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单词 onion
释义

onionn.1

Brit. /ˈʌnjən/, U.S. /ˈənj(ə)n/, Bermudian English /ˈɒnjən/, /ˈʌnjən/
Forms:

α. Middle English honȝon, Middle English hunyn, Middle English noynen, Middle English onȝon, Middle English onȝone, Middle English onyone, Middle English onyoun, Middle English onyounne, Middle English oyenoun, Middle English oygnon, Middle English oyneȝoun, Middle English oynen, Middle English oynenon, Middle English oyneon, Middle English oyneoun, Middle English oynioun, Middle English oynon, Middle English oynoun, Middle English oynownd, Middle English oynyen, Middle English oynyn, Middle English unȝon, Middle English unioun, Middle English unyonn, Middle English vniown, Middle English vniune, Middle English vnnan, Middle English vnon, Middle English–1500s unyon, Middle English–1500s vnyon, Middle English–1600s oynion, Middle English–1700s onyon, Middle English–1700s oynyon, 1500s onione, 1500s onnyon, 1500s vnion, 1500s yoynion, 1500s– onion, 1600s oignion, 1600s oinion, 1600s ongon, 1600s union; English regional 1800s– ownion (Devon), 1800s– unjun (Lincolnshire); also Scottish pre-1700 ȝungeon, pre-1700 oignon, pre-1700 oineyan, pre-1700 onȝeon, pre-1700 onȝion, pre-1700 onȝoon, pre-1700 onȝown, pre-1700 onoign, pre-1700 onon, pre-1700 ononion, pre-1700 onyeon, pre-1700 onyeoun, pre-1700 onyon, pre-1700 onyoun, pre-1700 oynion, pre-1700 oynyeon, pre-1700 unȝeon, pre-1700 unȝeoun, pre-1700 unȝone, pre-1700 ungyeon, pre-1700 ungyeoun, pre-1700 unyean, pre-1700 unyown, pre-1700 unyun, pre-1700 vneȝeon, pre-1700 vnȝeone, pre-1700 vnȝeoun, pre-1700 vnȝeoune, pre-1700 vnȝon, pre-1700 vnȝone, pre-1700 vnȝoun, pre-1700 vnȝown, pre-1700 vngyeoun, pre-1700 vnion, pre-1700 vnyean, pre-1700 vnyeon, pre-1700 vnyeoun, pre-1700 vnyone, pre-1700 vunȝon, pre-1700 wnȝounn, pre-1700 wonyeon, pre-1700 wyngȝeoin, pre-1700 wyngȝeone; N.E.D. (1902) also records a form late Middle English oyneuon.

β. Middle English eyngnon, late Middle English ynon, 1500s ynion, 1500s ynnion, 1500s–1600s inion; English regional (chiefly southern) 1700s–1800s ingan, 1700s– inion, 1800s inggun, 1800s inian, 1800s injen, 1800s injyen, 1800s innion, 1800s innon, 1800s– einyun, 1800s– ingen, 1800s– ingeon, 1800s– ingin, 1800s– ingon, 1800s– ingun, 1800s– inin, 1800s– iniun, 1800s– injin, 1800s– inon, 1800s– inun, 1800s– inyon, 1900s– hingin, 1900s– ingyun, 1900s– innin; Scottish pre-1700 angȝeoun, pre-1700 engȝeoun, pre-1700 ingeon, pre-1700 inȝeon, pre-1700 ingeoun, pre-1700 inȝeoun, pre-1700 ingȝeon, pre-1700 ingȝeoun, pre-1700 ingȝon, pre-1700 ingȝoun, pre-1700 ingoin, pre-1700 inȝoin, pre-1700 ingone, pre-1700 inȝone, pre-1700 ingown, pre-1700 ingyeon, pre-1700 ingyeoun, pre-1700 ingyone, pre-1700 ingyoun, pre-1700 inyon, pre-1700 yngȝon, pre-1700 ynȝoin, pre-1700 1800s ingon, 1700s– ingan, 1800s ingin', 1800s ingun, 1900s– eengan (northern and north-eastern), 1900s– engan (northern and north-eastern), 1900s– ingin; U.S. regional (chiefly southern and south Midland) 1700s–1800s ingyon, 1700s–1800s inion, 1800s ingin, 1800s inyan, 1800s inyin, 1800s inyon, 1800s inyun, 1800s– ingen, 1800s– ingun, 1900s– aingern, 1900s– engern, 1900s– ineon, 1900s– ingan, 1900s– ingern, 1900s– ingon, 1900s– yingin; Irish English (western) 1800s inyan.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French vngeon, unniun, oynoun, oignon.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman vngeon (1130: see below), unniun (c1190),hoinnon, hoynun, huniun, hunnun, oignon, oingnun, oinion, oinon, oinoun, oinun, ongnun, oynnun, oynoin, oynun, uniun (all 13th cent.), oynoun (first half of the 14th cent. or earlier), and Old French, Middle French, French oignon onion (c1230 or earlier in Old French; also hunion (c1200), ognon (1275)), pearl (1370 in Middle French; also in Anglo-Norman in this sense as uniun ), bulb (1538), bunion (1701; 1611 in Cotgrave in oignon du pied ) < classical Latin ūniōn- , ūniō a large single pearl, also a rustic Roman name for a single onion (see below) < ūnus one (see one adj.) + -iō -ion suffix1. Compare Old Occitan uignon, ignon onion. Compare post-classical Latin oygnunus, oynonus (1254, 1346 in British sources; from Anglo-Norman or French).According to the classical Latin agricultural writer Columella, the peasants used ūniō for a certain variety of onion because it put forth no shoots, i.e. it represented a single entity. The application of the word to a pearl may represent an independent derivation from ūnus one, alluding to the fact that it was worn alone, or it may be a transfer from the sense ‘onion’, with reference to the similarity in shape. With the β. forms compare e.g. mither , variant of mother n.1, brither , variant of brother n. and int., and hinnie , variant of honey n. Regional pronunciations in (broadly) /ʌɪ/ and /ɔɪ/ as well as /ɪ/ are recorded for southern counties of England, and these may be represented by some of the β. spellings. In form noynen showing metanalysis (see N n.). With forms with -ng- , -nȝ- , etc., for the French palatal nasal consonant /ɲ/ compare discussion s.v. N n. Examples such as the following from the 12th and 13th centuries should probably be taken as showing the Anglo-Norman rather than the Middle English word:1130 in Pipe Roll 31 Henry I (1929) 144 Et In Harengs & Vngeons & Oleo..conductu usque ad Vdestoc viij li.1225 in T. D. Hardy Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum (1844) II. 90 De nave..carcata weida & allece & oynoins..allece & weida & oinoins.
1. (a) The edible rounded bulb of Allium cepa, which consists of fleshy concentric leaf-bases with a strong pungent flavour and smell, varying in colour from dark red to white, and is used as a culinary vegetable, eaten raw, cooked, or pickled; also onion bulb (see Compounds 1a). (b) The plant Allium cepa itself (family Liliaceae or Alliaceae), with long rolled or strap-like leaves and spherical heads of flowers, which is a cultigen that perhaps originated in central Asia and is now widely grown in most climates.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > onion, leek, or garlic > [noun] > onion
onion1356
bulb1568
faverel1597
violet1890
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > onion, leek, or garlic > onion
onion1356
bulb1568
faverel1597
violet1890
α.
1356–7 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1899) II. 558 In Cepis et unyonnsede.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) Num. xi. 5 Þe leke & þe vnonys [a1425 Corpus Oxf. vniowns; a1425 L.V. oyniouns] & þe garlekys.
c1387–95 G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. 634 Wel loued he garlek, oynons [v.rr. oynyons, onyounnys, onyons] and eek lekes.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 221 An onyoun hatte Cepa oþer cepe & is an herbe þat haþ al his vertue in þe roote and in þe seed.
a1425 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 645 Hoc sepe, honȝon.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 89 An Onȝone, bilbus.
1522 J. Skelton Why come ye nat to Courte 368 What here ye of Burgonyons And the Spaniardes' onyons?
?1542 H. Brinkelow Complaynt Roderyck Mors xxiv. sig. G7v As moch for that purpose, as to lay an vnyon to my lytel fyngar for the tothe ache.
a1580 Chron. Fortirgall in C. N. Innes Black Bk. Taymouth (1855) 147 Ane oynion is helssum to annoynt the place that is bittin vith ane madde dog.
