单词 | bail |
释义 | bailn.1ΘΠ society > authority > [noun] doomc1000 strengthOE obediencea1225 bandon?c1225 mastery?c1225 authority1340 bailliec1380 obeisancea1393 baila1400 mastership?a1425 jurisdictionc1425 masterdomc1475 reformation1523 maistrice1526 swinge1531 potentness1581 obey1584 masterfulnessa1586 prevailance1592 covert1596 magistrality1603 command1608 magistery1642 magisteriality1646 sway1765 tenure1871 the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > care, protection, or charge > [noun] > keeping or custody yemselc1175 witing?c1225 yeminga1325 depose1393 baila1400 wardenshipa1400 guard1426 awarda1450 custodyc1450 credence1526 safe custody1536 credit1537 warding1548 guarding1551 guardiance1560 guardance1591 guardagea1616 guardship1629 wardship1631 guardianship1646 guardiancy1864 wardenry1906 a1400 Cov. Myst. (1841) 292 His body is undyr your bayle. 1470 J. Hardyng Chron. xxviii In battaill greate hir tooke and putte in baill. 1489 W. Caxton tr. C. de Pisan Bk. Fayttes of Armes i. xv. 39 So grete a thyng as is the bayll and charge of the noblesse. a1599 E. Spenser Canto Mutabilitie vi. xlix, in Faerie Queene (1609) sig. Hhb Faunus, now within their baile. Π 1292 Britton ii. ix. §3 Cum acun bail de seysine deit estre fet. (When any livery of seisin is to be made.)] ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > arrest > [noun] > custody > type of free keeping1483 free ward1538 bail1581 preventive detention1858 preventive custody1897 P.D.1956 1259 Provisions of Barons in W. Stubbs Select Charters 396 Quod hii quibus traditur in ballium eum habeant coram justitiis. 1331 Act 5 Edw. III viii Et ont este par les ditz Marescaux lessez en bail. (transl. Pulton: And by the Marshalles of the Kings Bench have been let to baile.)] 1581 W. Lambarde Eirenarcha (1602) iii. ii. 333 That no Iustice, nor Iustices of peace, should let to bayle any person contrary to the said statute. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. xxxvi. 85 Admitted to baile if the offences were baileable. 1809 T. E. Tomlins Jacob's Law-dict. (at cited word) To admit any to bail who ought not by law to be admitted is punishable by fine. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > bailing or bail > [noun] bail1466 repleving1470 bailing1542 bailment1554 replevin1588 replevy1607 society > authority > lack of subjection > freedom or liberty > liberation > [noun] > release from confinement unbinding1382 releasing1395 loosing1415 dischargec1458 enlargement1540 release1559 relaxationa1578 unloosing1578 bail1598 loosening1598 releasant1606 enlarge1608 dismission1609 eluctation1627 to let go1631 relaxating1647 unfetteringa1653 disimprisonment1656 disimprisoning1659 absolute discharge1729 disincarceration1831 decarceration1963 1466 in Manners & Househ. Expenses Eng. (1841) 169 Robard Henengham becam sewerte to my mastyr for the bayle of on Willyam Valenden of Manytre that was in the castell of Colchestre. 1509 A. Barclay Brant's Shyp of Folys (Pynson) f. xviv There shall be no Bayle nor treatynge of maynpryse. 1542 Act 34 & 35 Hen. VIII xxvii. §50 The Prenotarie to haue..for the bayle of euery person of felony, twelue pens. 1598 S. Rowlands Betraying of Christ 16 More dead then Lazarus in his stincking graue, When he deaths vaut till fift daies baile indured. 1642 Declar. Lords & Comm. 22 Dec. 6 To some common Goale, there to remaine without Bayle or Mainprize. 1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. IV. 294 The nature of bail is..a delivery, or bailment, of a person to his sureties, upon their giving (together with himself) sufficient security for his appearance. 5. a. Security given for the release of a prisoner from imprisonment, pending his trial. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > bailing or bail > [noun] > bail or security for release of prisoner bail1495 safe pledge1607 1331 Act 5 Edw. III viii Et ne les soeffrent nulle part aler walkerants ne par bail ne santz bail.] 1495 Act 11 Hen. VII c. 7 They [shall]..be put to sufficient baill. 1592 J. Stow Annales 580/1 Giuing liberty to..his prisoners to go vnder baile. 1605 R. Verstegan Restit. Decayed Intelligence x. 328 Putting in bail, to bee freeid or protected (for the tyme) from prison. 1607 T. Heywood Woman Kilde with Kindnesse sig. E4v I am not free, I go but vnder baile. 1671 F. Philipps Regale Necessarium 288 They ought not to be released until they..give Bayl to appear, and answer the action. 1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses II. 146 He had his liberty upon bayle of 40000l. 1726 J. Swift Cadenus & Vanessa 35 That both Parties,..Should..appear, to save their Bail. 1742 C. Middleton Hist. Life Cicero (ed. 3) I. iii. 193 A miserable, needy crew, who had..forfeited their bails. 1862 A. Trollope Orley Farm II. xiii. 98 His client..was prepared with bail to any amount. b. figurative. Security, surety, guarantee. ΘΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > security > [noun] sickerness?c1225 caution1297 plevina1325 suretyc1330 assurec1374 sickerty1405 baila1593 assinat1652 a1593 H. Smith Serm. (1637) 350 Death would take no baile, we are all tenants at will and we must leave..at a day's, at an houres warning. 1626 R. Bernard Isle of Man i. 108 None being sufficient to lay in bayle to answer God for the sinne. 