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单词 leech
释义

leechn.1

Brit. /liːtʃ/, U.S. /litʃ/
Forms: Old English lǽce, Northumbrian léce, Middle English–1500s leche, Middle English lache, læche, liache, Middle English, 1500s leache, Middle English leyche, Middle English lecche, Middle English–1500s lech, Middle English leeche, lieche, 1500s Scottish leiche, leitche, 1500s–1800s leach, 1500s– leech.
Etymology: Old English lǽce strong masculine (once lǽca weak), corresponds to Old Frisian (dative) letza, leischa, Old High German lâhhi, Middle Swedish läkir (Danish læge; Old Norse has the cognate lǽknir, and modern Swedish läkare, from the verb läka to heal), Gothic lêkeis < Old Germanic *læ̂kjo-z < pre-Germanic *lēgio-s; the synonymous Irish liaigh (Old Irish liaig, dative plural legib) is apparently related in some way.
1.
a. A physician; one who practises the healing art.Now archaic (chiefly poetic) or jocular; often apprehended as a transferred use of leech n.2 In the 17th cent. it was applied in ordinary prose use only to veterinary practitioners, and this sense survives in some dialects. (See also the combinations bullock-leech, cow-leech, horse-leech n., etc.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > veterinary medicine and surgery > [noun] > veterinarian
veterinarian1646
leecha1656
veterinary surgeon1795
veterinary1829
vet1862
V.S.1952
c900 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (1890) iv. xxi. [xix.] 320 Cyneferð læce, se æt hire wæs, þa heo forðferde.
c950 Lindisf. Gosp. Luke iv. 23 La lece lecna ðec seoline.
c1175 Lamb. Hom. 83 Nu bihoueð þe forwunded wreche þet he habbe leche.
c1290 S. Eng. Leg. I. 101/7 On leches heo hadde i-spendet Muche del of hire guod.
a1300 Cursor Mundi 26322 Als lech þou suld seke man hale.
a1340 R. Rolle Psalter vi. 1 Þe hand of þe leche brennand or sherend.
c1386 G. Chaucer Summoner's Tale 248 What nedeth hym þat hath a parfit leche To sechen othere leches in the toun?
a1500 (?c1450) Merlin xxviii. 574 The kynge delyuered hem leches to couer theire woundes.
1513 G. Douglas in tr. Virgil Æneid xiii. Prol. 80 Als stern of spech As he had bene ane medycyner or lech.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. v. sig. Ev Many skilfull leaches him abide, To salue his hurts.
a1656 J. Hales Serm. at Eton (1673) iii. 40 They that come and tell you what you are to believe,..and tell you not why, they are not Medici, but Veterinarii, they are not Physicians, but Leaches.
1715 N. Rowe Lady Jane Gray i. i. 2 The hoary wrinkled Leach has..Try'd ev'ry health-restoring Herb and Gum.
1777 Philos. Trans. 1776 (Royal Soc.) 66 498 A farrier and bullock-leach.
1807 G. Crabbe Parish Reg. iii, in Poems 122 Can this proud Leech, with all his boasted Skill, Amend the Soul or Body, Wit or Will?
1820 W. Scott Abbot I. vi. 134 A learned leech with some new drug.
a1839 W. M. Praed Poems (1864) II. 85 Grudging the leech his growing bill.
1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise I. i. 121 As one who lays all hope aside, Because the leech has said his life must end.
b. transferred and figurative. Applied often to God and Christ, and spiritual persons.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > [noun] > according to other attributes
horn of salvation (health)c825
fatherOE
Our FatherOE
leecha1200
searcher of (men's) heartsa1382
untempter1382
headstone of the cornerc1400
Valentinec1450
illuminator1485
sun?1521
righteous maker1535
shepherd1535
verity1535
strengthener1567
gracer1592
heart-searcher1618
heartbreaker1642
sustainera1680
philanthropist1730
the invisible1781
praise1782
All-Father1814
wisdom1855
omniscient1856
engracer1866
inbreather1873
God of the gaps1933
the great —— in the sky1968
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > [noun] > person > as healer
leecha1200
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > the Trinity > the Son or Christ > [noun] > according to other attributes
horn of salvation (health)c825
fatherOE
sun of righteousnessOE
priestc1175
leecha1200
vinec1315
apostlec1382
amenc1384
shepherdc1384
the Wisdom of the Father1402
high priest1526
pelican1526
mediatora1530
reconcilerc1531
branch1535
morning star1535
surety1535
vicar1651
arch-shepherd1656
hierarch1855
particularity1930
a1200 Moral Ode 303 Ich kan beo ȝif i scal lichame and soule liache.
c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 41 Ure louerd ihesu crist is alre herdene herde and alre lechene leche.
a1250 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Nero) (1952) 80 Þus is sicnesse soule leche. & salue of hire wunden.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 129 Þe holi gost is þe guode leche þet amaystreþ his ziknesse.
c1386 G. Chaucer Summoner's Tale 184 God that is oure lyues leche.
c1420 Pallad. on Husb. xii. 129 The best Of benes boyled water may be leche To sle the frost.
a1547 Earl of Surrey Poems (1964) 15 My hartes delight, my sorowes leche, mine earthly goddesse here.
2. = leechman n. at Compounds, leech-finger n. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > limb > digit > finger > [noun] > ring finger
ring fingereOE
leech-fingerc1000
leechc1290
leechman14..
medicinable finger?a1475
ring man?c1475
wedding-finger1543
nameless finger1584
medicinal finger1598
physic finger1621
physical finger1623
physician finger1623
medical finger1653
marriage finger1711
ring digit1867
c1290 S. Eng. Leg. 308/311 Þe nexte finguer hatte ‘leche’.
?a1500 Nominale (Yale Beinecke 594) in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 753/2 Hic medius, the longman. Hic medi[c]us, the leche. Hic auricularis, the lythylman.