1616 B. Holyday tr. Persius Sat. iv. sig. C8v A coated oignion then with salt hee eates.
1622 T. Dekker & P. Massinger Virgin Martir ii. sig. Fv Lets both be turnd into a rope of Onyons if we do.
1680 in L. B. Taylor Aberdeen Council Lett. (1961) VI. 257 Except for selling of Scotts onȝions and bread.
1718 M. Prior Alma i, in Poems Several Occasions (new ed.) 321 Who wou'd ask for her Opinion Between an Oyster, and an Onion?
1782 J. Abercrombie Every Man his Own Gardener (ed. 9) 119 Onions or leeks for the main crop should be sown the beginning or middle of this month.
1806 ‘Ignotus’ Culina (ed. 3) 68 Take three or four beef steaks cut thick, and season them with pepper, salt, and onion shred fine.
1831 M. Prince Hist. W. Indian Slave in H. L. Gates Six Women's Slave Narr. (1988) 13 My work was planting and hoeing sweet-potatoes, Indian corn, plaintains, bananas, cabbages, pumpkins, onions, etc.
1875 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) III. 243 They will have a relish—salt, and olives, and cheese, and onions.
1905 E. Tuite Dishes for All Seasons 11 When the onion begins to get soft remove it. Mix the cornflour with a little cold water and stir into the gravy.
1935 T. S. Eliot Murder in Cathedral i. 20 And our hearts are torn from us, our brains unskinned like the layers of an onion.
1963 N.Y. Herald Tribune 16 Apr. 26/7 In Kansas City..they are now serving the coonburger, made from carefully chopped raccoons, with onions and garlic salt added.
1990 Amer. Horticulturist Sept. 2/3 Diseased plants—such as cabbage with club root, onions with onion mildew, or root crops with dry rot—should be burned and their ashes added to the compost.
β. a1475 J. Russell Bk. Nurture (Harl. 4011) in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 156 Þat ye haue ssoddyn ynons to meddille with galantyne.1562 J. Heywood Sixt Hundred Epigrammes xxxix, in Wks. sig. Cciiiv Wilt thou hang vp with ropes of ynions?c1580 in Eng. Hist. Rev. (1914) July 519 Greate ynnions that be xij or xiiij ynches abowte.1596 Compt Bk. D. Wedderburne (1898) 71 Half a last of Ingȝeonis.1613 in R. Renwick Extracts Rec. Royal Burgh of Lanark (1893) 238 Fyve hundreth barrellis of ingonis.1660 in R. Renwick Extracts Rec. Royal Burgh of Lanark (1893) 176 Any sort of waires except..ingyones.1725 A. Ramsay Gentle Shepherd ii. i. 20 She can mix fou nice The gusty Ingans with a Curn of Spice.1787 W. Taylor Scots Poems 141 Wi'ingans, spice, an' meal.1819 W. Scott Legend of Montrose ii, in Tales of my Landlord 3rd Ser. III. 187 Our Spanish colonel, whom I could have blown away like the peeling of an ingan.1825 J. Neal Brother Jonathan II. 84 Ingyons are proper good, when ye're sick.1839 T. Hood Lost Heir in Hood's Own 57 He'll be rampant..at his child being lost; and the beef and the inguns not done!a1869 C. Spence From Braes of Carse (1898) 185 In ilka yaird ye pu' an ingan.
2. With distinguishing words.
a. Any of numerous varieties of Allium cepa; (also) any of several other species of the genus Allium.cocktail, Egyptian, Portugal, potato, red, spring, Welsh onion, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > onion, leek, or garlic > onion > other types of onion
hollekec1000
chibol1362
scallion1393
oniona1398
chesbollc1410
oinet?1440
red onionc1450
sybow1574
green onion1577
Strasbourg onion1629
cibol1632
Portugal onion1647
Spanish onion1706
Welsh onion1731
spring onion1758
Reading1784
rareripe1788
yellow onion1816
onionet1820
potato onion1822
tripoli1822
escalion1847
stone-leek1861
Egyptian onion1880
ramp1885
multiplier1907
ramps1939
Vidalia1969
tree onion-
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 221v Þe tame oynoun haþ an holowȝ stalke wiþouten knottes.
?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 498 (MED) And mouse oynoun [L. cepa muris] yrosted with oyle of onyfanyn is praysede of Avicen.
c1440 Liber de Diversis Med. 46 (MED) Tak & mynce a rede vnyon.
1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Onyon called a redde onyon, pallancana.
1581 B. Rich Farewell Militarie Profession Concl. sig. Dd.iij [They are] sometymes rounde like to Saincte Thomas Onions.
1629 J. Parkinson Paradisi in Sole II. xliii. 512 The long kinde wee call St. Omers Onions, and corruptly among the vulgar, St. Thomas Onions.
1699 M. Lister Journey to Paris (new ed.) 153 They abound in vast quantities of large Red Onions... And the long and sweet white Onion of Languedoc.
1706 G. London & H. Wise Retir'd Gard'ner I. i. 93 Red [and] white Spanish Onion.
1777 Farmer's Mag. Oct. 328 Weed your beds..on which your Welch onions are sown.
1832 E. Lankester Veg. Substances Food 290 The Tree, or Bulb-bearing Onion.
1855 ‘E. S. Delamer’ Kitchen Garden 40 Few gardeners, if any, can say they have ever seen a potato-onion in flower.
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. I. 40/2 How this [sc. A. fistulosum] obtained the name of Welsh Onion it is impossible to say, as it is a native of Siberia and certain parts of Russia.
1911 F. M. Farmer Catering for Special Occasions iv. 83 Peel six large Bermuda onions and remove a part of inside.
1948 G. D. H. Bell Cultivated Plants Farm xvii. 176 There are also the small shallot types, the Tree Onion, Potato Onion, Welsh Onion and Chives which are only garden or small-holding crops.
1994 Denver Post 8 Oct. e2/5 Blue onion (A. caeruleum) blooms on foot-tall stems in June.
b. Any of various, chiefly bulbous, plants of other genera and families.couch-onion, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > names applied to various plants > [noun]
heatha700
beeworteOE
leversc725
springworteOE
clotec1000
halswortc1000
sengreenc1000
bottle?a1200
bird's-tonguea1300
bloodworta1300
faverolea1300
vetchc1300
pimpernel1378
oniona1398
bird's nest?a1425
adder's grassc1450
cockheada1500
ambrosia1525
fleawort1548
son before the father1552
crow-toe1562
basil1578
bird's-foot1578
bloodroot1578
throatwort1578
phalangium1608
yew1653
chalcedon1664
dittany1676
bleeding heart1691
felon-wort1706
hedgehog1712
land caltrops1727
old man's beard1731
loosestrife1760
Solomon's seal1760
fireweed1764
desert rose1792
star of Bethlehem1793
hen and chickens1794
Aaron's beard1820
felon-grass1824
arrowroot1835
snake-root1856
firebush1858
tick-seed1860
bird's eye1863
burning bush1866
rat-tail1871
lamb's earsa1876
lamb's tongue plant1882
tar-weed1884
Tom Thumb1886
parrotbeak1890
stinkweed1932
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 221v Cepe caninum, as it were an houndes oynoun, hatte squilla also, and is y-founde by þe see syde, þerfore Platearius clepiþ him cepe marina, as it were a see oynoun.
1548 W. Turner Names of Herbes sig. E.viij Ornithigalon is called in Colon Hondes vllich..after the folowynge of the duche tonge it maye be called dogleke or dogges onion.
1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 28 Pushes or suddaine boyles..are cured with the ioyce of asses dung, and of sea-oynions beat to pouder.
1807 J. Robinson Archæol. Græca iii. iv. 211 Drawing round the person purified a squill, or sea-onion.
1832 W. D. Williamson Hist. Maine I. 120 The Brake, of which there are several varieties, the root of which is sometimes called the ‘bog-onion’.
