. Bugge  xii. 237  				These labyrinth caves and large passages under ground, lead to a grate. 1850    J. P. Thompson  51  				A private office accessible only by tortuous staircases and labyrinth passages. 1914     Mar. 208/2  				The miners..risk their lives daily in the labyrinth tunnels of the earth. 1938     22 Oct. 9  				British Troops, equipped with tear gas, entered the labyrinth caves. 1981    P. R. Laming   i. 18  				Spatial orientation is performed by the more highly developed labyrinth canal systems of the inner ear. 2011    L. MacDonald  xli. 357  				A world authority on labyrinth mazes.1792    W. Withering  		(ed. 2)	 III. 423  				Boletus... Tubes grey brown. Pores labyrinth-formed. 1798    C. Abbot  311  				Oak agaric... Gills labyrinth-shaped. 1860    J. Ruskin  V. 240  				Its forests are sombre-leaved, labyrinth-stemmed. 1894     Feb. 119  				The inhaled air must pass through the labyrinth-formed air passage of the nasal cavity, with its many inlets and irregularities. 1933     20 205  				The labyrinth-shaped fertile cavities. 2006     		(Nexis)	 6 Oct. 15  				He was given a custom-built lute with a labyrinth-shaped rose-hole. C3.  1922     XXXII. 789/2  				The pressure of steam in the blading..tends to thrust the discs apart. It is therefore balanced by an arrangement of ‘dummies’, or labyrinth discs. 1995     2 298  				In 1968 there was a change of labyrinth discs. 2013     Nov. 12/3  				The seal module has labyrinth discs positioned within [it]..that inhibit fluid flow.the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > 			[noun]		 > suborder Anabantoidei > family Anabantidae > member of (Siamese fighter)1835    C. F. Partington  I. 100/1  				The supply of water which these labyrinth fishes take with them is sufficient to maintain them in life for several hours. 1961    E. S. Herald  243/2  				Because of the special labyrinthine breathing apparatus located in a cavity above each gill chamber.., the members of this family [sc. Anabantidae] are called labyrinth fishes. 2015     18 310  				Betta fish are labyrinth fish, meaning they can breathe air at the surface.1801    E. King  II. 190  				Figures of animals..were bordered by the Vitruvian scroll, the braided Guilloche, and the Labyrinth fret. 1879     Jan. 552/2  				The commonest designs used for the embroidering of cloaks and robes were the labyrinth fret..and the well-known key pattern. 1926     7 Sept. 39/1  				It [sc. a pavement] is bordered with a wide labyrinth fret. 2012    B. Parker  332  				The pattern known as the ‘Greek fret’ or ‘Greek key’ pattern..is found in an almost endless variety of diamond fret, labyrinth fret, meander fret..and others for which we have no names.1909     183 25  				It was in effect a labyrinth packing on a small scale. 1911    L. C. Loewenstein  v. 166  				The effectiveness of this labyrinth packing is based on the expansion of steam in the enlarged spaces. 2008    C. Soares  iii. 80/1  				The spring-backed labyrinth packing is fitted to minimize steam leakage.1823    in  J. Baillie  210  				Life's labyrinth-thread deceives, and seems but sand. 1975     31 Oct. 12/5  				Beware of..subtle signals, labyrinth threads leading to major plot.1871     2 149  				All of these conditions [sc. absence of the vestibule, cochlea, semicircular canals, and fenestræ] can be considered only as the result of arrest of development at the earliest possible period—the first week—in the labyrinth vesicle. 1928     6 Oct. 688/2  				On the other side it is covered with the epithelium of the labyrinth-vesicle. 2004     No. 760. 3/2  				By postcopulation day 13,..the following structures are present: eye cups, labyrinth vesicle, epithelial nasal sac, [etc.].Derivatives the world > space > shape > curvature > series of curves > 			[adjective]		 > having many or winding curves > like a maze or labyrinth1601    W. I.  sig. B2v  				The pleasant rowes of daynty Apricockes, Quadrangle walkes did Laborinth-like compose. 1792    W. Withering  		(ed. 2)	 III. 292  				Sitting, membranaceous, labyrinth-like, grey, white within. 1855    G. F. Richardson  302  				The labyrinth-like arrangement of the dentine, from which Professor Owen derived the name Labyrinthodon. 1920    J. P. Schaeffer  vi. 207  				The lateral masses become more or less honeycombed or labyrinth-like. 2008    L. C. Heberle  & S. M. Opp  185  				The neighborhoods are interconnected by the sub-system of labyrinth-like laneways and alleyways.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022).labyrinthv.Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: labyrinth n.Etymology:  <  labyrinth n.With sense  2   compare earlier labyrinthed adj. Chiefly poetic  and literary . Usually in passive . the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > enclosing or enclosure > enclose			[verb (transitive)]		 > in or as in other specific receptacle or enclosure1637    N. Whiting  92  				Leave him labyrinth'd, and thus distrest. 1660    N.C. in  T. Forde  sig. V2  				I love thy labyrinth, and approve, That thou shouldst labyrinth my love. 1706     26  				No subterfuge Nor dear escape if labyrinth'd within The Subtle Windings of her [sc. Death's] lieuring Gin. 1770    J. Dove  22  				Any course of previously-devised experiments..leave us liable to mistake, labyrinthed in conjectures, conundrums, and absurdities. 1820    J. Keats Lamia  ii, in   30  				How to entangle..Your soul in mine, and labyrinth you there. 1890     11 Sept.  				I should be very sorry indeed to find myself labyrinthed in the intricate mazes of a directorate of a very questionable character. 1976    M. Malone  		(2002)	 xii. 123  				He shook his head vigorously over this amazing situation, weaving it like a maddened bull labyrinthed with unappetizing maidens.1651    C. Hotham  17  				How little leisure those greater Statesmen had to labyrinth their brains with all the tedious anfractus of that Theory. 1694    N. H.  211/1  				The stately Bushy Forest of the Head, like Atlas Crowned with Pines, is sometimes Labirinth'd with Mazie and rude Meanders. 1848    J. Ruskin  		(ed. 2)	 II.  iii. v. 38  				The purple clefts of the hill side are labyrinthed in the darkness. 1898     Mar. 178  				It [sc. a tavern] is said to have been labyrinthed by secret exits and cunning contrivances to facilitate the escape of fugitives from the law. 1904    B. Mitford  xviii. 205  				They gazed down upon shiny rock surfaces labyrinthed with ragged black chasms. 1942     25 June 11/7  				The common conception of Corregidor as a huge impregnable rock labyrinthed with tunnels, is entirely erroneous. 2015     		(Southern Illinois Univ.)	 18  				The snow still drifts in cramped quarters Labyrinthing the sidewalks and streets.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2017; most recently modified version published online June 2022).<  n.a1387  v.1637 |