| 释义 | mammetn.Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French maumet.Etymology:  <  Anglo-Norman maumet, reduced form of mauhoumet, Old French mahomet, mahommet idol (12th cent.), a use of Mahomet  Mahomet n., resulting from the common medieval Christian belief that the prophet Muhammad was worshipped as a god. Compare Mahomet n. 1.Several senses have parallels in regional French: with sense  3a   compare French regional (Brittany) mahonet   mischievous sprite, Canadian French mahoumet   evil spirit; with senses  3b   and  4a   compare French regional (Walloon) mawoumet   straw man used to ridicule someone ( >  Belgian Dutch mahomet   scarecrow); with sense  4b   compare French regional (Walloon) mahoumet baby. The word is attested earlier as a surname: Radulphus Maumet (1207).  N.E.D. (1906) enters this under maumet and gives the pronunciation (mǭ·met) /ˈmɔːmɛt/. Now chiefly archaic  and regional . †1. the world > the supernatural > deity > 			[noun]		 > idolc1225						 (?c1200)						     		(Bodl.)	 33 (MED)  				Ich..makede nabugodonosor..makien þe maumez igoten al of golde. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 l. 14583  				Þer-inne he hafde his maumet, þa he heold for his god. c1300    St. Sebastian 		(Laud)	 43 in  C. Horstmann  		(1887)	 179  				Þine maumates bi-leue, Þat ne mouwe helpe nouȝt, for heo beoth doumbe and deue. 1340     		(1866)	 6  				Þe ilke þet worssipeþ þe momenes. a1382     		(Douce 370)	 4 Kings xviii. 4  				He..hewȝ doun the mawmett wodis [L. lucos]. a1400						 (c1303)						    R. Mannyng  		(Harl.)	 190  				She shal noght to any be sette Withoutyn leue of my maumette. The munke seyd he graunted weyl Aftyr hys maumette to do euery deyl. ?a1425     		(Egerton)	 		(1889)	 xix. 86  				Þe kirke..es mykill and faire and full of ymagery of þaire mawmets. ?c1475     		(BL Add. 15562)	 f. 78v  				A Mawment howse [1483 BL Add. 89074 place], ydolium. 1483     		(BL Add. 89074)	 		(1881)	 232  				A Mawment wyrscheper, idolatra. a1500						 (?c1300)						     		(Chetham)	 l. 488  				Wheþure were strenger god in hevyn Or all the mawȝmettes, that ye can neme [read neven]. a1522    G. Douglas in  tr.  Virgil  		(1959)	  x. Prol. 153  				Lat Virgyll hald his mawmentis till hym self; I wirschip noder idoll, stok, nor elf. a1529    J. Skelton Speke Parrot in   		(1843)	 II. 20  				Moloc, that mawmett, there darre no man withsay. 1529    T. More Dialogue Heresyes  i, in   119/2  				The ydolles and mammettes of the paganes. a1600						 (    W. Stewart tr.  H. Boece  		(1858)	 I. 99  				And mamantis als he hes gart mak also, Of Phebus, Diane, and of Apollo. 1605    A. Willet  xxx. 326  				Such images and mammetts were found in Iacobs house. a1625    J. Fletcher Island Princesse  iv. v, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher  		(1647)	 sig. Pppv/2  				Where I meet your maumet Gods, I'le swing 'em. 1647    J. Trapp  (Acts xix. 25)  				Wealth is the worldlings god, which he prizeth as Micah did his mawmet. 1689    R. Milward  43  				Heretofore they call'd Images Mammets, and the Adoration of Images Mammettry: that is, Mahomet and Mahometry.]			c1390    G. Chaucer  749  				Euery floryn in his cofre is his mawmet. c1400    Comm. on Canticles 		(Bodl. 288)	 in  T. Arnold  		(1871)	 III. 38  				Lovynge moore vicis þan virtues, and so þei serven mawmetis. a1500						 (c1340)						    R. Rolle  		(Univ. Oxf. 64)	 		(1884)	 xcvi. 7  				Sum has syluyre his mawmet.society > faith > artefacts > symbol (general) > Christian symbols or images > 			[noun]		 > representing Christ > and the saints1581    J. Bell tr.  W. Haddon  & J. Foxe  309  				If those Mawmettes, and signes of Sainctes, be erected in their churches for none other ende, but to put the beholders in remembraunce of the Saincts themselves [etc.]. 1650    J. Trapp  (Deut. vii. 5) 91  				Those mawmets and monuments of idolatry, the Rood of grace, the blood of Hales, &c. 1827    W. Tennant  91  				Sipsies saw The marble mawments carvit braw Stuck in their niches i' the wa'. society > authority > subjection > subjecting or subjugation > 			[noun]		 > bringing under control > one who is under control of anotherc1390     		(Vernon)	 		(1950)	 18  				Þees is þe deueles Maumet þat haþ vs all wrongliche vsed in his werkes. 1419    in  J. H. Fisher et al.   		(1984)	 122  				This next somer he shal bryng in the maumet of Scotland to sturre what he may. 1459    J. Brackley in   		(2004)	 II. 334  				I knowe wele the iuge, W. Wayte hise mawment. 