1878 W. Dickinson Gloss. Dial. Cumberland (ed. 2) 9/1 Bog onion, the Osmunda Regalis or flowering fern.
1945 Senior Scholastic 23 Apr. 19/3 Kamas—a staple food in the early days. A bulbous root, sometimes called the siwash onion.
1974 S. L. Everist Poisonous Plants Austral. 353 Bulbinopsis bulbosa..native leek, also known as onion weed or wild onion. The last two common names are also applied to many unrelated plants with narrow, succulent leaves.
3. Squill, Drimia (or Urginea) maritima (family Liliaceae or Hyacinthaceae). Also called sea onion. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Liliaceae family or plants > [noun] > squill or sea-onion
onion?a1425
squillc1440
sea onion1526
squilla1526
French onion1548
scilla1629
vernal squill1796
?a1425 MS Hunterian 95 f. 198 (MED) Squilla, Squylle, it is a oyneoun hote & drye in þe þridde degree.
a1500 Agnus Castus (Laud) (1950) 202 (MED) Squilla is an herbe þat me clepuþ oynon..he growith in feldes and in brynkes of þe see.
4. A pearl. Cf. union n.1 Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > gem or precious stone > pearl > [noun]
margaritea1325
graina1350
pearlc1375
margerya1387
pebble1600
onion1688
mabe1940
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 39/2 The Onion, or Unions, or Pearl, are little round Stones, white.
1750 tr. C. Leonardus Mirror of Stones 200 The Pearl is for the most part round, and by some is called an Onion.
5. A bulb (of any plant). Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > bulb > [noun]
bulb1664
onion1721
1721 J. Chamberlayne tr. B. Nieuwentyt Relig. Philosopher (new ed.) II. xix. vi. 559 Making one only Julyflower or Tulip spring out of its Onion or Bulb.
6. A bunion. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of visible parts > [noun] > disorders of extremities > of the foot
foot evil1562
buniona1718
onion1785
Madura foot1855
fallen arch1858
claw-foot1862
foot-drop1886
tarsalgia1890
Morton's metatarsalgia1891
fallen instep1904
Madura disease1904
trench foot1915
maduromycosis1916
drop-foot1921
immersion foot1941
1785 D. Low (title) Chiropodologia; or, A scientific enquiry into the causes of corns, warts, onions, and other painful or offensive cutaneous excrescences.
1802 Hull Advertiser 17 Apr. 2/3 He eradicates Corns, Onions, or Nails growing into the Quick.
1846 F. Brittan tr. J. F. Malgaigne Man. Operative Surg. 64 The onion has a large base, and several layers of epidermis (like the layers of an onion) adhering to the skin in several points.
7.
a. slang. A seal or similar object, esp. worn on a watch chain or ribbon. Usually in plural. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > types of ornamentation > jewellery > jewellery of specific shape or form > [noun] > pendant > fastened to a watch-chain or girdle
watch-seal1798
onion1811
seal1836
chatelaine1851
breloque1856
charm1865
watch-charm1898
1811 Lexicon Balatronicum Onion, a seal. Onion hunters, a class of young thieves who are on the look out for gentlemen who wear their seals suspended on a ribbon, which they cut, and thus secure the seals or other trinkets suspended to the watch.
1829 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 26 132 Then his ticker I set a-going..And his onions, chains and key.
1834 W. H. Ainsworth Rookwood II. iii. v. 346 With my fawnied famms, and my onions gay.
1881 A. Trumble Slang Dict. 41 We pinched his thimble, slang and onions..the slang and onions were bene.
b. Nautical slang. A fraction of a knot.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement of length > [noun] > units of length or distance > mile > nautical mile > a fraction of a nautical mile
onion1916
1916 ‘Taffrail’ Pincher Martin v. 73 We got about six and an onion out of the old bus,..and reached there about noon.
1938 F. A. Worsley First Voy. in Square-rigged Ship iv. 71 The speed..was 13 knots or, as Stringer put it: ‘Thirteen and an onion in the squalls.’
1958 F. H. Shaw Seas of Memory ii. 48 ‘Fifteen, sir, fifteen and an onion!’ called the second mate. ‘That's the way I like her to move,’ said Fegan.
1982 L. Lind Sea Jargon 108/2 Onion, the smallest fraction of a knot.
8.
a. A rounded projection, bulb, or knob. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > protuberance or rounded projection > [noun] > a protuberance or protuberant part > knob
knob?a1425
knottle?a1500
bob1601
node1681
nub1696
umbo1753
button1758
knule1824
onion1825
umbonation1872
1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 134 The end of the rod B..has a knob or onion on it, by which it can be moved endwise while it is turning in the box C.
b. slang. The head; esp. in off one's onion: unwell (rare); mad, crazy.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > [adjective] > insanity or madness > affected with
woodc725
woodsekc890
giddyc1000
out of (by, from, of) wit or one's witc1000
witlessc1000
brainsickOE
amadc1225
lunaticc1290
madc1330
sickc1340
brain-wooda1375
out of one's minda1387
frenetica1398
fonda1400
formada1400
unwisea1400
brainc1400
unwholec1400
alienate?a1425
brainless1434
distract of one's wits1470
madfula1475
furious1475
distract1481
fro oneself1483
beside oneself1490
beside one's patience1490
dementa1500
red-wood?1507
extraught1509
misminded1509
peevish1523
bedlam-ripe1525
straughta1529
fanatic1533
bedlama1535
daft1540
unsounda1547
stark raving (also staring) mad1548
distraughted1572
insane1575
acrazeda1577
past oneself1576
frenzy1577
poll-mad1577
out of one's senses1580
maddeda1586
frenetical1588
distempered1593
distraught1597
crazed1599
diswitted1599
idle-headed1599
lymphatical1603
extract1608
madling1608
distracteda1616
informala1616
far gone1616
crazy1617
March mada1625
non compos mentis1628
brain-crazed1632
demented1632
crack-brained1634
arreptitiousa1641
dementate1640
dementated1650
brain-crackeda1652
insaniated1652
exsensed1654
bedlam-witteda1657
lymphatic1656
mad-like1679
dementative1685
non compos1699
beside one's gravity1716
hyte1720
lymphated1727
out of one's head1733
maddened1735
swivel-eyed1758
wrong1765
brainsickly1770
fatuous1773
derangedc1790
alienated1793
shake-brained1793
crack-headed1796
flighty1802
wowf1802
doitrified1808
phrenesiac1814
bedlamite1815
mad-braineda1822
fey1823
bedlamitish1824
skire1825
beside one's wits1827
as mad as a hatter1829
crazied1842
off one's head1842
bemadded1850
loco1852
off one's nut1858
off his chump1864
unsane1867
meshuga1868
non-sane1868
loony1872
bee-headed1879
off one's onion1881
off one's base1882
(to go) off one's dot1883
locoed1885
screwy1887
off one's rocker1890
balmy or barmy on (or in) the crumpet1891
meshuggener1892
nutty1892
buggy1893
bughouse1894
off one's pannikin1894
ratty1895
off one's trolley1896
batchy1898
twisted1900
batsc1901
batty1903
dippy1903
bugs1904
dingy1904
up the (also a) pole1904
nut1906
nuts1908
nutty as a fruitcake1911
bugged1920
potty1920
cuckoo1923
nutsy1923
puggled1923
blah1924
détraqué1925
doolally1925
off one's rocket1925
puggle1925
mental1927
phooey1927
crackers1928
squirrelly1928
over the edge1929
round the bend1929
lakes1934
ding-a-ling1935
wacky1935
screwball1936
dingbats1937
Asiatic1938
parlatic1941
troppo1941
up the creek1941
screwed-up1943
bonkers1945
psychological1952
out to lunch1955
starkers1956
off (one's) squiff1960
round the twist1960
yampy1963
out of (also off) one's bird1966
out of one's skull1967
whacked out1969
batshit1971
woo-woo1971
nutso1973
out of (one's) gourd1977
wacko1977
off one's meds1986
1881 J. C. F. Johnson Mount Browne & Back 19 What with sore eyes, a feverish cold, and fatigue, I was—in the vernacular of the district—rather ‘off my onion’.
1890 A. Barrère & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang II. 94/2 Off his onion (costermongers), imbecile, cracked.
1909 H. G. Wells Tono-Bungay (U.K. ed.) ii. ii. 176 He come home one day saying Tono-Bungay till I thought he was clean off his onion.
