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单词 longhouse
释义

longhousen.

Brit. /ˈlɒŋhaʊs/, U.S. /ˈlɔŋˌ(h)aʊs/, /ˈlɑŋˌ(h)aʊs/
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: long adj.1, house n.1
Etymology: < long adj.1 + house n.1In quot. 1643 at sense 2b after Narragansett qunnèkamuck. With reference to uses by members of the Iroquois Confederacy compare e.g. Mohawk kanúhses.
1. The grave; the last resting place after death. Cf. long home at home n.1 3. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > burial > grave or burial-place > [noun]
buriels854
througheOE
burianOE
graveOE
lairc1000
lair-stowc1000
lich-restc1000
pitOE
grass-bedOE
buriness1175
earth housec1200
sepulchrec1200
tombc1300
lakec1320
buriala1325
monumenta1325
burying-place1382
resting placea1387
sepulturea1387
beda1400
earth-beda1400
longhousea1400
laystow1452
lying1480
delfa1500
worms' kitchen?a1500
bier1513
laystall1527
funeral?a1534
lay-bed1541
restall1557
cellarc1560
burying-grave1599
pit-hole1602
urn1607
cell1609
hearse1610
polyandrum1627
requietory1631
burial-place1633
mortuary1654
narrow cell1686
ground-sweat1699
sacred place1728
narrow house1792
plot1852
narrow bed1854
a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) l. 8653 (MED) Vnkynde man ys he hardly Þat yn cher[che]ȝerde doþ vileyny; Oure long hous hyt ys to come, To reste yn, tyl þe day of dome.
c1400 (?a1300) Kyng Alisaunder (Laud) (1952) l. 749 (MED) A pytt he dude sone make, And brouȝth hym in his longe hous, and þus ended Neptanabus.
2.
a. A long and relatively narrow building, esp. one used as a dwelling.Probably not a fixed collocation in some early quots.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > [noun]
earneOE
wickc900
bottleeOE
innOE
boldOE
wonningc1000
wanea1225
wonea1250
bidea1300
dwelling1340
habitaculec1374
habitaclec1384
habitationc1384
mansionc1385
placea1387
manantie?a1400
dungeonc1460
longhousec1460
folda1500
residencea1522
abode1549
bield1570
lodgement1598
bidinga1600
sit-house1743
location1795
wigwam1817
address1855
yard1865
res1882
nivas1914
multifamily1952
c1460 (?c1400) Tale of Beryn l. 1926 To hanybaldis house..þey rode; And fonde..an houge house, long & brode, fful of marchandise... He [sc. Hanybald]..seyd þus: ‘Beryn..Chese of þe best of þat yee fynd[en] there; Thurh-out þe long[e] house.’
1485 Croniclis of Englonde (St. Albans) vii. sig. Ev The kyng let make in all the hast along house & a large of tymbre the wich wos called an hall.
1555 R. Eden Disc. Vyage rounde Worlde in tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 218 Bothe the men and women go naked, and dwell in certeyne longe houses.
1622 J. Bonoeil Treat. Art of making Silke 5 in King James VI & I Gracious Let. to Earle of South-Hampton They must chuse a place in a good ayre, and neere the Mulbery trees, and there build a long house, in forme of a Bowling Alley, couered ouer.
1646 J. Temple Irish Rebell. 4 He set up a long house, made of smoothed wattles.
1689 Quakers Art of Courtship viii. 139 Doctors Exercise more than Common Severity towards our brethren which are under their discipline in the Long-house on the South-side of Moorfields.
1716 Hesperi-neso-graphia ii. 7 The Smoak still hover'd over head; And did more Good than real Harm, Because it kept the long House warm.
?1787 A. Dalrymple Explan. Plans in Coll. Plans & Ports in E. Indies (ed. 3) 131 The Fort or Building of St. Jacinto consists of two long houses with three round Bastions.
1805 Ann. Reg. 1803 (Otridge ed.) Antiquities 867/1 Trelouk appears..to have been one of the long houses of Cornwall.
1877 ‘Mrs. Forrester’ Mignon I. 48 A low long house with gabled roof.
1966 G. E. Evans Pattern under Plough v. 72 The Welsh long-houses..with long sides and opposite doors providing a passage from side to side, and dividing the building roughly in two.
2006 Field July 25/3 This is a Grade II listed Devon longhouse with barns, stabling, a separated two-bedroom cottage and paddocks.
b. North American. A long bark-covered structure used traditionally by some Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples of northeastern North America as a multi-family dwelling or a meeting hall. Hence allusively: the Iroquois confederacy (frequently attributive).