1645 J. Milton Tetrachordon 63 Doubtlesse this man hath baile anough to bee no adulterer. c. to give leg bail: see leg-bail n.1 ΘΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away [verb (intransitive)] > run away or flee fleec825 afleeeOE atrina1000 atfleec1000 to run awayOE to turn to or into flighta1225 to turn the ridgec1225 atrenc1275 atshakec1275 to give backa1300 flemec1300 startc1330 to take (on oneself) the flighta1500 to take the back upon oneselfa1500 fly1523 to take (also betake) (oneself) to one's legs1530 to flee one's way1535 to take to one's heels1548 flought?1567 fuge1573 to turn taila1586 to run off1628 to take flighta1639 refugea1641 to run for it1642 to take leg1740 to give (also take) leg-bail1751 bail1775 sherry1788 to pull foot1792 fugitate1830 to tail off (out)1830 to take to flight1840 to break (strike, etc.) for (the) tall timber1845 guy1879 to give leg (or legs)1883 rabbit1887 to do a guy1889 high-tail1908 to have it on one's toes1958 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away from [verb (transitive)] > run away from of-runOE to show (a person) a (clean or fair) pair of heels (also one's heels)1370 to show (a person) the (or one's) backc1450 overrun1583 run1606 shuna1616 bail1775 1775 J. Adair Hist. Amer. Indians 277 I had concluded to use no chivalry, but give them leg-bail instead of it, by..making for a deep swamp. 1841 F. Marryat Joseph Rushbrook II. i. 10 Given them leg bail I'll swear. 6. a. The person or persons who procure the release of a prisoner from the custody of the officer arresting him, or from prison, by becoming surety for his appearance in court for trial.The bail now becomes answerable with his money, but formerly he might have to give his own person as security, whence the phrase to be or become bail, i.e. security, as opposed to give or put in bail of sense 5.In consequence of the transition of meaning, many phrases are current which are not easily analysed. ‘To say that the magistrate bails the prisoner (see bail v.1 2) is now somewhat old-fashioned. Generally, the magistrate accepts bail, admits to bail, allows bail, or (occasionally) holds to bail, or takes bail. I have also seen grants bail. The regular phrase of the Statute-book is, I think, “the magistrate may admit him to bail.” In 45 Geo. III, c. 92, the magistrate also takes bail, the prisoner gives bail. Bail is also offered by the prisoner, and may be refused by the magistrate; on the day appointed his bail surrender, render, bring in, or produce him in court, or the accused surrenders to his bail. In the latter phrase, there is a notion of his delivering himself up in discharge of the recognizances into which he himself, as well as his sureties, has entered, for his appearance. This idea also colours the later use of hold to bail, admit to bail.’ (F. W. Maitland.) ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > bailing or bail > [noun] > one who gives bail or surety mainpernora1325 mainprizec1390 mainprizer1440 manucaptor1523 fidejussor1539 bail1594 adpromissor1675 manuprisor1695 bailsman1862 1594 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 v. i. 109 My sonnes shalbe my baile. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) v. i. 118 The sonnes of Yorke..Shall be their Fathers baile . View more context for this quotation 1644 J. Milton Areopagitica 21 His bayl and surety. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. xxxvi. 85 If the party bailed made default..his baile suffered as principall. 1677 T. D'Urfey Madam Fickle v. 65 Well, leave 'em with me, I'll be Bail for their appearance to morrow. 1869 J. Martineau Ess. Philos. & Theol. 2nd Ser. 112 [He] must stand bail for himself in the court of truth. b. colloquial. I will go bail: (as an asseveration) I feel certain, I am sure. ΚΠ 1837 Dublin Univ. Mag. Apr. 431/1 I'll go bail Oona never opened her lips to him. 1849 W. M. Thackeray Pendennis (1850) I. xxxi. 302 Yee'll spend it like a man of spirit—I'll go bail for that. 1858 R. J. Macgeorge Tales, Sketches, & Lyrics 112 I will go bail that it is tough as the steak which we had for dinner. 1884 H. R. Haggard Dawn III. xxxi. 326 He won't marry her now, I'll go bail. 1964 ‘F. O'Brien’ Dalkey Arch. xvii. 184 That's one of them new electric mines, I'll go bail, he said. Compounds bail-bond n. the bond or security entered into by a bail. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > bailing or bail > [noun] > bail or security for release of prisoner > bond bail-bond1709 bond1970 1709 Act 7 Anne in London Gaz. No. 4538/1 All Bail Bonds given by the said Ambassador..are utterly Null and Void. 1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering III. xiii. 256 Where shall we find one to draw the bail-bond? bail-piece n. (see quot.). ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > bailing or bail > [noun] > bail or security for release of prisoner > bond > slip of paper bail-piece1768 1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. 291 Which recognizance is transmitted to the court in a slip of parchment intitled a bail piece. Draft additions 1997 bail bandit n. colloquial one who commits a crime while on bail awaiting trial. ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > [noun] > crime > a criminal or law-breaker > other types of criminal felon1297 misdemeanor1533 misfeasor1631 Alsatian1688 cosh-man1869 strong arm1893 street man1904 war criminal1906 Raffles1907 lone wolf1909 muscle man1929 single-o1930 hot rod1936 cosh1937 muscle boy1940 muscle1942 cosh-boy1953 cosh-bandit1954 slag1955 frightener1962 scammer1972 shonk1981 bail bandit1991 1991 Times 20 July 6/1 The study suggests that ‘bail bandits’ are responsible for between 24 and 39 per cent of recorded crime. 1993 Independent on Sunday 3 Oct. 5/7 After a police campaign against ‘bail bandits’..ministers are considering forcing a suspect to prove he would not be dangerous if allowed to wait at home instead of in jail. Draft additions March 2008 bail-jumper n. originally U.S. a defendant who absconds while on bail. ΚΠ 1868 N.Y. Times 23 May 2/6 (heading) A bail-jumper caught. 2007 South Wales Evening Post (Nexis) 18 Dec. 10 A Seasons greetings message is going out to bail jumpers..—turn yourself in or risk facing Christmas Day banged up in a police cell. Draft additions March 2008 bail-jumping n. originally U.S. the crime of absconding while on bail. ΚΠ 1881 National Police Gaz. (U.S.) 9 Apr. 3/3 She was subsequently arrested here at the instance of the Boston police for bail jumping and taken to Boston and jailed. 2007 News (Nigeria) (Nexis) 17 Dec. Mr. Bryant was detained for Bail Jumping. However, he was released the following day after he agreed to appear in court. Draft additions August 2007 bail bondsman n. U.S. a person who makes a living by charging a fee to defendants for standing as surety for their bail. ΚΠ a1911 D. G. Phillips Susan Lenox (1917) II. xiii. 311 I gave Sallie and that little Jew girl who's her side partner ten for the bail bondsman. 1994 Denver Post 4 Sept. f10/4 Her cousin Vinny, a bail bondsman, has a job opening for a skip tracer. Draft additions September 2017 bail hostel n. originally British a hostel providing supervised accommodation for offenders released into the community on parole, probation, etc.; cf. probation hostel n. at probation n. Compounds 3. ΚΠ 1971 Times 20 Apr. 14/8 It would be an undoubted advantage if there were bail hostels where men without fixed addresses could be sent instead of prison. 1995 A. Cretney & G. Davis Punishing Violence 197 Matthew Howell was assaulted in St Paul's, near the bail hostel where he has lived since his release from prison. 2011 Age (Melbourne) (Nexis) 16 Feb. 11 Bail hostels should be set up in Victoria, along with drug and alcohol testing. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021). bailn.2 1. A hoop or ring; a half-hoop for supporting the cover of a wagon or cradle, the tilt of a boat. etc. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > curvature > roundness > [noun] > annular quality > ring > of stiff material hoopa1175 girthc1356 bail1447 garter1556 girse1591 beesc1860 1447 O. Bokenham Lyvys Seyntys 120 My right hand arayid..Wyth a precyous beyl of gold hath he. in Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. (Harl. 642) (1790) 127 Twoe cradlebands of crimsonne velvett and a bayle..for the same. 1529 Privy Purse Expenses Hen. VIII (1827) 11 To the same watermen for fowre bayles for the saied barge. 1681 J. Worlidge Systema Agriculturæ (ed. 3) x. 216 Two small round Hoops or Arches..like unto the two end-Hoops or Bails of a Carriers Waggon, or a Tilt-boat. 1738 Defoe's Tour Great Brit. (ed. 2) I. 148 An Act of Parliament passed in..1736–7..prohibits close Decks and Bails nailed down in the Wherries. 1884 West Sussex Gaz. 25 Sept. 2/10 A capital large rick cloth, with bail. 2. The hoop-handle of a kettle or similar vessel. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > tool > parts of tools generally > [noun] > handle > round bail1463 bulle1483 boul1560 bow1611 loop1691 button1780 cob-handle1873 swing-handle1891 flush ring1961 1463 in S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds (1850) 23 A litell chafour with a beyl and a lyd. 1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 244 About the same vessell [sc. caldron or kettle]..binde this..to the handle or bayle therof. 1744 J. Payne in Philos. Trans. 1740–41 (Royal Soc.) 41 823 A Handle or Bale..by which it may be hung or held up. 1865 E. Burritt Walk to Land's End 460 The old-fashioned bails of our brass-kettles. 1866 W. D. Howells Venetian Life 36 A small pot of glazed earthenware having an earthen bale. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online March 2022). bailbaylen.3 1. plural. Outer line of fortification, formed of stakes; palisades, barriers. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > defence > defensive work(s) > palisade or stockade > [noun] shide-wallc1000 barrierc1380 peel?a1400 bails1523 palisade1588 stockado1608 stockade1614 fraise1775 picket1779 estacade1827 zariba1849 boma1860 1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. xxxviii. 52 The heynows conquered by force the baylles. 1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. xlvii. 66 A lytell skirmyssh before the bayles. 1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. xlvii. 67 They rode in good order, and came to the bayls. 1796 R. Southey Joan of Arc viii. 156 O'er the bayle, The bayle now levell'd by victorious France, The assailants pass'd. 2. The wall of the outer court of a feudal castle; extended to each of the successive walls which separate the courts. Hence, sometimes used for the courts themselves. See bailey n. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > defence > defensive work(s) > castle or fortified building > [noun] > court of castle ward1297 bailc1320 utterwardc1450 utter-court1530 bailey1840 society > armed hostility > defence > defensive work(s) > defensive walls > [noun] > outer wall of castle castle-wallc1175 bailc1320 baileya1400 ballium1773 c1320 Cast. Loue 687 Seþþe beoþ þre Bayles wiþ-alle So feir i-diht wt strong walle. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 10023 Þe baile midelmast o thre, Bitakens wel hir chastite..Nam o bail it hat for-þi For it hir heild als in baili. a1500 (?c1450) Merlin vii. 113 That thei wolde ley siege environ the baile. 1577 R. Holinshed Hist. Scotl. 514/2 in Chron. I The Lord Flemming..fledde out by the posterne gate at the neather baile. 1813 J. Hogg Queen's Wake iii. xvi. 267 Both bayle and keep rang with the din. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > part of vessel above water > [noun] > bulwark bails1558 bulwark1804 1558–1603 J. Nichols Progresses Queen Elizabeth II. 285 One of the watermen..being the second man next unto the bales of the said barge. 1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. 921/2 His barge..with yeomen standing vpon the bails. 4. A bar or pole to separate horses standing in an open stable; a swinging bail is hung at one end from the manger, and at the other from the ceiling. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > [noun] > stabling > stable > barrier in stable trevis1501 bail1844 1844 Queen's Regulations & Orders Army 351 When the horse is deposited in the hold..it is the duty of the ship's carpenter to fix the bails which are to secure him. 1851 Orders & Regulations Royal Engineers (rev. ed.) xix. 96 Battery Stables..70 Bail Stalls..9 ft. by 5½ ft. 1859 J. H. Walsh Man. Brit. Rural Sports 583 With bales horses can be stowed much more thickly than with travises. 1871 J. H. Walsh Horse (ed. 11) xiii. 170 A Gangway-Bail is..a strong piece of oak which is dropped into a mortice in the stall-post at one end, and into another made in the wall opposite. 5. Australian and New Zealand. A framework for securing the head of a cow while she is milked. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > dairy farming > [noun] > milking > framework to hold cow milking gallows1656 bail1847 milking bail1852 1847 A. Harris Settlers & Convicts xiv. 287 Next get up a moderate sized stockyard... Let it contain milking bales. 1847 A. Harris Settlers & Convicts xvi. 345 I..had seen my own cow in his bale, and the milk carried into his dairy. 1859 F. Fuller Five Years' Resid. N.Z. viii. 170 [The heifer] is secured by fastening the bails. 1861 Newcastle (New S. Wales) Advertiser 24 Apr. 1 Next day I was dragged by the neck to a bail, And milked by a hairy-faced man with a pail. 1874 W. M. Baines Narr. E. Crewe x. 225 The former bovine female..would have been impossible to milk without a ‘bail’. 1885 E. A. Petherick Let. The cows are taken to the bails, which may be in the open air, in a shed, or in stalls as in a stable. 1952 G. Wilson Julien Ware i. 5 In the yard outside the bail a second cow..stumbled uncertainly. 6. Of a typewriter: a hinged bar which holds the paper against the platen. Also bail bar, bail roller. ΘΚΠ society > communication > printing > typing > typewriter > [noun] > bail bar bail bar1931 society > communication > printing > typing > typewriter > [noun] > bail bar > roller on bail roller1962 1931 M. Crooks Bk. of Underwood Typewriter xii. 85 The paper is normally held by the Carriage Bail. 1950 M. Crooks & Dawson Dict. Typewriting (ed. 5) 23 Bail. The complete term, namely ‘Paper Bail’, is the name given to the swivelled arm which holds the paper down on to the paper cylinder. 1959 Observer 4 Oct. 15/4 Every typewriter has a ‘bail-bar’ to hold the paper down, and usually this has to be lifted up and down when inserting paper. 1962 Which? Dec. 353 (caption) Paper bail bar. 1962 Which? Dec. 354 The bail bar, which should hold the paper against the platen, was thin and bent easily... Bail rollers on the bail bar are an additional way of holding the paper on to the platen. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021). bailn.4ΘΠ the world > space > relative position > fact or condition of being transverse > [noun] > anything lying transversely > cross-piece, -bar, or -beam slote1485 crossbar1562 bail1575 cross-beam1594 traverse1604 bint1629 cross-yard1634 crown beam1776 cross-tie1813 cross-rail1836 stretcher1844 spall1895 1575 G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 358 Set them vppon some pearche or bayle of wood, that they maye by that meanes the better keepe their feathers vnbroken, and eschue the dragging of theire traines vppon the ground. 2. Cricket. Each of the two pieces of wood laid across the tops of the three stumps which form the wicket. Also attributive, as bail ball = bailer n.2The bails are at present made 4 inches long, turned and shaped on the lathe; but originally the wicket consisted of a single bail, two feet long, laid across two stumps. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > equipment > [noun] > wicket > bail bail1744 society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > bowling > [noun] > a ball bowled > types of delivery or ball full toss1826 long hop1830 twister1832 bail ball1833 bailer1833 grubber1837 slow ball1838 wide1838 ground ball1839 shooter1843 slower ball1846 twiddler1847 creeper1848 lob1851 sneak1851 sneaker1851 slow1854 bumper1855 teaser1856 daisy-cutter1857 popper1857 yorker1861 sharpshooter1863 headball1866 screwball1866 underhand1866 skimmerc1868 grub1870 ramrod1870 raymonder1870 round-armer1871 grass cutter1876 short pitch1877 leg break1878 lob ball1880 off-break1883 donkey-drop1888 tice1888 fast break1889 leg-breaker1892 kicker1894 spinner1895 wrong 'un1897 googly1903 fizzer1904 dolly1906 short ball1911 wrong 'un1911 bosie1912 bouncer1913 flyer1913 percher1913 finger-spinner1920 inswinger1920 outswinger1920 swinger1920 off-spinner1924 away swinger1925 Chinaman1929 overspinner1930 tweaker1938 riser1944 leg-cutter1949 seamer1952 leggy1954 off-cutter1955 squatter1955 flipper1959 lifter1959 cutter1960 beamer1961 loosener1962 doosra1999 1744 ‘J. Love’ Cricket iii. 19 The Bail, and mangled Stumps bestrew the Field. 1799 in Hoyle's Games (1803) 301 The striker is out if the bail is bowled off. 1813 Sports of Childhood Cricket 22 The Wicket consists of two pieces of wood fixed upright, and kept together by another piece, which is laid across the top and is called a Bail. 1833 J. Strutt Sports & Pastimes (Hone) 106 Of late years the wicket consists of three stumps and two bails. 1833 J. Mitford in Gentleman's Mag. Sept. 235/2 Tom Walker laid down a bail ball. 1861 G. J. Whyte-Melville Tilbury Nogo 167 My bails fly upwards; and..I am disagreeably conscious of being ‘bowled out.’ This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online March 2021). † bailn.5 Nautical. Obsolete. A bucket or shallow tub used on board ship, esp. for emptying out water; any small vessel used to bail the water out of a boat. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > vessel for scooping liquid > [noun] ladlea1000 spoocher1294 scoopc1330 lade-bowl1420 laving-bowl1457 bail1466 jet1501 lade-pail1558 lade-gallonc1575 lade-mele1579 spudgel1775 dipper1783 baler1875 bailer1883 tabo1900 1466 in Manners & Househ. Expenses Eng. (1841) 211 My master paid to Perse berebrewer for vj beyles for the spynas vijd. 1790 Coll. Voy. round World I. vii. 157 The gentlemen likewise saw the bail of a canoe..made of a human skull. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. Bayle, an old term for bucket. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online March 2021). bailv.1 I. Immediately from French baillier. 1. ‘To deliver (goods) in trust, upon a contract expressed or implied that the trust shall be faithfully executed on the part of the bailee.’ Blackstone. [See bailment n., bailor n., bailee n.] ΘΚΠ society > law > transfer of property > putting in possession > put (a person) in possession [verb (transitive)] > hand over > in trust upon contract bail1768 c1320 Year-bk. Edw. II 270 A tort luy detient viij escritz, les queux il luy bailla a rebailler a sa volounte.] 1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. II. 452 If cloth be delivered, or (in our legal dialect) bailed, to a taylor to make a suit of cloaths. II. Immediately from bail n.1 2. a. To admit to bail, to liberate on bail; to release (a person) from immediate arrest or imprisonment, on security being given by one or more sureties that the person so released shall be duly presented for trial. Said of the magistrate. archaic. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > bailing or bail > bail or admit to bail [verb (transitive)] mainprize?a1400 to let to bail1454 to let to borgh1482 bail1548 replevish1554–5 replevy1554 repleve1592 replevin1659 manucapt1898 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. civ Al the other, if they would be bayled, to fynde sureties for their trueth and allegeaunce. 1555 Act 2 & 3 Mary (1632) x. §1 Such Justices..as haue authority to baile any prisoner brought before them. 1641 Rastell's Termes de la Ley (new ed.) f. 35v Upon the Bonds of these Sureties..he is bailed, that is to say, set at liberty, untill the day appointed for his appearance. a1715 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time (1724) I. 591 Jefferies was bolder. So he bailed him. 1771 ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra (1772) II. lxv. 300 You have bailed a man..whom the Lord Mayor of London had refused to bail. 1827 H. Hallam Constit. Hist. Eng. I. viii. 455 Charles..told them he was content the prisoners should be bailed. ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > imprison [verb (transitive)] > liberate from bail1581 spring1900 1581 J. Studley tr. Seneca Hercules Oetæus v, in T. Newton et al. tr. Seneca 10 Trag. f. 216v Hath hell no power to hold thy sprite..Or else hath Pluto baalde thee out? 1591 R. Greene Second Pt. Conny-catching sig. F4 Sirra see if your pick locks will serue the turne to bale you hence. 1600 S. Nicholson Acolastus his After-witte sig. D3 It's hard to bayle imprisoned thoughts againe. 3. To procure the liberation of (any one) from prison or arrest, by becoming bail or security for him. (To bail out implies that he is already in prison.) Also figurative. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > bailing or bail > bail or admit to bail [verb (transitive)] > go bail for borrowa1300 to pledge out1446 bail1587 1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. Contin. 