| 释义 | laughtern.1Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.Etymology: Cognate with Old Dutch lahter  , Old Saxon lahter   (Middle Low German lachter  ), both in sense ‘joke, prank’, Old High German hlahtar   (Middle High German lahter  , early modern German lachter  ; compare (with added prefix) Middle High German gelehter   (German Gelächter  , which is the now usual German noun)), Old Icelandic hlátr  , Old Swedish later  , Old Danish later  , latther   (Danish latter  ), all in sense ‘act or instance of laughing’  <  the Germanic base of laugh v.   + a Germanic suffix forming nouns also found in e.g. fodder n., murder n.1, laughter n.2, lahter n.The Old English forms show breaking of the stem vowel before the stem-final consonant group (compare West Saxon hleahtor at  α. forms). Resulting ea   was smoothed to æ   in Anglian (compare Northumbrian (inflected) læhtr- at  β. forms) and to e   in late West Saxon (compare hlehter at  α. forms). (Occasional isolated forms with æ   from West Saxon manuscripts (e.g. hlæhtr-, hlæahter) have been assigned to the β.  forms, although it is possible that they may show (unexplained) reflexes of West Saxon hleahtor  .) The modern standard form goes back to the Anglian form (for the phonological development in Middle English compare discussion at laugh v.), while forms such as Middle English leihter   show the reflex of late West Saxon hlehter   (with development of a glide before the palatal fricative).  The modern standard pronunciation with medial /f/ is probably influenced by analogy with laugh v., as Middle English  /x/ before  /t/ tended to be lost in standard English (compare daughter n.); (it is retained in Scots: compare Scots spellings with medial -ch-  ). See further  E. J. Dobson Eng. Pronunc. 1500–1700 (ed. 2, 1968)  II. §§371, 424. Earlier currency of laughterful adj. at  Derivatives   (in an otherwise unattested sense ‘scornful, derisive’) is perhaps shown by the following apparent example of Old English hleahtorfull   (here used as a noun):OE    tr.  Felix St. Guthlac 		(Vesp.)	 		(1909)	 Prol. 101  				Ac gemune and geþence ælc þara tælendra and hleahterfulra, þa [read þæt] on [wordum] godes rice ne wunað.However, comparison with the Latin original suggests that the word is more likely to represent Old English leahtorfull   (a derivative of lahter n.), in an otherwise unattested sense ‘reproachful, reproving’, although the presence of several other apparent scribal errors within close proximity (in each case involving the introduction of hleahtor   or one of its derivatives) suggests that laughter n.1   was perhaps uppermost in the scribe's mind at the time, and that (irrespective of its aptness at this point in the text) hleahtorfull may indeed represent a genuine Old English word. 1. the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > 			[noun]		eOE    King Ælfred tr.  Gregory  		(Hatton)	 		(1871)	 xxxiv. 231  				Hi habbað sua micle mede oðerra monna godra weorca.., sua we habbað ðæs hleahtres, ðonne we hliehað gligmonna unnyttes cræftes. OE     3  				Wiht [i.e. an iceberg]..hlinsade hlude; leahtor wæs gryrelic, egesful on earde. OE     		(2008)	 611  				Ðær wæs hæleþa hleahtor, hlyn swynsode. a1200    MS Trin. Cambr. in  R. Morris  		(1873)	 2nd Ser. 175  				He..ne stont neure on one stede, Ac sigeð eure..fro lehtre to wope. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 1521  				Mid gomene & mid lehtre [c1300 Otho lihtre]. c1390    in  F. J. Furnivall  		(1901)	  ii. 501 (MED)  				He barst on lauhtre, and loude louh. a1413						 (c1385)						    G. Chaucer  		(Pierpont Morgan)	 		(1881)	  ii. l. 1169  				She for laughter wende for to dye. a1425						 (c1395)						     		(Royal)	 		(1850)	 Job viii. 21  				Til thi mouth be fillid with leiȝtir. 1487    How Good Wife taught her Daughter 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 15 in  J. Barbour  		(1877)	 525  				Nocht lowd of lauchtir, na of langage crous. 1576    A. Fleming tr.  Hippocrates in   283  				When I behold there undiscrete behauours,..I cannot but burst out into laughter. 1598    W. Shakespeare   v. ii. 80  				O I am stable with laughter. 1645    J. Milton L'Allegro in   31  				Laughter holding both his sides. 1651    T. Hobbes   i. vi. 27  				Much Laughter at the defects of others, is a signe of Pusillanimity. 1754    Earl of Chatham  		(1804)	 v. 35  				It is rare to see in any one a graceful laughter. 1793    T. Holcroft tr.  