Compounds

attributive and in other combinations, as leech-fee n. ‘a physician's fee’ ( Cent. Dict.).leech-house n. Obsolete a hospital. leechman n. †a physician; also (now dialect) = leech-finger n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun]
physician?c1225
leecherc1374
practiserc1387
doctora1400
flesh-leecha1400
leechman14..
mediciner?a1425
miria1425
M.D.1425
medicine?c1450
practitioner?1543
minister1559
doc1563
artist1565
medicus1570
medicianera1578
Aesculapius1586
Dra1593
pisspot1592
medician1597
physicianer1598
medicinary1599
pisspot1600
velvet-cap1602
healer1611
Galena1616
physiner1616
clyster1621
clyster-pipe1622
hakim1623
medic1625
practicant1630
medico1647
physicker1649
physicster1689
Aesculapian1694
nim-gimmer1699
pill-monger1706
medical man1784
meester1812
medical1823
pill-gilder1824
therapeutist1830
pill1835
pill roller1843
med1851
pill-peddler1855
therapeutic1858
squirt1859
medicine man1866
pill pusher1879
therapist1886
doser1888
internist1894
pill-shooter1911
whitecoat1911
quack1919
vet1925
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > limb > digit > finger > [noun] > ring finger
ring fingereOE
leech-fingerc1000
leechc1290
leechman14..
medicinable finger?a1475
ring man?c1475
wedding-finger1543
nameless finger1584
medicinal finger1598
physic finger1621
physical finger1623
physician finger1623
medical finger1653
marriage finger1711
ring digit1867
the world > health and disease > healing > places for the sick or injured > [noun] > hospital or infirmary
maison dieu1354
fermery1377
leech-house1483
sick-house1491
hospital1549
infirmitorya1552
guest house1600
infirmatory1603
valetudinary1623
infirmary1625
nosocome1653
hôtel-Dieuc1660
hothouse1707
sanity-institution1799
butcher's shop1890
14.. Camb. MS. Ff. v. 48 lf. 82 (Halliw.) at Fingers The lest fyngir hat lityl man, for hit is lest of alle; The next fynger hat leche man, for quen a leche dos oȝt, With that fynger he tastes all thyng, howe that hit is wroȝt.
1483 Cath. Angl. 211/1 A Leche house, laniena, quia infirmi ibi laniantur.
1600 F. L. tr. Ovid Remedy of Love sig. B2 The Leachmans skill.
1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. i. iv. 128 Light-bringer, Laureat, Leach-man, all-Reuiuer.
1888 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon Leechman, a practitioner of medicine.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

