单词 | only |
释义 | onlyn.ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > one > only one > [noun] oneeOE one sole1450 one only ——c1475 a or one several1543 only1609 oner1889 OE Stowe Psalter xxi. 21 De manu canis unicam meam : of handa hunda ða ænlican mine. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1965) Psalms xxi. 21 Pul out from þe swerd my soule, þou god, & fro þe hond of þe hound, myn onely [a1425 L.V. myn oon aloone; L. unicam meam]. 1609 Bible (Douay) I. Song of Sol. vi. 8 She is the only to her mother, elect to her that bare her. 1692 J. Dryden All for Love (new ed.) Pref. sig. b It is the only of the kind without Episode, or Underplot. 1693 J. Dryden in J. Dryden et al. tr. Juvenal Satires Ded. p. vii Suppose that Homer and Virgil were the only of their Species. 1771 P. Luckombe Hist. & Art of Printing 32 The internal parts of the bark..were the only that were made into paper. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > advantage > an opportunity > [noun] > sole opportunity only1878 1878 J. H. Beadle Western Wilds xxvi. 417 I seed it was my first, last and only, and I sot old Sally at a gallop for that pint. 3. An only child. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > child > [noun] > only child only child1655 parlour child1874 only1931 singleton1931 1931 J. Cannan High Table ii. 17 But poor little Theodore was ‘an only’, said Lady Oliver. 1975 C. Storr Chinese Egg xviii. 121 If you're an only, you're sort of a target. Everything your parents think or feel has to be worked out on you. 1997 Indianapolis Star 24 Oct. e 2/6 Only-child stereotypes are being shattered..Onlies are being recognized for their verbal strengths and self-assurance, garnered from spending much of their time with adults. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022). onlyadj.α. Old English ænlic, Old English anlic, Old English enlic (rare), late Old English–early Middle English anlich, early Middle English anlukest (superlative), early Middle English (Middle English northern) anli, Middle English anele (northern), Middle English aneli (northern), Middle English anely (northern), Middle English anly (northern), 1800s– yanly (English regional (northern)); Scottish pre-1700 anelie, pre-1700 anely, pre-1700 anly. β. early Middle English onlukust (superlative), Middle English oneli, Middle English onelich, Middle English onelyche, Middle English onli, Middle English onlich, Middle English onliche, Middle English onlych, Middle English onyli, Middle English oonleche, Middle English oonli, Middle English oonlich, Middle English oonlyche, Middle English wonli, Middle English–1500s oonly, Middle English–1600s onlye, Middle English–1700s onely, Middle English– only, 1500s onelye, 1500s wonly, 1500s–1600s (1700s– archaic) onlie, 1500s–1600s (1800s archaic) onelie, 1700s ownly; English regional (chiefly northern) 1800s oanly, 1800s ooanly, 1800s– oneley, 1800s– onely, 1800s– oonly, 1800s– ownly, 1800s– wonley; also Scottish pre-1700 onelie, pre-1700 onely, pre-1700 onelye, pre-1700 onle, pre-1700 onlye, pre-1700 onyly, pre-1700 1700s–1800s onlie; N.E.D. (1902) also records forms late Middle English ondely, late Middle English ondly, late Middle English onelych, late Middle English onelyk, late Middle English onlie, late Middle English ounly, late Middle English wonlych. 1. Without companions or companionship, alone; solitary; lonely. In later use chiefly English regional (northern). Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > lack of social communication or relations > solitude or solitariness > [adjective] onlyOE alonec1175 solitarya1340 lone1377 ledelessc1400 fellowless?c1425 savage1535 neighbourless1550 private1599 discompanied1601 unattended1603 disaccompanied1605 lonelya1616 marrowless?1635 companionless1644 unneighboured1657 unaccompanied1709 unescorted1774 uncompanioned1822 comradeless1891 the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > one > only one > [adjective] onlepyeOE aefauldeOE onlyOE soleinc1369 solea1398 halea1400 seul1477 anerlyc1485 alonelya1513 allenarlya1525 singulara1555 fellowlessa1586 unfellowed1597 unique1601 lone1602 unical1605 single1633 solitarya1634 exclusive1790 one-off1934 one-of-a-kind1954 OE Stowe Psalter xxiv. 16 Miserere mei quia unicus et pauper sum ego : gemildsa min forðam ænlic & ðearfa ic eom. OE Paris Psalter (1932) ci. 5 Ic spearuwan swa some gelice gewearð, anlicum fugele. c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 48 Ancre hus..schulde beon anlukest [a1250 Nero onlukust; ?c1225 Cleo. anlichest] stude of alle. a1250 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Nero:Morton) 152 So ouh ancre, hire one in onliche stude..chirmen & cheateren euer hire bonen. a1400 Psalter (Vesp.) xxiv. 17 in C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers (1896) II. 156 Aneli and pouer am I. a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1869) I. 110 He wolde in comunalte do þis dede, and not þus oonli in desert. a1500 (a1400) Awntyrs Arthure (Douce) 98 (MED) Þes knyȝtes arne vncurtays..Þat þus oonly haue me laft one my deþe day. 1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis iii. 62 His oane light, That stood in his lowring front gloommish malleted onlye. 1591 (?a1425) Adam & Eve (Huntington) in R. M. Lumiansky & D. Mill Chester Myst. Cycle (1974) I. 18 Hit is not good man only to bee. 1642 D. Rogers Naaman 9 Onely Denus and Demaris a poore only man and only woman, being excepted. 1828 W. Carr Dial. Craven (ed. 2) Onely, Onerly, lonely, retired. ‘This is an onely platt to live in’. 1856 E. Waugh in Manch. Weekly Examiner & Times 21 June (Suppl.) 3/3 Mon, aw'm one-ly when theaw artn't theer. II. In attributive use. 2. a. Alone of its, his, her, etc., kind; of a kind of which there exist no more; sole, lone.Usually preceded by a possessive adjective, a noun in the genitive, or the (in the latter case, frequently with postmodifying phrase or clause). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > one > condition of being alone > [adjective] oneeOE onlepyOE onlyOE alonec1175 single1340 soleinc1381 solitaire1382 singularc1384 solec1400 oddc1480 alonelya1513 uncompanieda1547 a-high-lone1565 bird-alone1572 self-one1602 insociate1606 unmated1615 lonesome1647 solo1727 uncompanioned1809 unfellowed1887 Pat Malone1937 OE West Saxon Gospels: Luke (Corpus Cambr.) ix. 38 He is min anlica [c1200 Hatton anliche] sunu. OE tr. Chrodegang of Metz Regula Canonicorum (Corpus Cambr. 191) lvii. 291 His heorte bið tobroden ymbe woroldcara, and ne bið gesamnod an lufe þære anlican godcundnysse. a1250 Apostles' Creed (Blickling) in Mod. Lang. Notes (1899) 4 138 (MED) Ich geleue..on halende crist, his anliche sune, ure lhaferd. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 11v He was his modir onliche sone, for sche hadde none oþir sone to fore hym neþir aftir. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) 8439 (MED) Bi grace of only god of heuen, Soone he coude þe artes seuen. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) 26549 In his sone, crist ihesu, our aller anly lorde. c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 101 The oonli argumentis which han propre place forto proue and grounde articles..of feith. a1450 St. Katherine (Richardson 44) (1884) 56 (MED) Þe oonly felowe of my bed ys hurt wyth þe tempest of þis soor. 1526 Bible (Tyndale) Luke vii. f. lxxxv The only sonne of his mother, and she was a widowe. 1559 Bk. Common Prayer (STC 16292a Prelim. No. 2) Letany sig. B.iiiiv The only ruler of princes. 1584 H. Llwyd & D. Powel Hist. Cambria 3 The onelie occasion he tooke. 1633 G. Herbert Temple: Sacred Poems 169 Christ is my onely head, My alone onely heart & breast. 1654 tr. M. Martini Bellum Tartaricum 189 The onely Southern Port..to which Boats may have access. 