J. C. Lavater  		(abridged ed.)	 xxx. 148  				The physiognomy of laughter would be the best of elementary books for the knowledge of man. 1825    H. W. Longfellow  16  				The silver brook..Slips down through moss-grown stones with endless laughter. 1826    J. Wilson Noctes Ambrosianae xxvi, in   June 755  				The..hubbub o' curses, endin' in shouts o' deevilish lauchter. 1863    ‘G. Eliot’  I. xii. 208  				In the vain laughter of folly wisdom hears half its applause. 1936     23 Sept. 20/2  				The party then settles down to a few hours of drinking, laughter and dancing. 1954    P. Frankau   i. iii. 17  				One could always hear the Duchess coming. She made peals of laughter that sounded like opera. 1979    M. Bradley  81  				Kerwin snorted brief, unamused laughter. 2003    J. Mullaney  179  				It was hard work trying to apologise to him, whilst dying with laughter and trying to hold the steering wheel steady.the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > 			[noun]		 > instance ofOE     59  				Hwær beoþ þonne..þa idelnessa, & þa ungemetlican hleahtras? ?c1225						 (?a1200)						     		(Cleo. C.vi)	 		(1972)	 123  				To underfon fleschliche lachtren. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 615  				His lauedi Diana hine leofliche biheolde. mid wn-sume leahtren. c1400						 (?c1390)						     		(1940)	 l. 1217  				Þus he bourded a-ȝayn with mony a blyþe laȝter. c1440						 (?a1400)						     l. 2673  				With lowde laghttirs on lofte for lykynge of byrdez. 1550    J. Heywood  		(new ed.)	  ii. ix. sig. Fiv  				Better is the last smile, than the first laughter. 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane  f. lvijv  				Then with a greate laughter (he saide) they would haue it so. 1651    J. Saint-Amard tr.  F. Micanzio  sig. B6v  				Whereat the Duke breaking into a laughter, replyed. 1692    R. L'Estrange Life Æsop in   		(1708)	 8  				Whereupon Æsop brake out into a Loud Laughter. 1709    D. Manley  		(ed. 2)	 I. 110  				Because she..did not burst out into a Laughter at his Jests, he concluded her mad. a1774    O. Goldsmith tr.  P. Scarron  		(1775)	 II. ii. 22  				They broke out into a laughter for four or five several times successively. 1840    R. Browning   iii. 98  				Exchanging quick low laughters. 1865     Aug. 226/2  				Then came bounding along another group of girls whose laughters rung through the warm air. 1907     Sept. 377  				Then John's ears became aware Of small articulations in the dark, Queer laughters, as of countless impish glee. 1986    T. Murphy   ii. 63  				An' not able to keep the straight face, Costello roared out a laughter. 2007     		(Nexis)	 12 Mar.  				They murmured in low tones and broke into long laughters. the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > 			[noun]		 > that which causes or is subject of laughterOE     		(transcript of lost MS)	 38  				[Peorð] byþ symble plega and hlehter wlancum ðar wigan sittaþ on beorsele bliþe ætsomne. a1250    Wohunge ure Lauerd in  R. Morris  		(1868)	 1st Ser. 283 (MED)  				Þu..was reowðe to rihtwise, lahter to þe luðere..tu..was unwreste folk of world to hoker lahter. a1450						 (c1412)						    T. Hoccleve  		(Harl. 4866)	 		(1897)	 l. 1690 (MED)  				War aduoutre! it is no pleye or laghtre To don it. a1500    tr.  A. Chartier  		(Rawl.)	 		(1974)	 95 (MED)  				Lorde God, what laughtir and iape war this and the losse of so many sowles had not fallen ther upon! 1598    W. Shakespeare   ii. iii. 3  				It would be argument for a week, laughter for a month, and a good iest for  euer.       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  iv. ii. 168  				Hath Cassius liu'd To be but Mirth and Laughter to his  Brutus?       View more context for this quotation 1676    A. Sammes  465  				They chose rather to be their own murtherers, and so die wilfully, than to be a mock and laughter to their Enemies. 1721    R. Blackmore  lxxx. 173  				To Neighbours we are made a Strife, And Laughter to our Foes. 1746    P. Francis  & W. Dunkin tr.  Horace   ii. ii. 195  				Thou future Laughter to thy deadliest Foe! 1864    Ld. Tennyson Enoch Arden in   11  				All his Annie's fears, Save, as his Annie's, were a laughter to him. 1864    Ld. Tennyson Aylmer's Field in   77  				A mockery to the yeomen over ale, And laughter to their lords. 1911    J. London  229  				He cannot go down without his nose to the grave. He will become a laughter and a byword.a1450    Terms Assoc. in   		(1936)	 51 604 (MED)  				A laughtre of hosterers. 