1928 Daily Express 11 Dec. 7/4 After four drops of beer I am properly off my onion.
1934 J. D. Carr Eight of Swords (1986) ii. 26 Look here, sir, do you mean that my governor has gone off his onion?
1978 P. Larkin Let. 17 Aug. in Sel. Lett. (1992) 588 What on earth makes you think I could sustain that kind of thing? Off yr old onion you must be.
9. slang (originally U.S.). A foolish or contemptible person; a ‘mug’. In British use originally and chiefly Services' slang.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > condition of being held in contempt > [noun] > state or quality of being contemptible > contemptible person
wormc825
wretchOE
thingOE
hinderlingc1175
harlot?c1225
mixa1300
villain1303
whelpc1330
wonnera1340
bismera1400
vilec1400
beasta1425
creaturec1450
dog bolt1465
fouling?a1475
drivel1478
shit1508
marmoset1523
mammeta1529
pilgarlica1529
pode1528
slave1537
slim1548
skit-brains?1553
grasshopper1556
scavenger1563
old boss1566
rag1566
shrub1566
ketterela1572
shake-rag1571
skybala1572
mumpsimus1573
smatchetc1582
squib1586
scabship1589
vassal1589
baboon1592
Gibraltar1593
polecat1593
mushroom1594
nodc1595
cittern-head1598
nit1598
stockfish1598
cum-twang1599
dish-wash1599
pettitoe1599
mustard-token1600
viliaco1600
cargo1602
stump1602
snotty-nose1604
sprat1605
wormling1605
brock1607
dogfly?1611
shag-rag1611
shack-rag1612
thrum1612
rabbita1616
fitchock1616
unworthy1616
baseling1618
shag1620
glow-worm1624
snip1633
the son of a worm1633
grousea1637
shab1637
wormship1648
muckworm1649
whiffler1659
prig1679
rotten egg1686
prigster1688
begged fool1693
hang-dog1693
bugger1694
reptile1697
squinny1716
snool1718
ramscallion1734
footer1748
jackass1756
hallion1789
skite1790
rattlesnake1791
snot1809
mudworm1814
skunk1816
stirrah1816
spalpeen1817
nyaff1825
skin1825
weed1825
tiger1827
beggar1834
despicability1837
squirt1844
prawn1845
shake1846
white mouse1846
scurf1851
sweep1853
cockroach1856
bummer1857
medlar1859
cunt1860
shuck1862
missing link1863
schweinhund1871
creepa1876
bum1882
trashbag1886
tinhorn1887
snot-rag1888
rodent1889
whelpling1889
pie eatera1891
mess1891
schmuck1892
fucker1893
cheapskate1894
cocksucker1894
gutter-bird1896
perisher1896
skate1896
schmendrick1897
nyamps1900
ullage1901
fink1903
onion1904
punk1904
shitepoke1905
tinhorn sport1906
streeler1907
zob1911
stink1916
motherfucker1918
Oscar1918
shitass1918
shit-face1923
tripe-hound1923
gimp1924
garbage can1925
twerp1925
jughead1926
mong1926
fuck?1927
arsehole1928
dirty dog1928
gazook1928
muzzler1928
roach1929
shite1929
mook1930
lug1931
slug1931
woodchuck1931
crud1932
dip1932
bohunkus1933
lint-head1933
Nimrod1933
warb1933
fuck-piga1935
owl-hoot1934
pissant1935
poot1935
shmegegge1937
motheree1938
motorcycle1938
squiff1939
pendejo1940
snotnose1941
jerkface1942
slag1943
yuck1943
fuckface?1945
fuckhead?1945
shit-head1945
shite-hawk1948
schlub1950
asswipe1953
mother1955
weenie1956
hard-on1958
rass hole1959
schmucko1959
bitch ass1961
effer1961
lamer1961
arsewipe1962
asshole1962
butthole1962
cock1962
dipshit1963
motherfuck1964
dork1965
bumhole1967
mofo1967
tosspot1967
crudball1968
dipstick1968
douche1968
frickface1968
schlong1968
fuckwit1969
rassclaat1969
ass1970
wank1970
fecker1971
wanker1971
butt-fucker1972
slimeball1972
bloodclaat1973
fuckwad1974
mutha1974
suck1974
cocksuck1977
tosser1977
plank1981
sleazebag1981
spastic1981
dweeb1982
bumboclaat1983
dickwad1983
scuzzbag1983
sleazeball1983
butt-face1984
dickweed1984
saddie1985
butt plug1986
jerkweed1988
dick-sucker1989
microcephalic1989
wankstain1990
sadster1992
buttmunch1993
fanny1995
jackhole1996
fassyhole1997
fannybaws2000
fassy2002
1904 G. Ade Breaking into Society 21 Wilbur was 18 and an Onion. He had outgrown his last year's Tunic, and his Smalls were hardly on speaking terms with his Uppers.
1917 O. Dent V.A.D. in France in P. Beale Partridge's Dict. Slang (ed. 8, 1984) 833/1 I'll cut the bread if you like. I seem to be the onion this afternoon.
1934 F. Nebel in Black Mask June 16/1 I'm going to hate to prosecute that onion for murder.
1953 E. Simon Past Masters i. 35 He's the poor onion who makes out the various rosters.
2004 J. Barratt & N. Fielding Mighty Boosh (transcribed from TV programme) 1st Ser. Episode 8 [Howard] He’s melted. [Hitcher] I ain’t melted, you onion. I’m over here.
10. Services' slang. = flaming onions n. at flaming adj. 1c. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > missile > ammunition for firearms > [noun] > anti-aircraft projectile
onion1917
flaming onions1918
1917 Blackwood's Mag. Apr. 560/1 A line of fiery rectangles shot up... These were ‘onions’, the flaming rockets which the Boche keeps for..hostile aircraft.
1918 in Amer. Speech 1972 (1975) 47 84 The airmen's pest is the ‘onion’, or large flaming anti-aircraft shell.
1936 ‘McScotch’ Fighter Pilot vi. 122 On heading south for the other balloon the ‘onion’ battery had another shot at me.
2000 W. L. Priest Swear Like Trooper 156/2 Onions, explosions of anti-aircraft rounds in the air.
11. With capital initial. A native or inhabitant of Bermuda; a Bermudian (sometimes used as a self-designation).Originally with reference to the large quantities of onions that the island produces and exports.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of America > native or inhabitant of West Indies > [adjective] > specific islands
Bermudan1625
Jamaican1670
Bermudian1681
Barbadian1692
Guadeloupean1762
Dominican1766
Anguillian1779
Antiguan1781
Bajan1789
Anguillan1806
Trinidadian1809
Puerto Rican1865
Tobagonian1882
Grenadan1886
Barbudian1890
Bajie1921
Guadeloupan1941
onion1951
Kittitian1958
Kittian1960
Nassauvian1961
Baje1973
Trini1973
yardie1986
1951 Bermuda Sports Oct. 10/1 When the Onions, Limeys or Caledonians played, some of the spirit and atmosphere of Wembley and Hampden descended on the field for the occasion.
1970 Bermuda Recorder 16 May 5/2 We ‘Onions’ like our cricket fresh and venturesome, but solid nonetheless.
2018 @MRM3333 17 Aug. in twitter.com (accessed 4 Aug. 2020) [In response to You're a Bermudian. Welcome Home.] I'm an Onion!

Phrases

P1. to know one's onions [origin unknown] : to be experienced in or knowledgeable about something.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > knowledge, what is known > familiarity > be or become familiar with [phrase]
at one's fingers' (also finger) ends1528
to get the hang of1845
to know one's onions1908
to know (something) inside out1921
1908 Postal Rec. Feb. 27/3 Never mind: Billy knows his onions. He is not troubled with corns or bunions.
1922 Harper's Mag. Mar. 530/1 Mr. Roberts knows his onions, all right.
1958 J. Cannan And be Villain ix. 200 Shakespeare knew his onions, didn't he?
1974 J. Wainwright Evidence I shall Give xxxii. 166 They know their onions... They are old in wisdom and experience.
2002 Digital Photogr. Made Easy No. 12. 41/4 (advt.) We do however know our onions when it comes to digital cameras.., after all that's all we sell.