1706 N. Rowe Ulysses ii. i. 801 Hear a Wretches only Pray'r. 1710 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum II Penny, Denarius, was the first coined piece of Silver we have any account of; and for many Years the only one. 1805 A. A. Opie Adeline Mowbray I. i. 1 In an old family mansion, situated on an estate in Gloucestershire..resided Mrs Mowbray, and Adeline her only child. 1854 A. Jameson Commonplace Bk. Thoughts (1877) 347 Eve..is the only undraped figure which is allowable in sacred art. 1875 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) I. 338 These two passages are the only ones in which Plato makes mention of himself. 1927 W. S. Churchill World Crisis III. i. ii. 45 The only method of waging war on the Western Front was by wearing down the enemy by ‘killing Germans in a war of attrition’. 1964 S. Woods Trusted like Fox iii. 26 Don't like him, eh? Well, you're not the only one. 1994 B. Hambly Crossroad xi. 145 Her only jewelry was earrings. b. †any only ——: any one —— (obsolete). one only —— (now archaic), an only —— (now somewhat rare except as in sense 2c): one single ——, one —— and no more, one —— and no other. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > one > only one > [noun] oneeOE one sole1450 one only ——c1475 a or one several1543 only1609 oner1889 the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > [noun] > state of being non-specific > unspecified thing(s) > anyone anyOE any man aliveOE anybodyc1300 manc1384 any only ——c1475 person?a1789 c1475 tr. A. Chartier Quadrilogue (Univ. Coll. Oxf.) (1974) 245 (MED) But the affeccion of the publique well may auoyde your singuler disordinate reule yf the voluntees ben conyoined all in oon onely desire to the comon saluacion. 1485 W. Caxton tr. Paris & Vienne (1957) 29 Wythout leuyng of ony onely thynge or word. 1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos ix. 36 Wyth one onely stroke thou haste wylled to termyne and fynysshe thy labours mortall. 1543 R. Grafton Contin. in Chron. J. Hardyng f. xlv Any onely kindenesse so sodenly contracted in an hour. ?a1560 L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria (1571) iii. xi. sig. R iv I shall for breuitie sake set foorth one onely rule generall. 1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies iii. xx. 183 Vpon all that coast it blowes continually with one onely winde. a1640 T. Risdon Chorogr. Surv. Devon (1811) (modernized text) 13 This country hath one only deanery. 1654 Pilgrims' Bk. (MS Venerable Eng. Coll., Rome) 5 Richard Blunt of Oxford came to Rome and to our Colledge out of England with an onely desire to convert him self to ye Catholick-faith. 1703 S. Centlivre Stolen Heiress i. i. 11 I have an only Friend, faithful and just. 1742 H. Fielding Joseph Andrews I. ii. xii. 250 The Small-Pox had left one only Mark on her Chin. View more context for this quotation 1796 F. Burney Camilla III. v. v. 64 Her talents, her acquirements, may..be set aside, with an only silent regret of wasted youth and application. 1819 Lady C. Lamb New Canto 12 That man should deal with misery, to mock it, And filch an only shilling from its pocket. 1832 F. Trollope Domest. Manners Amer. (ed. 2) I. i. 2 One only object rears itself above the eddying waters; this is the mast of a vessel long since wrecked. 1850 W. E. Gladstone in Q. Rev. Mar. 315 In Consalvo, a dying youth..abandoned by all but the object of his love, entreats of her the parting gift of an only kiss. 1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 974/1 To speak after the exact manner of divinity, there is but one only sacrifice, veri nominis, that is Christ's death. 1991 Which? Jan. 32/1 They are now bought as an only purchase to fulfil a wide variety of uses. c. With reference to a familial relationship, preceded by an or (without article) with a plural: solitary, single; having no siblings. Cf. only child n. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > child > relationship to parent > [adjective] > only child one-gottena1382 one-begottenc1384 only-begotten?a1425 only1483 only-born1567 only-childish1938 1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 77/3 I that am an only sone to my fader and moder I shold depose theyr olde age with heuynes and sorow to helle. 1593 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia i. 18 I haue an onely sonne, by name Clitophon. 1611 Bible (King James) Amos viii. 10 I will make it as the mourning of an onely sonne, and the end thereof as a bitter day. View more context for this quotation 1672 J. Dryden Conquest Granada ii. iii. ii. 109 What cannot onely Sons with Parents do! 1749 J. Cleland Mem. Woman of Pleasure II. 7 A strict resemblance she fancied she saw in me to an only daughter, whom she had lost at my age, was the first motive of her taking to me so affectionately. 1768 O. Goldsmith Good Natur'd Man i. 15 An only Son, Sir, might expect more indulgence. 1821 R. Pollok in D. Pollok Life (1843) iv. 87 A small house, inhabited by a widow-mother and an only daughter. 1860 ‘G. Eliot’ Mill on Floss III. vii. ii. 249 If Miss Tulliver,..had returned as Mrs Stephen Guest—with a post-marital trousseau and all the advantages possessed even by the most unwelcome wife of an only son. 1912 Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 17 454 Democracy in the household..may mean the right of the daughters, the right even of an only daughter, to leave home and follow a regular occupation. 1999 P. Jooste Frieda & Min 289 She was an only grandchild and her grandfather left her very nicely looked after. 3. a. Unique in quality, character, rank, etc.; peerless, pre-eminent, unparalleled, best.In modern English from 16th cent. only as hyperbolic use of sense 2, with the meaning ‘alone deserving one's consideration, attention, approval, etc.’. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > importance > [adjective] > outstanding > in specific way onlyeOE uphand1835 conspicuous by its absence1859 eOE King Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Otho) xxxv. 101 He hæfde an swiðe ænlic wif. OE Beowulf 251 Nis þæt seldguma, wæpnum geweorðad, næfne him his wlite leoge, ænlic ansyn. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) Wisd. vii. 22 I lernede..bi wisdam..þe spirit of vnderstonding, holi, manyfold, oneli [L. unicus], sootile, manerly. a1400 in C. Brown Relig. Lyrics 14th Cent. (1924) 55 Godis moder, blessed þow be..onely maden þorw godis gast, of alle wemen meked mast. a1500 tr. A. Chartier Traité de l'Esperance (Rawl.) (1974) 88 (MED) Thou myghttest..beleve and wourship God in His onely essence and infinyte. 1552 R. Ascham in Orig. Lett. Eminent Literary Men (1843) 12 If Lerning, Counsell, Nobilitie, Courte, and Cambridge, shold have bene all punisshed at ones by taking away..soch a general & onely man as Mr. Cheeke is. 1611 Bible (King James) Ezek. vii. 5 Thus sayth the Lord God; An euill, an onely euill, behold, is come. View more context for this quotation 1651 W. Lilly Charles I in Monarchy or no Monarchy 103 She had been the only stately and magnificent Woman of Europe. 1867 G. MacDonald Ann. Quiet Neighbourhood I. x. 290 The only man in the world ceased to be the friend of the only woman in the world. 1886 R. L. Stevenson Kidnapped vii. 61 The chief mate..was..‘the only seaman of the whole jing-bang’. 1993 Guardian 3 Nov. i. 18/3 Simply the only place to be seen these days. 2002 Bliss June 27/1 L8R is the only way to say ‘later’. b. In the superlative, with emphatic force. Now chiefly colloquial and regional.In quot. 1956 as noun; cf. only n. 