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单词 abject
释义

abjectadj.n.

Brit. /ˈabdʒɛkt/, U.S. /ˈˌæbˈˌdʒɛk(t)/
Forms: late Middle English obiect, late Middle English–1500s abjecte, late Middle English–1600s abiect, late Middle English–1600s abiecte, 1500s– abject.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French abject; Latin abiectus, abicere.
Etymology: < Middle French abject (French abject , †abjet ) wretched, despicable, self-abasing (15th cent. with reference to a person, a1460 with reference to an immaterial object), (of a person) cast down, brought low (c1460), (of an action) despicable, reprehensible (1475), of low social status (1549) and its etymon classical Latin abiectus dejected, downcast, humble, undistinguished, unimportant, commonplace, mean, despicable, base, subservient, use as adjective of past participle of abicere to throw away, to overthrow, to debase, degrade, to understate, undervalue, to discard, to give up, abandon, to disregard, to decline < ab- ab- prefix + iacere to throw (see jactation n.). Compare Spanish abyecto (end of the 15th cent. as †abjecto ), Italian abietto (14th cent.; also †abiecto ). With use as noun compare post-classical Latin abiectus poor or humble person (6th cent. in plural, abiecti , in an inscription). Compare slightly later abject v. and later abjected adj. N.E.D. (1884) gives the pronunciation as (æ·bdʒėkt) /ˈæbdʒɪkt/.
A. adj.
1. Cast off, rejected; cast out, expelled. Cf. abject v. 1. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
?a1425 (a1415) Lanterne of Liȝt (Harl.) (1917) 41 (MED) We þat ben in pilgrimage of þis world, as abiect & oute caste, we schulden make no waast housis for to dwelle ynne.
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) ii. l. 3937 (MED) Cirus..Which off al Asie was..emperour, Now lith he abiect, withoute sepulture.
2.
a. Of a person, an action, a situation, etc.: of low repute; despicable, wretched; self-abasing, servile, obsequious. In later use also as an intensifier: complete, utter.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > humility > servility > [adjective]
go-by-ground?a1300
thrall1398
abjectc1430
manly?c1430
servicious1440
serviceable1483
servile1537
tame1563
slavish1565
demiss1572
submissive1572
cringing1579
fawning1585
incrouching?1593
vassal1594
scraping1599
obsequious1602
spaniel1606
observing1609
deprostrate1610
supplea1616
vernile1623
shrugging1629
wormy1640
compliable1641
thrall-like1641
obeisant1642
inservient1646
truckling1656
cringeling1693
benecking1705
subservient1714
footman-like1776
bingeing1805
sidling1821
toadying1863
crawlsome1904
toadyish1909
crawling1941
ass-kissing1942
c1430 N. Love Mirror Blessed Life (Brasenose e.9) (1908) 80 (MED) He willeth not to be in reputacioun of men, but coueiteth fully to be despised and holde as foule, vnworthy, and abiecte.
a1475 Visio Philiberti (Brogyntyn) in J. O. Halliwell Early Eng. Misc. (1855) 15 (MED) Wer is now that mayne, thou stynkyng and abjecte, That thou wert wont so ryally to fede?
a1500 tr. Thomas à Kempis De Imitatione Christi (Trin. Dublin) (1893) 67 (MED) I am þi most poure seruaunt, and an abiecte worme.
1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Matt. x. f. 19 Unlearned and abiecte men.
1579 G. Harvey Let.-bk. (1884) 87 Lerned philosophers..are the dryest, leanist, ill-favoriddist, abiectist, base-mind[e]dist carrions.
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 99 A verie abiecte man thay halde him that gangis vpon his fute.
1612 A. Stafford Medit. & Resol. 4 Not too proud, nor too abiect.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) iv. i. 105 These paltry, seruile, abiect Drudges. View more context for this quotation
1642 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici 163 I repute my self the most abjectest piece of mortality.
1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker I. 160 I know nothing so abject as the behaviour of a man canvassing for a seat in parliament.
1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 140 To exact..not an entire devotion to their interest, which is their right, but an abject submission to their occasional will.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 527 (note) Howard was an abject liar.
1879 T. P. O'Connor Ld. Beaconsfield 554 Those who in adversity are the most abject, are in prosperity the most insolent.
1891 ‘Q’ Noughts & Crosses 202 He..tried to describe the review to his wife, and made such an abject mess of it.