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > a house > types of house > [noun] > house of specific shape or style
hall-house1467
longhouse1643
bungalow1676
single housea1684
tower-house1687
villa1755
box1773
cottage orné1774
villarette1792
mews1805
cottage1808
terrace house1817
casita1822
villa dwelling1833
villa residence1833
box-house1846
six-roomer1853
terrace1854
tembe1860
moat house1871
parlour house1871
row house1871
salt-box1876
trullo1898
townhouse1900
colonial1903
semi1912
Cape Cod1916
bungaloid1927
semi-detached1928
ranchette1938
solar house1946
rambler1947
rancher1950
ranch1951
tunnel-back1957
sidesplit1958
two-up-and-two-downer1958
two-up two-down1958
semi-det1960
A-frame1963
townhouse1965
tri-level1965
link house1968
split1970
dormer bungalow1977
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > other types of dwelling > [noun] > communal dwelling > of American Indians
longhouse1643
1643 R. Williams Key into Lang. Amer. xxviii. 172 They set up a long house called Qunnekamuck. Which signifies Long house, sometimes an hundred somtimes two hundred foot long upon a plaine neer the Court..where many thousands, men and women meet.
1670 J. Ogilby America ii. ii. 203 Smith they conducted to a long House, where thirty or forty tall Fellows did guard him, and e're long, more Bread and Venison was brought him than would have serv'd twenty Men.
1751 C. Gist Jrnls. (1893) 51 They marched in under French Colours and were conducted into the Long House.
1753 G. Washington Diary (1925) I. 50 We met in Council at the Long House.
1774 D. Jones Jrnl. 2 Visits to Indians (1865) 76 They proceed to bind them [sc. captives] naked to the post in the long house.
1826 J. F. Cooper Last of Mohicans I. Pref. p. vi Where the ‘long house’, or Great Council Fire, of the nation was universally admitted to be established.
1850 Stryker's Amer. Reg. & Mag. July 342 Ho-de-no-sau-ne, the name of the Iroquois as one people, signifies ‘The People of the Long House’.
1894 J. Fiske Hist. Amer. i. 5 Ground-plan of Iroquois Long-house.
1914 Indian's Friend Dec. 8/1 The Magwas (Mohawks) of the Long House people had told of two divisions of the strangers.
1961 Amer. Heritage Bk. Indians 176/1 Other reports speak of the superior farms of the Iroquoian people..and of their well-built multi-family ‘longhouses’.
1992 A. Fleras & J. L. Elliot Nations Within i. vii. 95 Supporters of the traditional Longhouse system of government, based on traditional chieftainship,..resolutely opposed any Indian Act initiatives.
2007 C. Wilcox Iroquois i. 7 A longhouse was usually 50 to 100 feet long and about 28 feet wide.
c. A large communal village house used by the Dayaks of Malaysia and Indonesia.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > other types of dwelling > [noun] > communal dwelling
brother-house1547
phalanstery1850
familistère1865
familistery1865
longhouse1866
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > other types of dwelling > [noun] > communal dwelling > in Malaysia or Indonesia
longhouse1866
1866 C. Brooke Ten Years Saráwak I. iv. 147 The eldest daughter of one of the chiefs of a long house was found to be in a state of pregnancy.
1894 Sarawak Gaz. 1 May 67/1 The practice of herding together in ‘long houses’ prevents mental and moral improvement.
1912 C. Hose & W. McDougall Pagan Tribes Borneo I. iv The Kenyah village frequently consists of a single long house.
1949 B. A. St. J. Hepburn Handbk. Sarawak xix. 180 The ‘long-house’ system ensures that the individual incapacitated by illness or accident cannot be ignored or abandoned.
1965 C. Shuttleworth Malayan Safari ii. 32 The walls and roofs of the long-houses were built of palm leaves.
2004 M. Crichton State of Fear 502 If you go to Borneo you will see the Dyak longhouses where they still display the skulls of the people they killed.
3. euphemistic. A privy, a lavatory. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > sanitation > privy or latrine > [noun]
gongOE
privy?c1225
room-housec1275
chamber foreignc1300
wardrobea1325
privy chamberc1325
foreignc1390
siegec1400
stool1410
jakes1432
house of easementa1438
kocayc1440
siege-hole1440
siege-house1440
privy house1463
withdraught1493
draught1530
shield1535
bench-hole1542
common house1542
stool1542
jakes house1547
boggard1552
house of office?1560
purging place1577
little house1579
issue1588
Ajax1596
draught-house1597
private1600
necessary house1612
vault1617
longhouse1622
latrine1623
necessary1633
commonsa1641
gingerbread officea1643
boghouse1644
cloaca1645
passage-house1646
retreat1653
shithouse1659
closet of ease1662
garderobe1680
backside1704
office1727
bog?1731
house of ease1734
cuz-john1735
easing-chair1771
backhouse1800
outhouse1819
netty1825
petty1848
seat of ease1850
closet1869
bathroom1883
crapper1927
lat1927
shouse1941
biffy1942
shitholec1947
toot1965
shitter1967
woodshed1974
1622 J. Mabbe tr. M. Alemán Rogue ii. 355 To make wads and wisps for those that go to the Long-house [Sp. para los que iban a dar a la banda] (you know what I meane).
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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n.a1400
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更新时间:2024/11/10 23:10:18