leechn.2

Brit. /liːtʃ/, U.S. /litʃ/
Forms: Old English lǽce, ( lýce), Middle English liche, Middle English–1500s leche, Middle English Scottish leiche, 1500s–1800s leach, 1500s– leech.
Etymology: Old English lǽce, Kentish lýce strong masculine = Middle Dutch lake (Kilian laecke, lijck-laecke, modern Flemish lijklake), lieke, leke feminine Commonly regarded as a transferred use of leech n.1; this is plausible, but the forms Old English lyce , early Middle English liche , Middle Dutch lieke , suggest that the word was originally distinct, but assimilated to lǽce leech n.1 through popular etymology.
a. One of the aquatic blood-sucking worms belonging to the order Hirudinea: the ordinary leech used medicinally for drawing blood belongs to the genus Hirudo or Sanguisuga. (See also horse-leech n. 2, land-leech n. at land n.1 Compounds 2b(b), sea-leech, water-leech, etc.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Annelida > [noun] > class Hirudinea > member of (leech)
leecha900
water leechc1350
bloodsuckera1387
lough-leech1562
loch leech1579
sanguisuge1585
censur1597
leech-worm1794
hirudinean1835
sangsuea1849
snail-leech1865
the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > other surgical equipment > [noun] > leech
leech1541
sanguisuge1585
leech-worm1794
a900 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 85/11 Sanguissuge, lyces.
c1000 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 121/36 Sanguisuga, uel hirudo, læce.
a1275 Prov. Ælfred 472 in Old Eng. Misc. 131 Suket þuru is liche, so dot liche blod.
c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 291/2 Leche, wy(r)m of þe watur, sanguissuga.
1541 T. Elyot Castel of Helthe (new ed.) 61 Evacuation by wormes, founde in waters called bloudde suckers or leaches.
1568 (a1508) W. Kennedy Flyting (Bannatyne) in Poems W. Dunbar (1998) I. 201 Lat him lay sax leichis on thy lendis.
1656 J. Smith Compl. Pract. Physick 154 Leeches set behind the Ears.
1794 E. Burke Speech against W. Hastings in Wks. (1827) XV. 351 He was driven out of it finally by the rebellion, and, as you may imagine, departed like a leech full of blood.
1803 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 10 430 The application of four leeches to each ankle.
1822 J. M. Good Study Med. IV. 5 The hirudo viridis, or green leech [is well known to multiply], by longitudinal sections.
1861 R. T. Hulme tr. C. H. Moquin-Tandon Elements Med. Zool. ii. iii. iv. 140 There are three principal varieties of Leeches employed in France. These are—1st, the Grey Leech; 2nd, the Green Leech; 3rd, the Dragon Leech..(true English or Speckled Leech).
in extended use.1849 A. Alison Hist. Europe from French Revol. (new ed.) II. viii. 261 Those female furies, aptly termed the ‘leeches of the guillotine’.Proverbial phrase.c1839 W. E. Forster in T. W. Reid Life W. E. Forster (1888) I. iv. 115 He [Cobden] is..likely to mistake a crotchet for a principle and stick to it like a leech.
b. artificial leech n. Surgery see quot. 1875.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > other surgical equipment > [noun] > leech > artificial leech
bdellometer1839
artificial leech1858
1858 in P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. II. 1283/2 Leech, Artificial, a light glass tube from which the air is expelled by the vapor of ether, and whose mouth is then applied to a previously scarified portion of the body.
1879 St. George's Hosp. Rep. 9 497 The artificial leech was applied to the temple on three occasions.
c. figurative. One who ‘sticks to’ another for the purpose of getting gain out of him.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > wish or inclination > desire > inordinate or excessive desire > [noun] > rapacity > rapacious person
gorgec1450
sanguisugec1540
horse-leech1546
harpy1589
vulture1605
leech1785
sanguisorb1884
1785 W. Cowper Task iii. 817 The spendthrift, and the leech That sucks him.
1794 C. Pigott Female Jockey Club (ed. 4) Pref. 20 Are the hearts of these leeches softened by the possession of such scandalous monopoly?
1842 Ld. Tennyson Will Waterproof's Monologue in Poems (new ed.) II. 192 Ere days, that deal in ana, swarm'd His literary leeches.
1883 J. Parker Tyne Chylde 86 It's a sticking leech you have laid on me this time, and a famous biter.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
leech-bite n.
ΚΠ
1882 H. de Windt On Equator 57 We..reached the bungalow..none the worse, with the exception of leech-bites and cut feet.
leech-bleeder n.
ΚΠ
1851 in Illustr. London News 5 Aug. (1854) 119 Leech-bleeder, leech-breeder.
leech-breeder n.
ΚΠ
1851 in Illustr. London News 5 Aug. (1854) 119 Leech-bleeder, leech-breeder.
leech-dealer n.
ΚΠ
1839 Penny Cycl. XIII. 383/2 The leech-dealers of Bretagne.
leech-family n.
ΚΠ
1839 Penny Cycl. XIII. 383/1 Cuvier thinks it doubtful whether the species of this genus [Clepsina] should be arranged with the leech family.
leech-gatherer n.
ΚΠ
1807 W. Wordsworth Resolution & Independence in Poems I. 97 I'll think of the Leech-gatherer on the lonely moor.
leech-tribe n.
ΚΠ
1835–6 Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. I. 170/2 There is observed in the leech-tribe something analogous to the lesser circulation.
C2.
leech-like adj.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > wish or inclination > desire > inordinate or excessive desire > [adjective] > rapacious
ravenousc1425
rapinous1484
ravening1548
rapacious1572
scambling1600
large-handeda1616
tenter-hooking1615
vulturizing1650
vulturian1659
leech-like1682
vulturine1721
vulturish1826
vulturous1843
1682 J. Dryden Medall 10 The Witnesses, that, Leech-like, liv'd on bloud.
1819 P. B. Shelley Eng. in 1819 5 Rulers who neither see nor feel nor know, But leech-like to their fainting country cling, Till they drop, blind in blood, without a blow.
1905 Westm. Gaz. 8 Jan. 3/2 He is prepared to stick to it with almost leech-like tenacity.
1908 Westm. Gaz. 6 Oct. 10/2 Parasitical and leech-like characteristics.
1963 R. P. Dales Annelids ix. 176 The parasitic leech-like branchiobdellids also belong to the Prosopora.
C3.
leech-eater n. a name for the Spur-winged Plover ( Holopterus spinosus) and the Crocodile-bird ( Pluvianus ægyptius).
ΚΠ
1885 Riverside Nat. Hist. (1888) IV. 100 The so-called spur-winged plover (Hoplopterus spinosus)..claims the distinction of being the ‘leech-eater’ or ‘trochilos’ of Herodotus.
leech-extract n. an extract prepared from leeches, used in physiological experiments for intravenous or intraperitoneal injections.
ΚΠ
1898 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. V. 420 Organic substances such as fibrin ferment, hemi-albumose, peptones, nuclein, and leech extract..have the effect on injection, of bringing about a marked and rapid diminution in the number of leucocytes.
leech-gaiter n. a kind of gaiter worn in Ceylon as a protection against land-leeches.
ΚΠ
1859 J. E. Tennent Ceylon I. ii. vii. 303 The coffee planters, who live amongst these pests, are obliged..to envelope their legs in ‘leech gaiters’ made of closely woven cloth.
leech-glass n. Surgery a glass tube to hold a leech which it is required to apply to a particular spot.
ΚΠ
1839 Penny Cycl. XIII. 384/1 It is difficult to make them fix themselves on the particular spot wished; but a leech-glass will generally effect this.
leech-worm n. Obsolete = main sense
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > other surgical equipment > [noun] > leech
leech1541
sanguisuge1585
leech-worm1794
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Annelida > [noun] > class Hirudinea > member of (leech)
leecha900
water leechc1350
bloodsuckera1387
lough-leech1562
loch leech1579
sanguisuge1585
censur1597
leech-worm1794
hirudinean1835
sangsuea1849
snail-leech1865
1794 Sporting Mag. 4 271 Observations on the Leech worm, by a Gentleman who kept one several Years for the purpose of a Weather-glass.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