1967 S. Beckett No's Knife 36 The aversion my person inspired even in its most abject and obsequious attitudes.
1994 A. Gurnah Paradise (1995) 101 After a while Hamid began to worry about this new piety. It was obsessive and abject, he thought.
2004 Independent 8 Mar. 10 Increasing numbers [of elderly people] spend their final years in abject isolation.
b. Cast down, brought low; of low status; downtrodden, desperate. Also: low-lying (rare).
ΚΠ
c1450 (a1400) Orologium Sapientiæ in Anglia (1888) 10 362 (MED) O how desolate schalbe þanne my soule & abiecte passynge alle oþere soulles!
1516 Lyfe St. Birgette in Kalendre Newe Legende Eng. (Pynson) f. cxxiiiiv & hir outwarde apparell was nat after the condicion of hir persone, but moch meke & abiecte.
1592 T. Nashe Pierce Penilesse (Brit. Libr. copy) sig. D Exhalations, drawen vp to the heauen of Honour, from the dunghill of abiect fortune.
1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion xii. 207 Now, both those and these Are by vile gaine deuour'd: So abiect are our daies.
1671 J. Milton Samson Agonistes 169 To lowest pitch of abject fortune thou art fall'n. View more context for this quotation
1729 R. Savage Wanderer i. 399 Rains redundant flood the abject ground.
1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. at Circea They should be planted..in some abject shady part of the Garden.
1752 H. Fielding Amelia II. v. v. 129 If my Fortune had been as high in the World as yours, and you in my Distress and abject Condition.
1840 T. B. Macaulay Ld. Clive in Ess. II. 502 Nothing more than a nominal dignity was left to the abject heirs of an illustrious name.
1854 S. T. Dobell Balder xiii. 56 Lying most humbly weary and abject On the immoveable earth.
1960 O. Manning Great Fortune iii. xvi. 195 He looked so abject that she had not the heart to turn her back on him.
1992 L. Gordon Shared Lives ii. 9 Mrs Gevint was a pretty woman..but a shy and abject manner obscured her prettiness.
3. Of goods or commodities: of poor quality or little value; inferior, base. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1450 (?c1425) St. Christina in Anglia (1885) 8 126 (MED) Þe meet þat she vsyd was foule and abiecte.
a1475 Revelations St. Birgitta (Garrett) (1929) 31 (MED) Cloth þat is litele worth and is calledde of men vile and abiecte is verely feyr anenste God.
1496 Myracles oure Blessyd Lady (de Worde) sig. Dv Be content with grosse metes & abyect clothes.
1666 Elegy on Thomas Glass in J. W. Draper Cent. Broadside Elegies (1928) 105 My Strength is not as Stones, nor Flash as Brass: Why am I broke as Shards, or abject Glass?
1675 R. Vaughan Disc. Coin & Coinage x. 96 Alchymists..knowing that they cannot suborn base and abject mettals, as Copper, Lead, Tinn.
B. n.
1. With the and plural agreement: abject people as a class; the downtrodden; outcasts.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > the common people > low rank or condition > the lowest class > [noun] > persons of the lowest class (collectively)
chenaille1340
offal?a1425
putaylea1425
ribaldail1489
abject1526
offscouring1526
dreg1531
outsweeping1535
braggery1548
ribaldry1550
raff1557
sink1574
cattle1579
offscum1579
rabble1579
baggagery1589
scum1590
waste1592
menialty1593
baggage1603
froth1603
refuse1603
tag-rag1609
retriment1615
trasha1616
recrement1622
silts1636
garbage1648
riffle-raffle1668
raffle1670
riff-raff1678
scurf1688
mob1693
scouring1721
ribble-rabble1771
sweeping1799
clamjamphrie1816
ragabash1823
scruff1836
residuum1851
talent1882
1526 Bible (Tyndale) 2 Cor. vii. 6 He thatt comfortith the abiecte.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida (1623) iii. iii. 156 Or like a gallant Horse falne in first ranke, Lye there for pauement to the abiect, neere Ore-run.
1692 W. Salmon Medicina Practica ii. viii. 227/s It is hid from their Eyes, being only the proper Inheritance of the abject and humble in Spirit, who are the true Sons of Wisdom.
1713 Countess of Winchilsea Misc. Poems 116 But from the Abject and the Weak, Who no important Figure make, What Statesman does not run?