1486     sig. Fvjv  				A Laughtre of Ostelores.1827    P. Cunningham  I. 232  				The loud laughter of the jackass summons us to turn out, and take a peep at the appearance of the morning. 1850    C. Brontë  4 June 		(2000)	 II. 411  				A laughing hyena..every now and then uttered a hideous peal of laughter such as a score of maniacs might produce. 1944    C. Beaton Diary in   		(1979)	 xiv. 122  				They develop a sixth sense, so that they can distinguish every animal step, the calls of the birds, the laughter of hyenas, the yells of jackals. 1972    A. Sanford  xx. 295  				Kookaburras waking me in the morning with their insane laugher. 2010     		(Nexis)	 30 Mar. 11  				New research has shown that hyena laughter encodes complex information about age, status and identity.Compounds C1.   a.   General attributive . 1851    C. de Chatelain 		(title)	  				A Laughter-Book for Little Folk. 1928     4 May 22/1 		(advt.)	  				Two Innocents on a Natal Farm A Laughter Book by W. P. Hewetson. 2000     		(Nexis)	 11 Apr. 4  				I met Dr Kataria on a business trip to Bombay. I saw a laughter book and read it and we took it from there.1840    R. M. Milnes  13  				Each repeated laughter-burst. 2006     		(Nexis)	 19 Sept.  				The..Laughter Clubs blend silly child's play, laughter bursts and yogic breathing techniques into a therapeutic mix.  b.   Instrumental. 1634    T. Heywood  & R. Brome   ii. sig. C4v  				Our sides are charm'd, or else this stuffe Would laughter-cracke them.1745    W. Thompson   i. 2  				Where pleasure rolls her honey-trickling streams, Of blooming health and laughter-dimpled joy. 1887    G. Meredith  113  				A laughter-dimpled countenance.the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > 			[adjective]		 > made radiant by laughter (of the eyes or face)1813    W. Scott   i. xviii. 43  				Laughter-lighted eyes. 1908     June 676/1  				The eyes were brown, and laughter-lighted. 1974    J. Betjeman  16  				Dear hands and feet and laughter-lighted face And silk that hinted at the body's grace.the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > 			[adjective]		 > made radiant by laughter (of the eyes or face)a1847    E. Cook  		(1853)	 44  				Apollo with laughter-lit face. 1917    W. B. Yeats  18  				And when she meets our gaze her eyes are laughter-lit. 1999     		(Nexis)	 25 Nov. 33  				After a laughter-lit spell as a comedy writer's wife,..Hickson returned with her family to Sydney.the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > 			[adjective]		 > made radiant by laughter (of the eyes or face)1826    H. Smith  II. ii. 29  				The..laughter-twinkling eyes of the Frenchman.  c.   Objective. the mind > emotion > pleasure > merriment > 			[adjective]		 the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > 			[adjective]		 > inclined to laugh1592    S. Daniel  x  				Thou..Laughter-louing Goddesse, worldly pleasures Queen. 1645    E. Waller  16  				We finde not that the laughter loving dame Mourn'd for Anchises. 1788    S. Low   i. iii. 12  				If your spirits are depress'd, what so replete with that which can revive them as the laughter-loving Thalia? 1807     18 Apr. 148  				One of those confounded good thoughts struck his laughter-loving brain. 1935     Nov. 32/2  				Joaquin Murrieta was a laughter-loving Mexican. 2005    M. Atwood  xxii. 154  				Modesty was not among the gifts given to me by laughter-loving Aphrodite.1810     May 347  				D. Mandrogenes, ὁ γελωτοποιος, the laughter-maker, or buffoon, played all his tricks and made them laugh immoderately. 1937     27 Jan. 10/4  				There are no half-measures with a piece as light as this. It passes the evening, but as a laughter-maker it misses fire. 2004    S. Little  175  				Whoever is the laughter-maker in the show is expected to throw in several gags of their own.1689    H. Killigrew tr.  Martial   ii. 39  				Mimicks, and Droles, a Laughter-moving Jest [L. mimos ridiculi Philistionis Et conuiuia nequiora uita Et quidquid lepida procacitate Laxat perspicuo labella risu]. ?1734    ‘Pilgrim Plowden’  137  				My imagination is now and then sooth'd into dainty dreams by the aromatick Cloacina's laughter-moving notes. 1836    E. A. Poe in   Apr. 339/2  				Not a broad, forced, loud, vacant-minded joke, but a quiet, pungent, sly, laughter-moving conceit. 