1353/1 A woman..whome the same Bruistar had bailed out of Bridewell. 1594 W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus ii. iii. 299 Thou shalt not baile them, see thou follow me. View more context for this quotation 1642 T. Fuller Holy State i. iv. 11 The dearest Husband cannot bail his wife when death arrests her. 1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1752 I. 134 [Garrick:] I shall have my old friend to bail out of the Round-house. a1832 J. Mackintosh Hist. Revol. Eng. (1834) ix. 260 Twenty-eight peers were prepared to bail them, if bail should be required. 1859 E. C. Gaskell Round the Sofa 58 I offer to bail the fellow out, and to be responsible for his appearance at the sessions. 4. figurative. To be security or pledge for; to secure, guarantee, protect. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > make safe or secure [verb (transitive)] > assure (a person) of safety sicker1297 warrant1530 bail1587 1587 J. Higgins Mirour for Magistrates (new ed.) Madan xii. 4 Grace and prudence bayles our carefull bandes. 1627 R. Sanderson Ten Serm. 354 This stranger, this Lott,..hath bayled you hitherto, and giuen you protection. a1659 F. Osborne Mem. Reigns Elizabeth & James (1673) 464 Let the Proverb As sure as Check bayl me from the least suspicion of hyperboly. Draft additions March 2009 transitive. to bail out: to release or rescue (a person, business, etc.) from (esp. financial) difficulty or crisis. Also reflexive. [The financial context of early evidence, in which money is the means by which rescue is effected, suggests that this sense probably belongs here. However the influence of bail v.4 b is also evident; see, for example, the use of the spelling bale , at bale v.3 Additions b, and the note at that sense.] ΚΠ 1916 H. Mearns Richard Richard xx. 350 We're going to pay off the debts, liquidate the mortgage, and set the Wells family on its feet—bail 'em out, in short. 1932 Creation of Syst. Federal Home Loan Banks (U.S. Senate Comm. on Banking & Currency) 228 They should purchase some additional stock, if I may use the term, to bail out the Government's investment in the home loan banks. 1963 J. N. Harris Weird World Wes Beattie (1966) xviii. 182 Gadwell and Jackson made a fortune. They bailed themselves out, and their other enterprises began to prosper. 2003 Chatelaine Jan. 20/2 Bailing people out of bad situations that they have repeatedly dug themselves into is a bad idea. 2009 Press (Christchurch, N.Z.) (Nexis) 21 Jan. 4 The Government is eyeing a list of key businesses it would bail out if the deepening economic crisis saw bank funding dry up. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021). bailv.2 ? Obsolete. To hoop, gird. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > fasten [verb (intransitive)] bail1548 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. cxiiii Then came the quene in a litter of white clothe of golde not couered nor bayled. 1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. K Close soldered, and bailde about with yron. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online June 2018). bailv.3 1. To confine. rare. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > confine [verb (transitive)] beloukOE loukOE sparc1175 pena1200 bepen?c1225 pind?c1225 prison?c1225 spearc1300 stopc1315 restraina1325 aclosec1350 forbara1375 reclosea1382 ward1390 enclose1393 locka1400 reclusea1400 pinc1400 sparc1430 hamperc1440 umbecastc1440 murea1450 penda1450 mew?c1450 to shut inc1460 encharter1484 to shut up1490 bara1500 hedge1549 hema1552 impound1562 strain1566 chamber1568 to lock up1568 coop1570 incarcerate1575 cage1577 mew1581 kennel1582 coop1583 encagea1586 pound1589 imprisonc1595 encloister1596 button1598 immure1598 seclude1598 uplock1600 stow1602 confine1603 jail1604 hearse1608 bail1609 hasp1620 cub1621 secure1621 incarcera1653 fasten1658 to keep up1673 nun1753 mope1765 quarantine1804 peg1824 penfold1851 encoop1867 oubliette1884 jigger1887 corral1890 maroon1904 to bang up1950 to lock down1971 1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets cxxxiii. sig. H4v Prison my heart in thy steele bosomes warde, But then my friends heart let my poore heart bale, Who ere keepes me, let my heart be his garde. View more context for this quotation 1836 W. Hamilton in Edinb. Rev. Jan. 450 The infinite spirit does not bail itself under proportion and number. 2. To secure the head of a cow in a ‘bail’ while she is milked. (One leg is also usually secured.) Usually with up. Australian and New Zealand. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > [verb (transitive)] > tether renewc1450 tether1483 stake1544 picket1729 headline1800 flit1816 hang1835 to rack up1843 bail1846 to hang up1858 bush1871 manger1905 1846 C. J. Pharazyn Jrnl. 25 Aug. (MS.) 54 Helped George in bailing up Durham [a cow]. 1853 J. Rochfort Adventures Surveyor iii. 24 We were just in time to see his men bailing up some cattle [at the station]; i.e. the cow is made to put her head between two posts, when a bar slides across the space and catches her by the neck, rendering it impossible to get her head back. 1860 R. Donaldson Bush Lays 14 A young cow must be bailed. a1885 Mod. (from E. A. Petherick) ‘Have you bailed up the cows?’ ‘Yes, they're bailed up.’ 1888 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Robbery under Arms I. vii. 89 She could frighten a wildish cow, and bail up anything that would stay in a yard with her. 1906 E. W. Elkington Adrift in N.Z. i. 16 The cows..refused to be bailed up. 1950 N.Z. Jrnl. Agric. Sept. 268 After the heifer has been bailed in the normal way the board is swung into position. 3. (Originally said of Australian bushrangers.) To ‘stick up’ travellers in order to rob them; to ‘corner’ a wild boar (or other hunted animal); (in weakened sense) to detain (a person); also transferred. Also intransitive, to surrender (by throwing up the arms). Usually with up. Australian and New Zealand. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > defeat > be defeated [verb (intransitive)] > surrender to cry (or say) creanta1250 to yield oneself creanta1250 to do (also put) oneself in (also to) a person's mercya1325 yieldc1330 recray1340 summisec1450 render1523 amain1540 surrender1560 to throw down one's arms (also weapons, etc.)1593 articulate1595 to yield (also bow oneself) to (also upon) mercy1595 to give grass1597 capitulate1601 to cry cravena1634 to lower or strike one's flag1644 bail1840 hands-up1879 kamerad1914 the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > rob [verb (transitive)] > rob on the highway toby1819 bail1840 rumpad1895 the world > food and drink > hunting > hunt [verb (transitive)] > hunt down or bring to bay stallc1400 to set up1608 to run down1650 to hunt down1711 to tire down1835 to stick up1850 bail1872 society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restrain [verb (transitive)] > from going on or away stayc1440 retainc1515 to keep ungone1572 keepa1627 bail1879 1840 Sydney Herald 31 Jan. 2/4 Only think of one man [sc. a bushranger] bailing up the master and twelve men. 1853 E. Clacy Lady's Visit Gold Diggings Austral. xvi. 235 But can picture their horror when ordered to ‘bail up’ by a party of Australian Turpins. 1855 W. Howitt Land, Labour & Gold II. xxxix. 309 So long as that is wrong, the whole community will be wrong, — in colonial phrase, ‘bailed up’ at the mercy of its own tenants. 1872 Lady M. A. Barker in D. M. Davin N.Z. Short Stories (1953) 25 Our head shepherd recognized an old enemy in the dead boar, and declared that he and his dogs had bailed him up unsuccessfully ‘many a time and oft’. 1879 W. J. Barry Up & Down xii. 112 She bailed me up, and asked me if I was going to keep my promise and marry her? 1880 Argus (Melbourne) 22 July 1/7 We were bailed up by an armed man on horseback. 1880 in Leisure Hour (1885) 197 ‘Bail up! Throw up your arms, I'm Ned Kelly!’ 1885 H. Finch-Hatton Advance Australia! vii. 105 A little further on the boar ‘bailed up’ on the top of a ridge. 1888 A. H. Duncan Wakatipians x. 105 We are bailed up by the snow, and look like frozen Esquimaux. 1894 J. K. Arthur Kangaroo & Kauri II. iii. 98 The pigs will oftentimes ‘bale up’, or stop, and with their back to a rock, tree, or other obstacle, keep two or more dogs at bay for a long time. 1894 H. Nisbet Bush Girl's Romance 144 Reginald..acted like a wise man and ‘bailed up’, that is, he dropped his knife and threw up his hands as a sign of his submission. 1895 G. Chamier South-Sea Siren xiv. 205 He was immediately ‘bailed up’ [by the surveyors], and made to dismount against his will to partake of some refreshment. 1900 D. McK. Wright Wisps of Tussock 50 He bailed me up straight for a shilling. 1904 M. Cradock Sport in N.Z. i. iii. 67 Unless he [sc. the pig] is a peculiarly obstinate beast the dogs very soon ‘bail him up’ again. 1911 Chambers's Jrnl. 4 Mar. 222/2 The dogs have ‘bailed’ a fighting old boar in a rock-cleft. 1930 E. Wallace White Face xiii. 213 ‘Bail up!’ It was an expression of the old Australian bushrangers. It's still used by the hold-up men in Australia. 1943 F. Davison in Coast to Coast 1942 194 I didn't like the colour of those who had him bailed up. 1946 F. D. Davison Dusty (1947) ix. 94 The border collie's shrill barking when he had a goanna bailed up always brought him to the scene. 1960 B. Crump Good Keen Man 84 I couldn't see eye-to-eye with Jim on the matter of going in on bailed boars with a slasher. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2020). bailv.4 Now often less correctly bale v.3 To lade or throw water out of a boat, etc., with buckets (formerly called bails), pails, basins, or other vessels. a. To bail the water (out). ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > other nautical operations > [verb (transitive)] > bail scoopc1330 lade1340 empt1555 free1612 bail1614 bale1692 1614 S. Purchas Pilgrimage (ed. 2) ix. xiv. 911 They bailed and pumped two thousand tuns, and yet were ten foot deep. 1622 R. Hawkins Observ. Voiage South Sea lxiii. 157 In clearing and bayling the water. 1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia v. 174 Buckets..to baile out the water. 1829 F. Marryat Naval Officer II. i. 14 One [man] to bail the water out. b. To bail the boat (out). ΚΠ 1840 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast xviii. 50 By the help of a small bucket and our hats we bailed her out. 1841 G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians II. xlviii. 111 Ladles to bail them out. c. absol. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > other nautical operations > [verb (intransitive)] > specific damage limitation operations bail1624 to trench the ballast1627 fother1800 1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia v. 174 Bailing and pumping three daies and three nights without intermission. 