P2. not the only onion in the stew (also hash): not the only person or thing to be taken into consideration.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > impossible to number [phrase] > one among many
not the only onion in the stew (also hash)1934
1934 P. G. Wodehouse Right ho, Jeeves vii. 75 I claim the right to have a pop at these problems..without having everybody behave as if Jeeves was the only onion in the hash.
1972 P. G. Wodehouse Pearls, Girls, & Monty Bodkin vii. 109 She wanted to stimulate competition. By showing you you weren't the only onion in the stew she would get your attention.
1995 South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) (Nexis) 8 Mar. (Business section) 10 ABC's move shows that Moody's is not the only onion in the stew.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive.
onion bed n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > farm > farmland > land raising crops > [noun] > onion land
onion bed1565
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > garden > division or part of garden > [noun] > bed or plot > bed in kitchen-garden > of specific plants
leek-bed14..
onion bed1565
leek-garth1570
1565 T. Cooper Thesaurus Cepêtum, an oynion bedde: a platte of oynions.
1574 J. Baret Aluearie O 92 An onyon bed, or a place planted with onyons.
1828 M. R. Mitford Our Village III. 98 Most ingeniously watering her onion-bed with a new mop—now a dip, and now a twirl!
1874 2nd Rep. Vermont State Board Agric. 1873–4 551 Raked as smooth as an onion bed.
1926 N. Gale Rupert Rabbit in Flight of Fancies 52 Before you hurry off to bite Those carrots near the onion-bed I wish to know if you are quite Aware of all that I have said.
1975 D. Green Food & Drink from your Garden 91 They..no longer need the special onion beds which took so many years to perfect.
2001 Times (Nexis) 29 Sept. I'll start a new onion bed at the far end of the patch, away from contaminated soil.
onion bulb n.
ΚΠ
1830 J. Lindley Introd. Nat. Syst. Bot. 274 In consequence of the free phosphoric acid which the common Onion bulbs contain.
1864 Harper's Mag. Aug. 312/2 7 barrels of onion bulbs.
1925 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 11 185 We thus have a distinct correlation between the flavone or anthocyan color in onion bulbs and their resistance to two common diseases, smudge and neck rot.
1975 D. Hoobler & T. Hoobler Veg. Gardening & Cooking 77 Growing onions from seeds takes up to four or five months, so most home gardeners buy onion ‘sets’, which are the baby onion bulbs, ready to be buried in early spring, 2 inches deep, 4 inches apart, in rows 12 inches apart.
1995 Nichols Garden Nursery 13/1 (advt.) Egyptian Onions or Walking Onions—A unique onion, whose bulb remains in the ground from one year to the next, producing annual crops of onion bulbs on the end of stalks.
onion crop n.
ΚΠ
1835 C. I. Johnstone in Tait's Edinb. Mag. May 337/2 Old Mrs. Luke was rejoiced to hear of her darling Mysie's health, of the flourishing condition of the onion crop in her son Mark's new garden.
1879 Congress. Rec. 46th Congress 1 Sess. App. 120/1 The onion crop of South Carolina.
1946 P. R. Kibbe Lat. Americans in Texas xii. 197 Third in line as a source of income for migratory laborers..was the onion crop.
1990 R. Staines Market Gardening v. 56 Accurate drilling of all onion crops is essential for an even stand.
2000 W. Klein Westport iii. x. 120 After the onion crop setback, raising turkeys became very much in vogue.
onion-head n.
ΚΠ
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §445 It may bee tried also, with putting Onion-Seed into an Onion-Head, which thereby (perhaps) will bring forth a larger, and earlier Onion.
1681 S. Colvil Mock Poem ii. 8 There be Onion-heads and Garlick, The food of Turkish Janizaries.
1728 A. Ramsay Last Speech Miser in Poems II. 95 My Pouch produc'd an Ingan Head, To please my Wame.
1809 W. Irving Hist. N.Y. I. iii. i. 121 His head was a perfect sphere, far excelling in magnitude that of the great Pericles (who was thence waggishly called Schenocephalus, or onion head).
1991 Hesperia 90 474 While Perikles commonly may have been dubbed ‘Big Bulb’ or ‘Onion-head’ in Greek comedy, could an analogous reference to his cranial peculiarity have occurred in High Classic visual art?
onion roll n.
ΚΠ
1958 Daily News 20 Feb. 9 The shop specializes in an onion roll that resembles a bagel but is softer.
2001 N.Y. Mag. 11 June 59/2 There are baskets of squeezy onion rolls on the table and gravy boats of..red steak sauce.
onion salt n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > additive > other flavourings > [noun]
saffronc1200
rorraa1500
fetida1588
balachong1699
gammon essence1706
ratafia1727
silphium1753
peppermint1811
Honduras sarsaparilla1818
oil of wintergreen1827
wintergreen oil1827
peppermint oil1850
apple oil1852
almond extract1865
duxelles1877
celery salt1897
gianduja1902
onion salt1925
garlic saltc1938
banoffi1994
1925 G. W. Johnson Reviewer Jan. 60 (title) Onion Salt.
1980 Hunting Ann. 1981 71/2 Top with crust, sprinkle with onion salt, and bake until golden brown.
onion sauce n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > additive > sauce or dressing > [noun] > onion sauce
onion sauce1699
poor man's sauce1706
Soubise1822
1699 E. Ward London Spy I. xi. 3 As much avers'd..as a Court Lady is to Onion-Sawce.
1723 J. Nott Cook's & Confectioner's Dict. sig. X5 (heading) To make Onion Sauce. Cut..Onions into slices, put them into a Sauce-pan with some Veal-gravy,..simmer.
1787 J. Woodforde Diary 4 Dec. (1926) II. 356 I gave them for Dinner..a couple of Rabbitts boiled and Onion Sauce.
1839 C. Dickens Nicholas Nickleby xli. 399 I don't know how it is, but a fine warm summer day like this,..always puts me in mind of roast pig, with sage and onion sauce and made gravy.
1877 E. S. Dallas Kettner's Bk. of Table 320 (heading) Onion sauce.—See the Soubise sauce, the Breton sauce, and the Sauce Robert.
1939 T. S. Eliot Old Possum's Bk. Pract. Cats 45 And when he's finished, licks his paws So's not to waste the onion sauce.
1998 N. Lawson How to Eat (1999) 296 A fine Sunday lunch was roast chicken as it always used to be done, with parsley and thyme stuffing, bread and onion sauce, roast potatoes and sausages and honey-roast parsnips.
2001 D. Valent in B. Geddes World Food: Caribbean 209 Fresh fish served with an onion sauce.
onion seed n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > onion, leek, or garlic > onion > skin, seed, shoots, or bulbs
onion seed1356
scallion1393
cartilage1563
onion skin1616
fold1675
tunic1832
onion set1859
grass1885
1356–7 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1899) II. 558 In Cepis et unyonnsede.
1468–9 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1898) I. 92 (MED) j lb. et di. del unyonsede.
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §445 It may bee tried also, with putting Onion-Seed into an Onion-Head, which thereby (perhaps) will bring forth a larger, and earlier Onion.
1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. at Cepa About the Beginning of August the Onion-Seed will be ripe, which may be known by its changing brown.
1811 Statist. Acct. Towns & Parishes Connecticut (Connecticut Acad. Arts & Sci.) I. 23 Drills are not used, except to drop onion seed.
1879 Harper's Mag. Apr. 766/1 Onion seed or sets also should go into the ground as early as possible.
1945 Sci. Monthly May 391/2 By this process a strain of male-sterile onion can be developed which can be crossed, without emasculation, with pollen from an inbred male-fertile strain to produce hybrid onion seed.
1988 Garden News 3 Sept. 22/5 (advt.) A clear phial of supreme graded and selected onion seeds.
2001 M. Hughes et al. World Food: India 45 This aromatic mix is a blend of..black mustard seeds and kalonji (..also called onion seed).
onion soup n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > soup or pottage > [noun] > vegetable soup
joutes1377
leek-pottagec1440
kalea1480
colea1500
nettle broth1652
spring pottage1661
minestra1673
spring soup1744
onion soup1747
shchi1824
Palestine soup1834
potato soup1834
tomato soup1840
julienne1841
gazpacho1845
printanier1867
minestrone1871
vichyssoise1939
pistou1979
1747 H. Glasse Art of Cookery ix. 77 An Onion Soop.
1861 I. M. Beeton Bk. Househ. Managem. vi. 73 Onion Soup... 6 large onions,..¼ pint of cream.
1898 Cent. Mag. Jan. 351/1 The English girl breakfasted on a bowl of onion-soup; but I would not guarantee that she enjoyed the necessity.
