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单词 mon
释义

Monn.1adj.

Brit. /məʊn/, /mɒn/, U.S. /moʊn/
Inflections: Plural unchanged, Mons.
Forms: 1700s– Moan, 1800s Môn, 1800s Mun, 1800s Mwun, 1800s– Mon.
Origin: A borrowing from Mon. Etymon: Mon Mon.
Etymology: < Mon Mon, self-designation.
A. n.1
1. A member of a people of Indo-Chinese origin, now inhabiting eastern Burma (Myanmar) and western Thailand but having their ancient capital at Pegu in southern Burma. Cf. Peguan n. 1, Talaing n. and adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > ethnicities > peoples of Burma > [noun]
Mon1798
Talaing1798
Kuki1799
Palaung1860
Wa1860
1798 F. Buchanan in Asiatick Researches 5 235 To the kingdom, the natives of which call themselves Moan, we have given the name of Pegu, a corruption of the vulgar appellation of its capital city Bagoo.
1854 F. Mason in Jrnl. Amer. Oriental Soc. 4 284 Moan, the name by which the Talaings now call themselves.
1932 J. G. Scott Burma & Beyond i. 16 The Khmêr went, or were pushed, farther east,..but the Mōn remained behind, and came to be known to the early merchant adventurers as Peguans.
1971 National Geographic Mar. 356 Masterpieces of lacquer ware... The craft may have originated in China and spread across Southeast Asia to the Mons, who brought the technique to the capital.
1991 Man 26 568 The first essay..posits the existence of proto-Indochinese kingdoms..in north Thailand and south Burma before the Indianization of the area by the Mon.
2. The Mon-Khmer language of the Mon. Cf. Peguan n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > languages of the world > Austric > [noun] > Austroasiatic > Mon-Khmer > south
Peguan1698
Nicobarian1699
Mon1808
Talaing1854
Nicobarese1882
1808 J. Leyden in Asiatick Researches 10 239 Môn.—The Môn language is still used by the original inhabitants of Pegu, who denominate themselves Môn.
1831 Encycl. Americana VI. 561 The Mon is still prevalent among the inhabitants of Pegu.
1854 F. M. Müller in C. C. J. Bunsen Outl. Philos. Universal Hist. I. 389 A list of words given by Dr. Morton, of the Mon or Talien, shows coincidences with Kamboja words from the Mekhong river.
1881 C. J. F. S. Forbes Compar. Gram. Lang. Further India iv. 49 In three savage and more primitive dialects we find further traces of affinity with the Mon.
1939 L. H. Gray Found. Lang. xii. 393 Mōn-Khmēr has six sub-divisions: Central (Mōn or Talaing, Khmēr or Cambodian, Bahuar, etc.).
1972 W. B. Lockwood Panorama Indo-European Lang. 228 The group [sc. Mon-Khmer] takes its name from two of its members: Mon, the vernacular of the coastal districts round the Gulf of Martaban between Rangoon and Moulmein, and Khmer or Cambodian, the state language of Cambodia.
1998 D. Bellos et al. tr. G. Ifrah Universal Hist. Numbers xxiv. 383/2 From this system was derived:..Burmese, which derived from Môn in the eleventh century, used by populations of Pegu before the Burmese invasion.
B. adj.
Of, relating to, or designating the Mon or their language.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > ethnicities > peoples of Burma > [adjective]
Mon1808
Talaing1835
Kachin1892
Palaung1897
Wa1902
Nung1916
the mind > language > languages of the world > Austric > [adjective] > specific Austroasiatic
Annamitic1820
Annamite1843
Annamese1848
Santal1852
Munda1854
Khasi1855
Santalic1875
Mon-Khmer1887
Kol1903
Korku1906
Temiar1933
Mon1939
Vietnamese1947
1808 [see sense A. 2].
1828 J. Crawfurd Jrnl. Embassy to Siam & Cochin China xv. 448 Of the Mon, or Pegu, race, although the Siamese be in possession of no part of their territory, there are a considerable number in Siam.
1873 Jrnl. Asiatic Soc. Bengal 42 i. 34 The people of Pegu..call themselves Mun, Mwun, or Mon... The Burmese, since the conquest of Pegu..in 1757–58, had strongly discouraged the use of the Mun language.
1877 Trans. Philol. Soc. 1875–6 83 Cambojan..has loan-words from Malay, Pali, Annamite, and Mon.
1907 V. C. S. O'Connor Mandalay iv. ii. 400 Under Binya Dala a strenuous effort was made by the Môn people to recover their ancient ascendency in Burma, and restore the glories of Pegu.
1939 L. H. Gray Found. Lang. xii. 394 The earliest Mōn inscription is of 1084.
1948 D. Diringer Alphabet vii. 410 The early Mon character was not only the ancestor of the modern Mon script, but also of the Burmese and some Shan characters.
1984 Jrnl. Asian Stud. 44 244 Traditional Mon society and culture in Thailand, the Mon language, and a description of three Mon villages are presented in chapter 1.
1995 Guardian 28 Sept. i. 18/4 Nowadays, Mon is spoken mainly by the Mon minority in Burma, within which—like the Karens and Shans—they have their own state.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