1963    T. Munro  v. 47  				And what is the grotesque? It is infinitely varied,..frightful and laughter-moving by turns, as in medieval gargoyles and witches' revels.1814    W. Wordsworth   vii. 313  				A merry journey—rich in pastime—cheered By music, prank, and laughter-stirring  jest.       View more context for this quotation 1877    E. Dowden  (Macmillan Lit. Primers) vi. 66  				Laughter-stirring surprises.  C2.  the world > life > the body > skin > textures or states of skin > 			[noun]		 > wrinkle1867     June 463/2  				There are thought-lines in my forehead, and laughter-lines about my mouth. 1938    M. Allingham  xii. 180  				His light grey eyes were entirely without humour in spite of the laughter-lines beside them. 1991    T. Pratchett  203  				Give or take the odd laughter line and wrinkle, it was Granny Weatherwax to the life. 2007     July 71/3  				If you've ever glanced in the mirror, wishing away your laughter lines, spare a thought for the A-list, whose success hinges on how they look.Derivatives the mind > emotion > pleasure > merriment > 			[adjective]		 the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > 			[adjective]		 > inclined to laugh1874    F. Boyle  ii. 29  				The laughterful, uproarious exchange of scolding. 1898     9 July 39  				A teacher as rich and laughterful, as mendacious and corrupting as life itself. 1998     		(Nexis)	 25 Mar. 16  				The most exciting, colourful, wonderful, laughterful football supporters in the world.the mind > emotion > suffering > dejection > melancholy > seriousness or solemnity > 			[adjective]		1825     18 440  				No unfit haunting place For things of..laughterless beatitude. 1947    H. W. Garrod in  E. Baker  xv. 342  				In our literature, laughter in fact begins with Chaucer. Whatsoever things are ‘Old English’ are laughterless. 2005    J. Gantar  v. 95  				A perfect world could well end up a laughterless place.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).laughtern.2 Brit.  /ˈlɑːftə/ ,   /ˈlaftə/ , U.S.  /ˈlæftər/ , Scottish English  /ˈlɔxtər/ ,   /ˈlaxtər/ , Irish English  /ˈlɑxtər/Origin: Probably a borrowing from early Scandinavian. Etymon: early Scandinavian *lahtr.Etymology: Probably  <  an unattested early Scandinavian *lahtr (compare Old Icelandic (in poetic texts) látr  , although this has a different sense: ‘place where animals lay their young’)  <  the Germanic base of lay v.1   + the Germanic suffix forming nouns which is also seen in laughter n.1Some forms, as well as the pronunciation, are influenced by association with (etymologically unrelated) laughter n.1 Now English regional , Scottish , and Irish English  (northern ). the world > animals > birds > egg > 			[noun]		 > whole number laid  tr.  Palladius  		(Duke Humfrey)	 		(1896)	  i. l. 712 (MED)  				An hen vppon ther eyron me may sette..But lest thyn hennys eyron shuld ought lette, Ley nettelys vndir with, and euermore The laughter last. 1601    P. Holland tr.  Pliny  I. 298  				Pullets lay more than old hennes, but they be lesse, especially the first and last of one laiter. 1667    N. Fairfax Let. 26 Nov. in  H. Oldenburg  		(1966)	 III. 624  				She layd her 2d layter being a knot of eggs... Aug. 28. these eggs were hatcht, out of wch sprang 7 or 8 spiderlings. 1703    R. Thoresby Let. 27 Apr. in  J. Ray  		(1848)	 424  				A hen lays her laughter, that is, all the eggs she will lay that time. 1787    F. Grose   				Lafter [printed Laster] or Lawter, thirteen eggs to set a hen. 1790    D. Morison  68  				Her [sc. a goose] lachter's laid with which she's set. 1808    J. Jamieson   				Lachter, A fowl is said to have laid all her lachter, when it is supposed that she will lay no more eggs at one time. a1825    R. Forby  		(1830)	  				Latter. 1868    R. W. Huntley  47  				Layter, the full amount of eggs laid by a bird. 1869    A. C. Gibson  210  				I hevn't a ne'bour 'ill lend me a lafter of eggs. a1879    W. Forsyth Neighbours i, in   		(1882)	 43  				Some pirds..will pe missin' a sinkle egg oot o' her lauchter. 1893    R. O. Heslop   				The soo hes a good loutor o' pigs. 1928    A. E. Pease  72/1  				Lafter, the complete ‘sitting’ of eggs, of a hen, goose or other bird. 1930    in   		(1960)	 V. 476/3  				[Orkney] A lighter o chickens, o grices. A bonnie lighter o bairns she hed about her. 1997    W. Rollinson  95/1  				Lafter, laghter, brood of chickens; the eggs which a hen sits on during incubation. 2004    T. P. Dolan  		(2006)	 135/1  				Lachtar, clutch of eggs.., flock of chicks.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).<  n.1eOE  n.2?1440 |