1966 J. B. Priestley Salt is Leaving xiii. 179 He..opened a tin, French and good, of onion soup.
2001 N.Y. Mag. 22 Jan. 47/2 The incoming chef..is a native of a small town in Alsace, where saucisson, onion soup, and potato salad are, figuratively speaking, mother's milk.
b. Objective.
onion-eating adj.
ΚΠ
1884 E. Barker Through Auvergne 80 An onion-eating or garlick-eating people.
1937 Mod. Lang. Notes 52 223 The last word concerning the author who amiably satirized Connecticut Yankees for their onion-eating and conceived Ichabod Crane as the apotheosis of New England pedagoguery has been written by a professor in New Haven.
1996 Denver Post (Nexis) 1 Oct. a2 These days, she's a happily married onion-eating vegetarian.
onion-loving adj.
ΚΠ
1811 P. B. Shelley Let. 17 May (1964) I. 92 How gets on your onion-loving Deist.
1996 Dallas Morning News (Nexis) 5 May (Special section) v.11 One visit, an onion-loving patron had not only snagged the pletzo, but also had cleaned out the onion sticks.
2001 Philadelphia Inquirer 7 Nov. f01 The ethnic influence of the '90s, particularly that of the onion-loving Hispanic market.
onion seller n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > selling > seller > sellers of specific things > [noun] > seller of provisions > seller of onions
onion seller?c1475
Johnny1928
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 89 An Onȝon sellere, Ceparius.
a1500 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 688 Hic ceparius, unȝonseller.
1897 Living Age 30 Oct. 287/2 Behind him I see the blue blouse of the old onion-seller, who lies unnoticed on the ground.
1914 W. B. Yeats Responsibilities 15 What th' onion-sellers thought or did.
1970 V. Canning Great Affair xvi. 300 Troops..strung with hand grenades..like French onion sellers.
2002 Daily Mail (Nexis) 9 July 33 Its latest slogan, ‘Vive la Vie Francaise’, conjures up pictures of onion sellers in berets quaffing at a village bar.
onion selling n.
ΚΠ
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 94/1 Onion selling can be started on a small amount of capital.
1915 Daily Chron. 23 Nov. 5/3 Onion-selling parties in England.
1996 Hobart Mercury (Nexis) 18 June A man who travels the neighbourhood on a bicycle, dispensing medical advice as a sideline to his core business of onion selling.
c. Parasynthetic.
onion-spired adj.
ΚΠ
1959 Times 25 Apr. 9/5 A baroque, onion-spired church.
2000 Calgary (Alberta) Sun (Nexis) 31 Dec. (Sports section) 6 Muscovites and tourists alike gawked as the players posed for photos in front of onion-spired St Basil's.
onion-towered adj.
ΚΠ
1959 Listener 15 Jan. 131/1 Almost every little South Swabian and Bavarian village has its delightful onion-towered church.
1995 Chicago Tribune (Nexis) 14 May (Tempo section) c6 The onion-towered Catholic churches..now attract as many as 1,000 Chinese worshippers each Sunday.
d. Similative.
onion green n. and adj.
ΚΠ
1906 S. W. Bushell Chinese Art II. viii. 23 The brilliant grass-greens of the Lungch'üan porcelain, called ts'ung-lü, or ‘onion-green’ by the Chinese.
1967 H. Scott Golden Age Chinese Art iv. 29 Even in the accustomed green, there are dozens of distinct hues, bearing such colorful names as kingfisher, spinach, emerald, moss and young onion green.
onion-red adj.
ΚΠ
1853 Amer. Jrnl. Pharmacy 25 528 A hot saturated solution of boracic acid produces an onion-red color, when a little tincture of litmus is poured into it.
2000 Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Nexis) 7 Apr. (What's Happening section) 4 Medallions of salmon play their oily succulence against lush, earthy lentils in an intriguing dinner entree splashed by an onion-red currant vinaigrette.
onion-shaped adj.
ΚΠ
1830 Withering's Arrangem. Brit. Plants (ed. 7) IV. 349 Lyc[operdon] proteus... Var. 82 Onion-shaped.
1896 Cent. Mag. Aug. 375/1 The epithet of ‘holy city’ is justified by the sanctuary of the Kremlin, but its aptness is further sustained by the three hundred and sixty churches, each with its tower and onion-shaped cupola, which are scattered through all the districts.
1959 J. Braine Vodi vi. 87 The chapel..was a compact red-brick building with large round-headed windows, topped rather incongruously by a tower with an onion-shaped dome.
2000 Denver Post 10 Sept. t5/2 Mosques and marabouts, white, onion-shaped tombs for great teachers, sages and holy men) are everywhere.
onion spire n.
ΚΠ
1950 F. Maclean Escape to Adventure 374 Serbia was spread out before us in the sunshine, a patchwork of green orchards.., the whitewashed walls of a village and the onion spire of a church.
1988 R. Turnbull Fisher's World: Canada 117 At Erikson twin onion spires on a Ukrainian church belie the Norse name.
onion steeple n.
ΚΠ
1868 G. M. Hopkins Jrnls. & Papers (1959) 179 The churches here have those onion steeples nearly all.
1960 Times 11 June 11/6 A Church with Baroque ‘onion’ steeple.
C2.
onion asphodel n. Obsolete a kind of asphodel with bulbous roots, probably Asphodelus fistulosus.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > lily and allied flowers > asphodels
affodill1440
daffodilly1538
daffodil1548
asphodel1597
king's spear1597
onion asphodel1597
knavery1640
frodils1674
Scotch asphodel1771
ten o'clock1826
bog asphodel1881
1597 J. Gerard Herball i. 89 Of Onion Asphodill.
1659 R. Lovell Παμβοτανολογια 23 Onion asphodill.
1884 W. Miller Dict. Eng. Names Plants 6/2 Asphodel, Onion, Asphodelus fistulosus.
onion bag n. (a) a mesh bag in which onions are sold; (b) Association Football (colloquial) a goal-net, esp. in the context of scoring a goal.
ΚΠ
1946 Ecology 27 218/1 The average number of pods per bag in the 50-pound size mesh onion bags used in the 1943 collection program ranged from less than 500..to about 800.
1979 in Roy of Rovers: Playing Years (1994) 121 (cartoon caption) Bingo! Goal, goal, goal! Straight into the onion bag!
2001 Newsday (Electronic ed.) 1 Apr. The storeroom held a large stack of 50-pound-capacity onion bags, woven of red plastic.
2002 Western Gaz. (Electronic ed.) 28 Feb. We played well and were probably the better side but at the end of the day they put the ball in the onion bag.
onion couch n. a false oat grass of the variety Arrhenatherum elatius var. bulbosum, with bulb-like swollen basal internodes, occurring as a weed of arable land.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants perceived as weeds or harmful plants > weed > [noun] > wild oat
oateOE
wild oat?a1500
haver1684
Tartary oat1790
onion twitch1875
onion couch1880
onion grass1880
1880 J. Britten & R. Holland Dict. Eng. Plant-names Onion Couch, Avena elatior... It is also called Onion Grass..and Onion Twitch.
1937 S. F. Armstrong Brit. Grasses (ed. 3) i. 5 In the weed known as ‘Onion Couch’..it is common to find several of the lower internodes enlarged and forming a chain of tubers.
1991 C. Stace New Flora Brit. Isles 1030 Var. bulbosum..has the basal, very short culm internodes swollen and corm-like; they are effective propagules in arable land (Onion Couch).
onion dome n. a bulbous dome on a church, palace, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > [noun] > dome or cupola
tipe1532
cupola1549
thole1633
dome1656
tholosc1660
imperial1826
onion dome1868
domelet1883
geodesic dome1952
geodetic dome1957
geodesic1977
1868 Sci. Amer. 9 Dec. 373/3 The same green iron roofs, and the same churches with their tall belfries and their onion domes.