monn.2

Brit. /mɒn/, U.S. /mɑn/
Inflections: Plural unchanged.
Forms: 1800s mong, 1800s moon, 1800s– mon.
Origin: A borrowing from Japanese. Etymon: Japanese mon.
Etymology: < Japanese mon (14th cent.; 1603 in Vocabulario da Lingoa de Iapam; 10th cent. in sense ‘pattern’) < Middle Chinese. Compare German Gomon (1779 in printed version of text translated from manuscript in quot. 1727).
A Japanese family crest or badge, frequently used in decorative art.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > insignia > [noun] > cognizance > types of
scopperil1486
knot1828
mon1861
1727 J. G. Scheuchzer tr. E. Kæmpfer Hist. Japan I. iv. x. 390 List of the Contraband Goods, none of which the Dutch are suffer'd to buy... Gomon. The Emperor's coat of arms. All prints, pictures, goods or stuffs bearing the same.]
1861 C. P. Hodgson Resid. at Nagasaki & Hakodate 16 These very people most uncivilly and most unreasonably refuse to accept the signet and ‘moon’ of the Imperial Siegoon.
1869 W. G. Dickson Japan 328 The ‘mong’, or crest of the owner, is generally stamped upon the curtain, which has at a distance, perhaps, given the idea of loop-holes.
1878 F. B. Palliser tr. A. Jacquemart Hist. Furnit. 457 Of these princely [Japanese] families we shall give the ‘mon’ or arms most frequently occurring.
1893 A. M. Bacon Japanese Interior x. 166 A kimono of some plain coloured crape with the mon or crest stamped on the back and sleeves in white.
1910 E. Papinot Hist. & Geog. Dict. Japan (1972) 400 The higher daimyō usually had three different mon.
1980 Daily Tel. 22 Nov. 13/5 The mon (or family badge) of the Japanese Masakitsu family comprises four silver leaves..on a gold background.
1997 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 20 Feb. 7/2 The stately tall backs of the chairs, surmounted by oval motifs recalling the mon crests of Japanese nobility, invested the scene with an inviolably regal presence.
2016 A. McClellan Bonsai & Penjing 110 One item I considered important was a logo for the collection—that is, a kind of family crest (mon) such as I had so often seen in Japan.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