leechn.3

Brit. /liːtʃ/, U.S. /litʃ/
Forms: Middle English lek, leche, lyche, 1600s leatch, 1600s, 1800s leach, 1600s– leech.
Etymology: Of obscure origin; apparently related in some way to Old Norse līk (a nautical term of obscure meaning; the Swedish lik, Danish lig mean ‘bolt-rope’), Dutch lijk, German liek, leech-line.
Nautical.
Either vertical edge of a square sail; the aft edge of a fore-and-aft sail. Also with qualifications, as after-leech, mast-leech, roach-leech, weather-leech.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > sail > [noun] > side edge of sail
leech1485
skirt1627
after leech1769
1485 [see leech-hook n. at Compounds].
1496 in T. Dickson Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1877) I. 300 Item, to Dauid Gourlay, for making of a bonat and the lek to it.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Penne d'un voile,..the Leech of a sayle.
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. vii. 32 The Leech of a saile is the outward side or skirt of the saile from the earing to the clew, the middle betwixt which wee account the Leech.
1762 W. Falconer Shipwreck ii. 20 The leeches taught, the hallyards are made fast.
1834 F. Marryat Jacob Faithful I. xvii. 300 They were handing in the leech of the sail, when snap went one blunt-line.
1881 W. C. Russell Sailor's Sweetheart I. v. 123 The leech of the top-gallant sail.
1948 R. de Kerchove Internat. Maritime Dict. 407/1 Leech, the side of a square sail, or the afteredge of a fore-and-aft sail. Also called skirt when referring to square sails.