1897 Living Age 13 Mar. 745/1 This form is sometimes called ‘the onion dome,’ and sometimes ‘the watermelon,’ for it resembles both.
1950 Russ. Rev. 9 237 The picture of the onion dome found in the Dubilov Gospel..forms illustration 42.
1991 N.Y. Mag. 16 Dec. 78/2 Churchly treasures and onion domes hunker on the dozen snowy sites of The Golden Ring: Cities of Old Russia.
onion-domed adj. (of a church, etc.) having a bulbous dome.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > [adjective] > dome or cupola > specific type
onion-domed1891
1891 Cornhill Mag. Jan. 51 The little church was near these, a plain white building with red onion-domed tower.
1959 Manch. Guardian 26 Feb. 9/4 The Kremlin, with its three onion-domed cathedrals.
1990 Home & Away Mar.–Apr. 19 a/1 An imperial city of canals, bridged, grandiose baroque palaces and onion-domed buildings.
2002 Wanderlust Feb. 57/1 Red Square... The iconic splendour of the onion-domed St Basil's Cathedral at one end is undoubted.
onion-eyed adj. Obsolete having eyes full of tears, as if from the effect of raw onions.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > [adjective]
weepingc900
wopi?c1225
greetingfula1340
greetyc1350
weeplyc1374
weepfula1382
weepinglyc1440
lachrymablec1450
moistc1450
lachrymous1490
rainy1563
tearfula1586
greeting1588
collachrymate1593
crying1594
onion-eyeda1616
maudlinc1616
rheumatica1627
fluxed1628
lachrymalc1630
crystal-droppinga1650
showery1654
lugent1656
Niobean1665
lachrymary1693
lachrymose1727
moist-eyed1797
larmoyant1824
pluviose1824
ploratory1831
lachrymating1837
screwmatic1847
pipy1861
weepy1863
blarting1898
leaky1905
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) iv. ii. 35 Looke they weepe, And I an Asse, am Onyon-ey'd. View more context for this quotation
1753 Stage Coach I. 23 But your women are all onion-eyed.
onion-fish n. Obsolete (a) the red bandfish, Cepola rubescens (family Cepolidae); (b) U.S. the onion-eye grenadier, Macrourus berglax (family Macrouridae), of the north Atlantic, with eyes that are said to resemble onions.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > [noun] > order Lampridiformes > member of genus Cepola (ribbon-fish)
shelp1553
swathe-fish1668
riband fish1751
serpent-fish1753
snake-fish1796
ribbonfish1798
red snakefish1823
red bandfish1828
band-fish1836
red ribbon fish1838
onion-fish1854
red ribbon1858
tape-fish1885
1854 C. D. Badham Prose Halieutics 232 The..onion-fish, whose body peels into flakes like that bulb, and who zigzags through the waves like a leech.
1884 G. B. Goode in G. B. Goode et al. Fisheries U.S.: Sect. I 244 The Grenadiers, or, as the fishermen frequently call them, on account of the size and shape of their eyes, ‘Onion-fishes’, inhabit the deep parts of the ocean.
onion fly n. either of two small dipteran flies, Delia antiqua (family Anthomyiidae) of Europe and Tritoxa flexa (family Otitidae) of America, the larvae of which can be very destructive to onions.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [noun] > suborder Cyclorrhapha > family Muscidae > delia cepetorum or anthomyia ceparum (onion fly)
onion fly1840
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [adjective] > of or relating to family Muscidae > delia cepetorum or anthomyia ceparum
onion fly1966
1840 J. Loudon & M. Loudon tr. V. Köllar Treat. Insects ii. 159 The larva very much resembles that of the onion fly.
1896 Daily News 17 July 6/7 Onion fly, which causes serious injuries to the onion crop.
1966 Punch 6 Apr. 510/2 Sets..will grow onions..without onion fly risk.
1990 R. Staines Market Gardening v. 57 Pests are not normally a problem on onions and leeks but eelworm and onion fly can sometimes be troublesome.
onion hoe n. a small hoe with a curved neck, used for weeding between onions and other closely grown plants.
ΚΠ
1714 Philos. Trans. 1713 (Royal Soc.) 28 91 About the bigness of an Onion-Hoe.
1991 National Trust Mag. Spring 27/2 The..weeds in the paving are easily eradicated using the corner of an onion hoe or a knife.
onion maggot n. the larva of an onion fly.
ΚΠ
1861 Amer. Agriculturist July 195/2 Try a weak solution of oil soap, a pound to eight gallons of water, upon a small plot, if troubled with the onion maggot.
1929 Science 1 Feb. 117/2 Papers on ‘Insects Affecting Truck Crops’ were presented Monday morning, dealing with..field studies on the onion maggot, cucumber beetles and carrot rust fly.
1992 Harrowsmith Dec. 92/1 The onion maggot fly is the most destructive. The adult..lays eggs near the base of the plant in early summer.
onion orchid n. any of various orchids of the genus Microtis, native to Australia, New Zealand, South-East Asia, and the Pacific region, with spikes of small, usually green flowers.
ΚΠ
1942 C. Barrett On Wallaby iii. 40 Ant-house plants were growing on the mangroves, together with onion-orchids.
1961 Meanjin 6 Cucumber, potato and even onion orchids.
1985 Melbourne Winner's Weekly 2 Sept. 23/2 There are all kinds of greenhoods, sun-orchids..and the minutely flowered onion-orchids.
onion peel n. = onion skin n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > writing > writing materials > material to write on > paper > [noun] > transparent paper
serpent paper1797
onion peel1868
Japanese tissue1900
1868 E. Bulwer-Lytton New Poems 192 One of those daily scribblers,—fellows who live in garrets, pelting princely names with onion peel,—contrived to get hold of the story.
1898 Daily News 10 Nov. 6/4 It is not the ordinary foreign paper, nor the ‘onion peel’—so called from its transparency.
1946 H. J. Rose Anc. Greek Relig. i. vii. 142 She was handed two bits of onion-peel, but on reaching home, found that they were Turkish gold coins.
2002 Townsville Bull. (Nexis) 13 June (Good Life section) 23 Roses certainly seem to thrive when onion peels are dug in around them.
onion ring n. a circular segment of an onion; such a segment deep-fried in batter.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > onion, leek, or garlic > [noun] > onion > onion ring
onion ring1769
1769 B. Clermont tr. Professed Cook (ed. 2) II. 444 Then put the Sweet-bread in the Middle of the Dish; put two or three of the Onion-rings upon it.
1936 Restaurant Managem. June 412 French onion rings.
2002 N.Y. Mag. 7 Jan. 33 I found myself at the bar, devouring plates of gourmet pulled-pork sandwiches topped with frizzled onion rings.
onion set n. a small onion bulb planted instead of seed to yield a mature bulb.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > onion, leek, or garlic > onion > skin, seed, shoots, or bulbs
onion seed1356
scallion1393
cartilage1563
onion skin1616
fold1675
tunic1832
onion set1859
grass1885
1859 H. W. Beecher Plain & Pleasant Talk 110 If you prefer top-onion sets, or sets of any other kind, plant them out at..eight inches between the row and five or six between the sets.
1886 Harper's Mag. Oct. 708/2Onion sets’..are produced by sowing the ordinary black seed very thickly on light poor land.
1951 Dict. Gardening (Royal Hort. Soc.) III. 1424/2 Small bulbs grown in the previous autumn and known as ‘onion sets’ may..be planted in spring for the raising of dry bulbs.
1988 Garden Answers Apr. 55/3 The garden centres were also full of onion sets.
2001 Observer 4 Mar. (Life Suppl.) 64/1 I moved thalictrums, took melianthus and dahlias cuttings, thinned rocket and planted 150 ‘Turbo’ onion sets.
onion-shell n. Obsolete rare any of various bivalve molluscs of the family Anomiidae, having a round, thin, translucent shell; (also) any of various bivalve molluscs of the genera Lutraria and Mya.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Pelecypoda or Conchifera > [noun] > section Asiphonida > family Ostreidae > member of (oyster) > shell of
oyster shelleOE
flake1577
onion-shell1753
shuck1881
1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. Onion-shell,..a peculiar kind of oister, which is of a roundish figure, and very thin, and transparent, and [is like] the peel of an onion.