1548     f. xxxv  				Wherefore she [sc. the duchess] sent Perkyn Werbeck, her new inuented Mawmet first into Portyngall. 1593    G. Harvey  141  				Nash,..Greene,..Euphues,..the three famous mammets of the presse. 3. the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > fairy or elf > 			[noun]		a1425     		(Stonyhurst)	 f. 49v  				Pigmeus, a maumet. 1583    J. Dee Jrnl. in   		(1659)	  i. 11  				There stand a great many of Mawmets, little ugly fellows at the top of the hill. 1600      ii. ii. 60  				Io. What Mawmets are these? Fris. O they be the Fayries that haunt these woods.the mind > attention and judgement > lack of beauty > 			[noun]		 > grotesqueness > person society > leisure > entertainment > toy or plaything > doll > 			[noun]		 society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > puppetry > 			[noun]		 > puppet1461–2    in  H. J. F. Swayne  		(1896)	 8  				Et ij lb. canabis pro crinibus..Et in Tynfoile..Et pro mamettis. a1513    R. Fabyan  		(1516)	 II.  f. clxiv  				The Cytie of Roan..made them a Mamet of a Fatte & vnwyldely as. 1530    J. Palsgrave  244/1  				Maument, marmoset; poupee. 1583    P. Stubbes  sig. Fviv  				Mawmets of rags & clowtes compact together. 1597–8      xxxiii. 186 		(note)	  				These havyng folowed theire vanitie al the night in sekynge there maumet, commonly called the floure of thwell, would nedes bringe the same on a barrow into ye churche in prayer times. 1598    W. Shakespeare   ii. iv. 89  				This is no world To play with mammets .       View more context for this quotation 1609     sig. H1  				Iulius Cæsar acted by the Mammets. 1642    C. Herle  2  				He..sets up..a Mawmet of his owne dressing. 1861    J. R. Wise  154  				This is no world to play with mommets. 1892    S. Hewett  15  				It was at one time customary for village children to canvass the neighbourhood for subscriptions, for materials to make a Guy Fawkes' ‘momet’. 1921    W. de la Mare  89  				Mute as a mammet in his saddle sate The hunched Postilion. 1930    H. Williamson  309  				What was a mommet? I enquired. They told me it was a scarecrow. 1967    H. Orton  & M. F. Wakelin  IV.  i. 200  				Q[uestion]. What do you put up in a field to frighten birds away?.. Mommet. [Somerset, Wiltshire, Devon.] 1970    G. Greer  34  				A full bosom..endears her to the men who want to make their mammet of her.  4. the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > condition of being held in contempt > 			[noun]		 > state or quality of being contemptible > contemptible persona1529    J. Skelton Poems against Garnesche in   		(1843)	 I. 125  				Thou murrionn, thow mawment, Thou fals stynkyng serpent. 1597    W. Shakespeare   iii. v. 184  				A wretched whyning foole, A puling mammet .       View more context for this quotation 1600     L 3 b  				Downe stubborne Queene,..Downe, Mammet. 1608    G. Markham  & L. Machin   iii. sig. F4  				O God that euer any man should looke Vpon this maumet and not laugh at him. 1612    B. Jonson   v. v. sig. M4  				'Slight, you are a Mammet! O, I could touse you,  now.       View more context for this quotation 1630    P. Massinger  sig. B2v  				How the mammet twitters! 1877      i. 23  				He wes olus a flaenowt braggan mamet. 1891    T. Hardy  III. xlii. 33  				What a mommet of a maid! 1932    W. H. Auden   iii. 100  				We're getting a little tired of boys, Of the ninny, the mawmet and the false alarm. 1937    L. A. G. Strong  xvi. 307  				How could you love a mommet like that? 1971    G. Jones  & I. F. Elis  177  				His mouth fell open, his eyes glared under the bloody eyebrows, he shook like a mammet.the world > people > person > baby or infant > 			[noun]		1932    S. Gibbons  v. 69  				Far from those that loves her and cowdled her in their bosoms when she was a mommet. 1949     23 42  				The poor mommet whose father was ‘in trade’ is discernible even on its tomb as ‘a really vulgar babe’. the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Columbiformes (pigeons, etc.) > domestic pigeon > 			[noun]		 > other types1678    J. Ray tr.  F. Willughby  182  				Mawmets, called (as I take it) from Mahomet. 1688    R. Holme   ii. 244/2  				Of Pigeons..Mawmets..exceed all others..from their great black eyes. 1835    P. J. Selby  164  				Turkish or Mawmet Pigeon. Columba Turcica.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2000; most recently modified version published online June 2022).<  n.c1225 |