1778 G. Huddesford Warley 19 Such charms has vile gold for the abject and mean.
c1859 ‘Philobiblius’ Hist. & Progress Educ. ix. 122 They withheld knowledge from the poor, the lowly, the abject.
1881 Harper's Mag. July 313/1 The diffusion of happiness, comfort, education, and religion among the poor, the friendless, the abject, and the criminal.
1950 Hispania 33 28/2 In compassionate lines, he voiced his sympathy for the poor and abject.
1994 Buffalo (N.Y.) News (Nexis) 27 Nov. 9 For the truly abject, there's Cosmopolitan's Irma Kurtz. Irma makes everyone feel mentally healthy.
2. A person cast off or cast out; an outcast, exile; a degraded or downtrodden person.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > lack of social communication or relations > exclusion from society > [noun] > rendering outcast > outcast
outcastc1390
outwalea1400
abjection1447
abject1528
overcast1574
rejectament1681
castaway1799
pariah1818
leper1825
cagot1844
Ishmaelite1848
hinin1884
expellee1888
eta1897
Ishmael1899
reject1917
1528 Rede me & be nott Wrothe sig. eiiiiv Wherfore all the wother sectes, In maner reputed abiectes, The observaunt were honorable.
a1535 T. More Dialoge of Comfort (1553) i. iii. sig. A.viii He is not an abiect cast out of gods gracious fauour.
1582 T. Bentley et al. Monument of Matrones iii. 328 O almightie God: which raisest vp the abiects, and exaltest the miserable from the dunghill.
1611 Bible (King James) Psalms xxxv. 15 The abiects gathered themselues together against me. View more context for this quotation
1631 G. Herbert Sacrifice in Temple 36 Servants and abjects flout me, they are witty.
1736 S. Wesley Poems 70 They saw the worthless Abjects lifted high, Empty alike of Learning and of Brain.
1794 D. Bradberry Tetelestai iii. 37 The Abjects crawling from the Folds of Earth.
1820 P. B. Shelley Prometheus Unbound iii. iv. 118 The subject of a tyrant's will Became, worse fate, the abject of his own.
1867 H. Bushnell Moral Uses Dark Things 57 What wonder that men have been deified and set up as idols of religious worship, when souls are only abjects to themselves.
1926 J. Freeman H. Melville 142 A herd of transcendentalists, philanthropists and misanthropes, mental and physical quacks, the abjects of a crude civilization.
2003 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 4 July 25 The church reaches out to that vast universe of outsiders and abjects—junkies, ex-cons, Aids sufferers, the homeless—that society has chosen to abandon.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2009; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

abjectv.

Brit. /abˈdʒɛkt/, U.S. /æbˈdʒɛk(t)/
Forms: late Middle English abiecte, late Middle English 1500s–1600s abiect, 1500s abjecte, 1500s– abject. Also past participle 1500s abgect, 1500s–1600s abiect, 1600s abject.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin abiect-, abicere.
Etymology: < classical Latin abiect-, past participial stem of abicere (see abject adj.). Compare Middle French abjecter , abjetter to abase oneself (a1544, used reflexively), (with change of conjugation) abjettir to disdain, despise (a person) (1596). In sense 3 after German abschleudern to eject with force (1884 in specific mycological sense, in the passage translated in quot. 1887). Compare slightly earlier abject adj., abjection n., and later abjected adj.
rare after 17th cent. Frequently in passive.
1. transitive. To cast off or away; to cast out, exclude, reject, esp. as inferior, unworthy, or repugnant.
ΚΠ
?c1425 T. Hoccleve Jonathas (Durh.) l. 199 in Minor Poems (1970) i. 222 Wel worthy were it me to been abiect ffrom al good conpaignie.
c1450 Assembly Bk. Norwich Guild of St. George in Middle Eng. Dict. at Abjecten The kyng hath graunted to the seid alderman..to remeuen and abiecten al maner of swiche bretheren or sistren of the seid fraternite.
1509 A. Barclay Brant's Shyp of Folys (Pynson) f. xxxiv The holy Bybyll grounde of trouth and of lawe Is nowe of many abiect and nought set by.
1516 Kalendre Newe Legende Eng. (Pynson) f. lxxxiv He gaue great almes to pore folke and endowed the Churche with great possessions abiectyng hymself vtterly fro all temporall thynges.