Compounds

leech-hook n. Obsolete a hook for attaching the leech-line to the sail.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > rigging > [noun] > running rigging > ropes securing sail to yard > hook for
leech-hook1485
luff hook1485
1485 in M. Oppenheim Naval Accts. & Inventories Henry VII (1896) 38 Shanke hokes.., Pakke hokes.., Leche hokes.
1495 in M. Oppenheim Naval Accts. & Inventories Henry VII (1896) 158 Lyche hokes of Yron,..loff hokes of yron.
leech-line n. a rope attached to the leech, serving to truss the sail close up to the yard.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > rigging > [noun] > running rigging > ropes securing sail to yard
headline1294
rope-bend1294
roband1336
robbin1497
raeband1513
rope-yard1611
earing1626
leech-line1626
rope-band1769
jackstay1834
roving1837
1626 J. Smith Accidence Young Sea-men 30 Cleare your leach-lines.
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. v. 23 Leech lines are small ropes made fast to the Leech of the top-sailes.
1860 Mercantile Marine Mag. 7 113 A leach-line is bent on each yard-arm.
leech-lining n. (see quot. 1883).
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > sail > [noun] > material of sails > piece of canvas strengthening sail > on topsail
top-lining1794
leech-lining1883
1883 Man. Seamanship for Boys' Training Ships Royal Navy (1886) 53 Q. What is a goring cloth? A. A side cloth of a topsail,..or lining of a topsail, called by sailmakers the leech lining.
leech-rope n. (see quot. 1769).
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > sail > [noun] > rope sewn at edge to prevent tearing > parts of
foot ropeOE
head ropec1625
body rope1759
leech-rope1769
foot line1813
1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine Leech-rope, a name given to that part of the bolt-rope, to which the border, or skirt of a sail is sewed.
1801 Asiatic Ann. Reg. 1800 Chron. 23/2 The leech ropes of the fore-sail, main-sail, fore-top sail, and mizen-top-sail.
1885 A. Brassey In Trades 465 Repaired leech rope of mizen and set the sail.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

leechn.4

Brit. /liːtʃ/, U.S. /litʃ/
(See quots.)
Π
1805 J. Luccock Nature & Prop. Wool 15 The part of the staple through which the shears passed to separate it from the sheep (and which is commonly called the leech of the fleece).
1805 J. Luccock Nature & Prop. Wool 310 In some instances a quantity of dirt is concealed by the custom of winding fleeces with the leech outwards.
1892 P. L. Simmonds Commerc. Dict. Trade Products (rev. ed.) Suppl. Leech, the technical name for a bundle or small parcel of human hair.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

Leechn.5

Brit. /liːtʃ/, U.S. /litʃ/
Etymology: < the name of John Leech (1926–92), British mathematician, who described the concept in Canad. Jrnl. Math. (1967) 19 251.
Mathematics.
Leech lattice n. a set of points in 24-dimensional Euclidean space regularly arranged such that each point has exactly 196,560 nearest neighbours.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > geometry > point > [noun] > sets or groups of points
umbilic point1586
involution1847
triad1850
range1859
point group1887
tetrad1889
tristigm1889
neighbourhood1891
trinode1891
trigraphy1895
Cantor set1902
web1909
limit cycle1918
Leech lattice1968
1968 J. H. Conway in Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 61 398 The Leech lattice Λ is the union of the sets [C, m] over all CC and all integers m.
1974 Nature 8 Feb. (Advt. facing p. 402) In the final chapter Steiner systems and sphere packing problems are related via the famous Leech lattice.
1982 D. Gorenstein Finite Simple Groups ii. 120 Conway constructed his three simple groups from the automorphism group of the remarkable 24-dimensional Leech lattice.
1986 Nature 20 Feb. 621/3 The Leech lattice (an economical way to pack spheres in 24-dimensional space).
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1997; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