1882 Ogilvie's Imperial Dict. (new ed.) Onion-shell, a species of oyster of roundish form; also, species of Lutraria and Mya.
onion smut n. a parasitic fungus, Urocystis cepulae, infesting onions; the disease caused by this fungus.
ΚΠ
1878 Johnson's New Universal Cycl. IV. 1076/1 Urocystis cepulæ is the onion-smut, which has caused great harm, particularly in Connecticut.
1930 Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 57 447 In the onion smut, Urocystis Cepulae, Anderson..and Blizzard..maintain that infection takes place through the cotyledon.
1988 G. N. Agrios Plant Pathol. (ed. 3) xi. 475 Urocystis, causing onion smut (U. cepulae), and leaf or stalk smut of rye (U. occulta).
onion twitch n. Obsolete rare = onion couch n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants perceived as weeds or harmful plants > weed > [noun] > wild oat
oateOE
wild oat?a1500
haver1684
Tartary oat1790
onion twitch1875
onion couch1880
onion grass1880
1875 Gardeners' Chron. 10 Apr. 477/2 Onion Twitch.
1880 J. Britten & R. Holland Dict. Eng. Plant-names Onion Couch, Avena elatior... It is also called Onion Grass..and Onion Twitch.
onion-water n. Obsolete a medicinal liquid prepared from onions.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medicines of specific form > decoction or infusion > [noun] > aqueous decoction or infusion > specific
barley waterc1320
oak-water?1523
hydrelaeon?1550
plantain-water1588
lily-water1599
napha water1600
cowslip-water1612
water of magnanimity1659
succory water1670
lime-water1682
onion-water1694
pennyroyal water1699
balm-water1712
forge-water1725
laurel-water1731
aqua mirabilis1736
tar-water1740
milk of lime1784
laurel-cherry water1787
fly-water1815
herb-water1886
1694 W. Salmon Pharmacopœia Bateana i. xi. 717/2 You may make it with Parsly, Arsmart, or Onion-water.
C3. attributive. U.S. regional (chiefly Pennsylvania). Designating (a fall of) snow or (occasionally) rain in late spring (see quot. 1937).
ΚΠ
1930 H. W. Shoemaker 1300 Old Time Words 44 Onion snow, a late snow in Spring after the onions have been set out.
1937 Amer. Speech 12 238 ‘Onion snow’ is one that falls after the onions are planted. Generally it is a storm of short duration, coming after days of balmy spring weather—‘false spring’, about the time these folks begin to plow.
1943 Sun (Baltimore) 22 Apr. 16/5, in Dict. Amer. Regional Eng. (1996) III. 884/1 The prolonged spell of abnormal spring cold weather had at last eventuated into the usual ‘onion rain’ of the srping [sic] season.
1990 D. Kline Great Possessions (1993) 71 The ‘onion’ snowstorm on the last day of March brought a sudden stop to these early migrants' northward travels.

Derivatives

onionet n. [compare post-classical Latin oinunnetta, oynonetta (1211, c1386 in British sources), French oignonet (1377 in Middle French; compare Anglo-Norman oygonet).] Obsolete a small onion.Apparently an isolated use.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > onion, leek, or garlic > [noun] > onion > types of onion
hollekec1000
scallion1393
sybow1574
Portugal onion1647
shallot1664
Spanish onion1706
eschalot1707
Welsh onion1731
Reading onion1784
onionet1820
potato onion1822
tripoli1822
ramps1828
escalion1847
stone-leek1861
Egyptian onion1880
cocktail onion1927
Maui onion1967
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > onion, leek, or garlic > onion > other types of onion
hollekec1000
chibol1362
scallion1393
oniona1398
chesbollc1410
oinet?1440
red onionc1450
sybow1574
green onion1577
Strasbourg onion1629
cibol1632
Portugal onion1647
Spanish onion1706
Welsh onion1731
spring onion1758
Reading1784
rareripe1788
yellow onion1816
onionet1820
potato onion1822
tripoli1822
escalion1847
stone-leek1861
Egyptian onion1880
ramp1885
multiplier1907
ramps1939
Vidalia1969
tree onion-
1820 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 8 89 From your large, fat, yellow, insipid onion, to your little, lean, fiery, bitter onionet.
ˈonionized adj. smelling of onions (also) having eyes full of tears, as if from the effect of raw onions.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fetor > [adjective] > other spec.
sulphureousa1552
sulphured1605
sulphurous1606
sulphury1614
mephitic1623
nidorulent1634
empyreumatic1651
nidorous1651
Stymphalian1653
hircine1656
nitrosulphureous1656
empyreumatical1661
nitro-sulphurious1693
mephitical1704
nidorose1707
nitro-sulphurous1717
empyreumatized1829
onionized1830
Stymphalid1831
hircinous1866
1830 Fraser's Mag. 1 751 The unwashed fraternity of onionized ragamuffins.
1962 in H. Himmelstein Television Myth (1994) 140 Sally begins to cry. Luke empathizes, ‘Now don't go gittin' yourself all onionized.’
onion-like adj.
ΚΠ
1868 Amer. Naturalist 2 347 These plants [sc. orchids] are found in myriads..strapping their naked, onion-like bulbs to any chance support.
1944 A. Holmes Princ. Physical Geol. viii. 119 Ultimately the angular block is transformed into an onion-like structure of concentric shells of rusty and thoroughly rotted residual material.
2001 Observer 14 Oct. (Food Monthly Suppl.) 16/4 A wild onion-like hyacinth.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

onionn.2

Brit. /ˈʌnjən/, U.S. /ˈənjən/, Australian English /ˈʌnjən/
Forms: 1900s– onion, 1900s– on-i-on.
Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: onion n.1
Etymology: Origin uncertain; perhaps a spec. sense of onion n.1, although the sense development would be unclear (and compare quot. 1984).
Australian slang.
Esp. among members of a motorcycle gang: an occasion on which several men have sexual intercourse one after another with the same woman. Also: the woman involved.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > other types of sexual activity or intercourse > [noun] > other specific
vera copula1850
knee-trembler1896
gang-banging1949
gang-bang1950
gang-up1951
wham, bam, thank you ma'am1956
tribadism1962
bareback1963
Princeton1965
safe sex1968
onion1969
dry fuck1971
dry hump1972
barebacking1991
scissoring2003
1969 Sydney Morning Herald 16 July 13/4 When he had passed the circle of men, he knew an ‘onion was going on’.
1978 Weekend Austral. 1 July 3/8 Woodhouse told the man the girl was to be the ‘onion’ for the night.
1984 National Times (Sydney) 30 Nov. 17/2 The girl alleges the traditional on-i-on or onion as it is sometimes incorrectly pronounced, by a group of motor bike riders in a disused gravel pit after several hours of riotous drinking.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

onionv.

Brit. /ˈʌnjən/, U.S. /ˈənj(ə)n/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: onion n.1
Etymology: < onion n.1
rare.
1. transitive. To season or flavour with onions. Cf. onioned adj. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > seasoning > season [verb (transitive)] > flavour in other ways
saffronc1386
milk?a1565
hop1572
juniperate1605
beginger1611
macea1634
caryophyllate1651
fruit1736
onion1755
mustard1851
clove1883
lemon1883
herb1922
sherry1970
1755 T. Smollett tr. M. de Cervantes Don Quixote II. iii. xvii. 301 They treated him with an hachis of beef well onioned.
1845 E. Acton Mod. Cookery viii. 210 Currie sauce, highly onioned, is frequently served.
1939 Times 16 Jan. 17/4 Fried steaks can be served with a curry sauce highly onioned.
2. transitive. To treat (the eyes) with raw onion, so as to produce tears. Also in extended use. Cf. onioned adj. 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > lachrymal organs > flow [verb (transitive)] > produce tears by application of onion
onion1763
1763 C. Johnstone Reverie (new ed.) I. 243 The fellow wiped his eyes which had been well onioned for the purpose.
1900 G. B. Shaw Three Plays for Puritans p. xxix The undertaker's handkerchief, duly onioned with some pathetic phrase.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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