?1553 (c1501) G. Douglas Palice of Honour (London) 240 in Shorter Poems (1967) 24 We wrechys bene abiect thairfra I wys.
1587 G. Gascoigne Posies in Wks. 287 A Lover being disdainfully abiected by a dame of high calling.
1611 J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. ix. xxiv. 848/1 Dauid durst not touch Saul, though he was abiected by God.
1614 W. Browne Shepheards Pipe i. sig.B5v Well worthy were it me to been abiect From all good company.
1650 T. Venner Via Recta 111 The Spawn of them is to be abjected.
1689 T. Plunket Char. Good Commander 17 He knows not what 'tis to be so abjected Or by his Veteranes so much rejected.
1835 J. S. Hardy Church Eng. its own Witness 15 [The Churches of England and Rome] have received their institution and government from apostolic men; but the one has abjected the truth, whilst the other holds it fast.
2005 Polit. Res. Q. 58 652/2 The common labeling of undocumented border-crossers as ‘illegal’ immigrants is the most obvious way that Mexican immigrants are abjected from the domain of the lawful.
2. transitive. To cast or throw down; to lower, degrade, debase; to subject, subjugate.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > degrading or debasement > degrade [verb (transitive)]
vile1297
supplanta1382
to bring lowa1387
revilea1393
gradea1400
villain1412
abject?a1439
to-gradea1440
vilifyc1450
villainy1483
disparage1496
degradea1500
deject?1521
disgraduate1528
disgress1528
regrade1534
base1538
diminute1575
lessen1579
to turn down1581
to pitch (a person) over the bar?1593
disesteem1594
degender1596
unnoble1598
disrank1599
reduce1599
couch1602
disthrone1603
displume1606
unplume1621
disnoble1622
disworth?1623
villainize1623
unglory1626
ungraduate1633
disennoble1645
vilicate1646
degraduate1649
bemean1651
deplume1651
lower1653
cheapen1654
dethrone1659
diminish1667
scoundrel1701
sink1706
demean1715
abjectate1731
unglorifya1740
unmagnify1747
undignify1768
to take the shine out of (less frequently from, U.S. off)1819
dishero1838
misdemean1843
downgrade1892
demote1919
objectify1973
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) ii. 508 (MED) Thus was Saul..Forsake off God..Abiect also doun from his roial see.
1538 tr. Erasmus Prepar. to Deathe sig. fviiv So againste the ieoperdy of arrogancy, it shalbe a present and redy remedy, to abiect and humiliate hym self with consyderation of his owne weakenes.
1557 New Test. (Geneva) 1 Cor. iv. 10 (note) In abiecting him selfe and exalting the Corinthians he maketh them ashamed of their vayne glorie.
1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) I. 238/2 Such of ye clergy as abiected themselues to be vnderlinges or seruauntes.
1604 T. Wright Passions of Minde (new ed.) v. 181 The eye..may be grauely eleuated vp to heuen or abjected to earth.
a1631 J. Donne Serm. (1959) IV. 315 What phrases of abjecting themselves, in respect of the Prince, can exceed Davids humble expressing of himselfe to Saul?
1874 Galaxy Jan. 113/2 Even yet they cannot see as you do the infinite blessing they enjoy in being subjected and abjected to Yankee rule.
1998 TDR 42 179 In the guise of ethnographic display, Fusco and Gómez-Peña have subjected (even abjected) themselves to induce a homeopathic cure for the colonial disease afflicting their viewers.
3. transitive. Mycology. To discharge or eject (spores or sporidia), esp. with force. Cf. abjection n. 4.
ΚΠ
1887 H. E. F. Garnsey & I. B. Balfour tr. H. A. de Bary Compar. Morphol. & Biol. Fungi iii. 72 The cell which is to be abjected [Ger. Die abzuschleudernde Zelle]..is abjointed singly by a cross septum at the apex of a tubular..sporiferous cell, a basidium or a sterigma.
1923 Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 50 324 The conidium is forcibly abjected by the bursting of the upper region of the conidiophore.
1949 Mycologia 41 688 The term ‘ballistospore’ has been used..to include those spores of the Basidiomycetes that are forcibly abjected at maturity by the drop-excretion mechanism.
2005 R. Maheshwari Fungi 229 The diploid nucleus divides to form four meiotic products called basidiospores that..are abjected outside from a tube-like or a club-shaped basidium.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2009; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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adj.n.?a1425v.?c1425
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