leechv.1

Brit. /liːtʃ/, U.S. /litʃ/
Forms: Middle English liache, Orm. læchenn; Middle English–1500s leche, Middle English liche, Middle English–1500s lech, Middle English, 1600s leach, 1500s leeche, 1800s leech.
Etymology: Early Middle English, < leech n.1; compare Swedish läka , Danish læge . The sense was expressed in Old English by lácnian , lǽcnian : see lechne v.
Now rare and archaic.
transitive. To cure, heal.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > heal or cure [verb (transitive)]
lechnec900
helpc950
beetc975
healc1000
temperc1000
leechc1175
amendc1300
halec1330
soundc1374
sanec1386
warishc1386
defenda1400
rectifya1400
salve1411
lokenc1425
redress?c1425
recure?a1439
guarish1474
cure1526
medify1543
recover1548
resanate1599
sanate1623
sain1832
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 17227 Hiss gast. Iss clennsedd & rihht læchedd.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 4274 He comm her to læchenn uss Off all þatt dæþess wunde.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Job v. 18 [The Lord] woundeth and lecheth; smyteth, and his hondis shuln helen.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 176 Iesu crist..openlik bigan..alle þat sek ware to leche.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 11841 Þai moght not leche his wa.
c1440 York Myst. xvii. 156 A barne is borne Þat shall..leche þam þat ar lorne.
?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) l. 1832 He taght goddis wordes..And synfull' men lyues lechyd.
1564 Louth Corporat. Acc. (1891) 78 Paid for leching my horses verie sicke, vs.
a1625 J. Fletcher Loyal Subj. iii. v, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Eee3v/2 Have ye any crackt maiden-heads to new leach or mend?
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe II. iv. 53 Let those leech his wounds for whose sake he encountered them.
1850 J. S. Blackie tr. Æschylus Lyrical Dramas I. 63 A disease that none may leech.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

leechv.2

Brit. /liːtʃ/, U.S. /litʃ/
Etymology: < leech n.2
transitive. To apply leeches to medicinally. Also absol.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > surgery > bloodletting > let blood of [verb (transitive)] > apply leeches to
leech1828
1828 G. Ewing in Mem. (1847) xiv. 5 I was leeched and bled in the arm and am almost quite well.
1834 J. Forbes tr. R. T. H. Laennec Treat. Dis. Chest (ed. 4) 427 The patient was bled and leeched with relief.
1861 ‘G. Eliot’ Silas Marner xvi. 286 When I'm leeching or poulticing.
1897 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. III. 346 The protruding tongue must be leeched.

Draft additions 1997

2. intransitive. Const. on (to). To attach oneself like a leech; to be parasitic on. Also const. off.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > taken [verb (intransitive)] > take advantage
leech1937
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > commendation or praise > flattery or flattering > servile flattery or currying favour > flatter servilely or curry favour [verb (intransitive)] > be a parasite or sponger
hang1535
lick1602
parasite1609
shirk1633
sponge1673
scunge1846
coat-tail1852
leech1937
freeload1940
lig1960
1937 R. K. Narayan Bachelor of Arts xiv. 201 It was nearly two years since he left college, and he was still leeching on his father.
1983 Listener 23 June 14/2 A silver-tongued mountebank leeching on to suffering, pitilessly fleecing the gullible.
1986 Philadelphia Inquirer 6 Nov. 4 d/5 As you might imagine, the greedy and the tasteless are wanting to leech onto him, to cash in on The Farewell Tour.
1988 People Weekly 23 May 11/1 They exist to leech on our fears and desires for revenge and to use the suffering of victims to boost ratings.
1990 Sunday Mail Mag (Brisbane) 25 Mar. 22 To leech off the American people!

Draft additions 1997

3. figurative. To drain (someone or something) of energy, money, etc.; to drain (something) away or from something.There appears to be some confusion with leach v.2 4.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > take [verb (transitive)] > to drain someone of something
leecha1961
the mind > possession > taking > taken [verb (intransitive)] > to drain someone of something
leech1981
a1961 in Webster's 3rd New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. (at cited word) Bankers who had always leeched them white.
1964 Listener 13 Aug. 225/2 It [sc. a modern office block] has neither virtues nor vices; it just sits there like a graceless woman, leeching away a bit more of the city's vitality.]
1974 Times Lit. Suppl. 1 Mar. 211/4 The invading Englishman..leeching the land with his reservoirs and his crass afforestations.
1981 R. Davies Rebel Angels iii. 98 ‘What's he been up to?’ ‘Leeching and bumming and sornering.’
1988 Times 17 Feb. 12/1 I see no reason why the London cabbie should not..leech his heritage..for mutual gain.
1990 Times 5 Apr. 1/3 The brain-drain..leeched 45,000 people from the territory.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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