1682 Sir J. Berry in London Gaz. No. 1720/7 Still working with the Pumps and Bailing, but to no purpose. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2020). bailv.5 1. to bail out. a. intransitive. Originally U.S. Of a person: to make an emergency descent by parachute from an aeroplane. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > parachuting > parachute [verb (intransitive)] > jump out of aircraft > in emergency to bail out1925 to take to or hit the silk1933 to hit the silk1941 to step out1942 to punch out1964 1925 Oakland (Calif.) Tribune 1 Sept. 2 b/3 The..pilot who has to ‘bail out’ hurriedly from a crippled or burning plane. 1930 C. J. V. Murphy Parachute 272 Some say the pilot ‘bailed out’ the moment he went into the spin. 1939 F. D. Tredrey Pilot's Summer 28 If you bale out and land in water..a smart rap will release the whole lot and you can swim free. 1983 J. D. Harvey Tumbling Mirth (1986) 95 I remember putting soap, toothpaste, toilet paper, and canned goods inside my flying suit. If I had to bail out I was determined to be ready for anything. 2002 G. Mccafferty They had no Choice vii. 52 He bailed out far too low for his parachute to deploy fully. b. intransitive. colloquial. To leave hurriedly; to escape an unpleasant situation or abandon a burdensome responsibility. Also with of or on. ΚΠ 1941 R. Riskin Meet John Doe in Six Screenplays (1997) 623 Boy Midget. Come on, Snooks—you better bail out. Girl Midget. Goodbye, Mr. Doe! 1970 N. Armstrong et al. First on Moon x. 239 The computer just bails out and starts over at the top but drops off the things at the bottom which are not important. 1976 T. Murphy & N. O'Donoghue On Outside in T. Murphy Plays: 4 (1989) 190 I'm not sticking around here much longer. England. I'm bailing out of that lousy job. 1976 J. Morris How Mad Tulloch was taken Away i. 8 Where's Mary?.. She baled out nearly an hour ago. 1984 Times 24 May 5/6 European banks were now bailing out as fast as the Japanese. 2001 J. Murphy Kings of Kilburn High Road ii, in Two Plays 64 Ah jaysus Maurteen..don't you go now..don't you bail out on me too. c. intransitive. Originally and chiefly Surfing. To jump or dive off a surfboard in order to avoid injury when a fall seems imminent; to make a similar jump from a bicycle, skateboard, etc. ΚΠ 1962 T. Masters Surfing made Easy 64 Bailing out, getting off and away from the surfboard on purpose. 1965 P. L. Dixon Compl. Bk. Surfing 142 If the dory broaches in the surf line and turns over, bail out and get clear of oars and falling boat. a1970 S. Afr. Surfer 1 ii. 27 in Stud. in Eng. (Univ. Cape Town) (1970) 1 32 Some kook dropped in on my best wave. He pearled as I came through a hot section. I had to bale out. 1976 J. Grant Skateboarding iv. 38 You want to start by riding a slope that suits your limits, so that you can bail out reasonably safely by jumping off the board and running. 2005 San Diego Union-Tribune (Nexis) 16 June d10 It's a lot harder to bail out on a bike than a surfboard. d. intransitive. Baseball. Of a batter: to step away from a pitch, either instinctively or deliberately. ΚΠ 1964 Oakland (Calif.) Tribune 29 Apr. e39/6 It was he who suggested the throw-at-him drill to Dark, Lavagetto having used it before with other batters who bailed out too slowly. 1985 Chicago Tribune (Nexis) 19 Apr. (Sports section) 1 I get locked in and concentrate when a lefty is on the mound and I don't bail out. 1992 N. Ryan & J. Jenkins Miracle Man iv. 58 I struck them out because they were up there at the edge of the batter's box on their toes, ready to bail out. 2. slang (originally North American). a. intransitive. = sense 1b. Also with on. ΚΠ 1977 G. F. R. Filosa Surfer's Almanac 181 Bail,..to leave, depart, exit. 1982 M. Pond Valley Girl's Guide to Life 51 When you skip school.., it's cool to go, ‘like, I bailed, man.’ Or when you leave a party, you go, ‘Let's bail.’ 2002 Premiere June 61/2 She studied kinesiology for a year, then bailed and headed to Europe for four years of modeling. b. intransitive. In Skateboarding and similar sports: to fall, esp. deliberately in order to avoid injury when a worse fall seems imminent; (also) to jump from one's board, etc., for this purpose. Also transitive: to abandon the execution of (a manoeuvre). Cf. sense 1c. ΚΠ 1984 San Francisco Examiner & Chron. 2 Sept. (Calif. Living Suppl.) 20/2 Bail, to fall either while skating or walking. 1988 Toronto Star 13 Nov. h7 The first obstacle for a street boarder, however, is getting used to skating backwards, downhill. Then there's learning to ‘bail’—wipe out. 1997 Prevention (Electronic ed.) Apr. Newer bladers should learn to crash in grass before they hit the roads..,and should learn to always look for a safe place to bail. 2001 Adrenalin No. 9. 157 (advt.) You're standing on the platform with your knees trembling. And you bail tricks that you normally always manage. 2004 T. Donaldson BMX Trix v. 92/2 If you have to bail, it's best to let go of the bike so you can run or slide down the back side of the jump. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2022). < n.1a1400n.21447n.3c1320n.41575n.51466v.11548v.21548v.31609v.41614v.51925 |
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