monn.3

Brit. /mʌn/, U.S. /mən/
Forms: 1800s– mon, 1800s– mon., 1800s– mun.
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: money n.
Etymology: Shortened < money n.
slang (originally U.S.).
Money.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > [noun]
silverc825
feec870
pennieseOE
wortheOE
mintOE
scata1122
spense?c1225
spendinga1290
sumc1300
gooda1325
moneya1325
cattlec1330
muckc1330
reasona1382
pecunyc1400
gilt1497
argentc1500
gelta1529
Mammon1539
ale silver1541
scruff1559
the sinews of war1560
sterling1565
lour1567
will-do-all1583
shell1591
trasha1592
quinyie1596
brass1597
pecuniary1604
dust1607
nomisma1614
countera1616
cross and pilea1625
gingerbreada1625
rhinoa1628
cash1646
grig1657
spanker1663
cole1673
goree1699
mopus1699
quid1699
ribbin1699
bustle1763
necessary1772
stuff1775
needfula1777
iron1785
(the) Spanish1788
pecuniar1793
kelter1807
dibs1812
steven1812
pewter1814
brad1819
pogue1819
rent1823
stumpy1828
posh1830
L. S. D.1835
rivetc1835
tin1836
mint sauce1839
nobbins1846
ochre1846
dingbat1848
dough1848
cheese1850
California1851
mali1851
ducat1853
pay dirt1853
boodle?1856
dinero1856
scad1856
the shiny1856
spondulicks1857
rust1858
soap1860
sugar1862
coin1874
filthy1876
wampum1876
ooftish1877
shekel1883
oil1885
oof1885
mon1888
Jack1890
sploshc1890
bees and honey1892
spending-brass1896
stiff1897
mazuma1900
mazoom1901
cabbage1903
lettuce1903
Oscar Asche1905
jingle1906
doubloons1908
kale1912
scratch1914
green1917
oscar1917
snow1925
poke1926
oodle1930
potatos1931
bread1935
moolah1936
acker1939
moo1941
lolly1943
loot1943
poppy1943
mazoola1944
dosh1953
bickies1966
lovely jubbly1990
scrilla1994
1888 A. Trumble Mott Street Poker Club (1889) 6 No playee polkel if you no havee mon.
1894 Yale Wit & Humor 69/2 Who in the cold world makes large ‘mon’, And comes back to ‘Trienns’ for fun?
a1911 D. G. Phillips Susan Lenox (1917) II. v. 119 In little old New York,..you've got to have the mon. or you get..the swift, hard kick.
1958 A. Wilson Middle Age of Mrs Eliot ii. 122 I'm only going because she's got lots of lovely ‘mon’ and might leave it to me.
1963 ‘J. Bell’ Flat Tyre in Fulham iii. 30 All that good ‘mon’ down the drain.
1989 B. Roche Handful of Stars i. i, in K. Harwood First Run 204 Hey..no mon, no fun boy. If you want to bet with me put your money down.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

Monn.4

Brit. /mɒn/, U.S. /mɑn/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: monoceros n.
Etymology: Shortened < monoceros n., originally as a graphic abbreviation.
Astronomy.
The constellation Monoceros. Chiefly as postmodifier, designating a star of this constellation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the universe > constellation > Southern constellations > [noun] > Monoceros
unicorn?1768
monoceros1769
Mon1922
1922 Trans. Internat. Astron. Union 1 158 The following resolutions were adopted [at the first General Assembly of the IAU]: (1) The exclusive use of the Latin names of the constellations. (2) The adoption of the three-letter abbreviations proposed by Profs. Hertzsprung and Russell for the representation of the 88 principal constellations... Men Mensa... Mic Microscopium... Mon Monoceros... Mus Musca.
1930 C. H. Payne Stars High Luminosity 298 (table) Z Mon.
1964 D. H. Menzel Field Guide Stars & Planets vi. 248 β Mon is an easily resolved triple.
1995 Astron. & Astrophysics 297 L51/2 The magnetic field in Mon R2 appears well-ordered over scales larger than either of the beam widths.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, September 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

monv.

Brit. /mɒn/, U.S. /mɑn/, Scottish English /mɔn/
Forms: 1900s– 'moan, 1900s– 'mon, 1900s– moan, 1900s– mon.
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: c'mon v.
Etymology: Shortened < c'mon v. (see β. forms at that entry).
Scottish colloquial.
intransitive. In imperative. ‘Come on’: used to encourage or urge a person to continue or proceed with some action or activity; also to express impatience, incredulity, or exasperation. Cf. c'mon v.
ΚΠ
1973 ‘J. Patrick’ Glasgow Gang Observed xi. 102Mon,’ he says tae me, ‘you an' me's hivin' a square-go’.
1985 J. Kelman Chancer 156 Hey Vi—mon we'll go to the cafe across the road!
1993 I. Welsh Trainspotting 54 Eh? 'Moan tae fuck! Whit you oan aboot? ah respond, genuinely fuckin perplexed at the bastard's outburst.
2000 M. Pye Lollipop iv. 144 Moan, Ev, dae ye want a boatil ay beer? Huv a dance wi us..moan.
2016 Daily Record (Glasgow) (Nexis) 8 Dec. (Entertainm. section) 'Mon we'll go and have a wee kerry oan to ourselves.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, June 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
n.1adj.1798n.21861n.31888n.41922v.1973
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