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > quality of being special or extraordinary > [adjective] > incomparable, unparalleled, or unique unilicheOE makelessc1225 unevenlyc1230 peerlessc1330 alonea1382 uncomparablea1382 unoverpassablea1382 solea1398 incomparable1412 sans-peer1426 nonpareilc1450 invincible1509 matchless1530 inimitable1531 unmatchable1544 unmatched1548 unpassable1563 alonely1567 inequivalent1568 mateless1570 unparagonized1578 only1581 fellowlessa1586 unimitablea1586 compareless1590 incompared1590 immatchless1595 unequalized1596 nonsuch1598 paragonless1599 immatchable1601 unparalleled1601 uncompeered1602 unpeered1602 imparalleled1604 unpeerable1604 unrivalled1607 uncompanioned1608 unexampled1610 unsurmountable1611 unsurpassable1611 unparagoned1612 patternless1613 unpatterned1617 unique1618 unparallelable1621 parallelless1622 unmatchless1623 single1633 unexemplifieda1634 unsampleda1638 unequalled1639 imparallel1641 unparallel1645 unseconded1646 unexemplary1649 unaccessional1651 unequalable1659 uncome-at-able1694 rivalless1735 untouched1735 unexcelleda1800 unexceeded1813 sans-pareilly1818 unsurpassed1818 unrivallable1823 unapproachable1834 untranscendeda1849 insuperable1849 unbrothered1853 unapproached1856 insurpassable1859 untouchable1867 hors concours1884 1581 R. Mulcaster Positions v. 30 It was either the onely, or the onelyest principle in learning, to learne to read Latin. 1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses II. 486 He was..accounted..the onliest person to be consulted about the affairs. a1777 S. Foote Trip to Calais (1778) i. 28 It is the onliest method to keep her to one's self. 1890 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Colonial Reformer (1891) 375 The kindest, wisest, ‘onliest’ thing, under the circumstances. 1907 Yesterday's Shopping (1969) 1136/2 Comic and humorous songs... Ma Onliest One. 1956 N. Algren Walk on Wild Side ii. 166 ‘You were my onliest’, he admitted at last, ‘but we only got to B.’ 1992 J. Stern & M. Stern Encycl. Pop Culture 465/1 Still the liveliest, as well as the onliest venue for rhythm-and-blues performances not packaged as music videos. a. Modifying a noun simply. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > one > condition of being alone > [adjective] > alone or nothing but onlya1400 sheer1622 a1400 Cato's Distichs (Fairf.) 131 in R. Morris Cursor Mundi (1878) III. App. iv. 1671 Sin þou art doutande..nedderres for venim, mare mai þou be agast of anli man vn-wrast, and warre þe for him. c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 318 (MED) Folie hadde be to al thilk Cristen multitude..forto haue storid..eny grete possessiouns..bisidis the oonli housis and gardeyns, whiche weren necessarie for hem silf and her meyne forto in hem dwelle. 1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 277/1 Our only feyth shalle suffyse us. ?c1523 T. More Let. to Wolsey in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. (1824) 1st Ser. I. 206 The onely redyng therof held hym above twoo howres. 1544 Bk. Chyldren in T. Phaer tr. J. Goeurot Regiment of Lyfe (new ed.) sig. h.viiiv The onely odour of quyckesyluer kylleth lyce. a1620 M. Fotherby Atheomastix (1622) i. xv. §2. 155 All this fell vpon them, for the onely impietie of their Prince. 1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica ii. vi. 96 Conceive a vegetable [sc. the mandrake] whose parts are usefull unto many, should in the only taking up prove mortall unto any. View more context for this quotation 1854–6 C. Patmore Angel in House ii. ii. i For the sake of only love,..he does approve, His wife entirely.] b. Placed between a demonstrative determiner, a possessive adjective, or a noun in the genitive, and the noun which they modify, or before a noun followed by an of-phrase, with reference to the noun so modified. Obsolete. ΚΠ c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 306 Endewed into his oonli sufficience. 1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure (1845) xxix. 139 I must abyde..Of lyfe or death your onely judgement. 1558 Dunkyn's Mortgage to Vicary in Vicary's Anat. (1888) App. v. 186 To the onlye vse and behoufe of the said Thomas Vycary. 1577 R. Holinshed Hist. Scotl. 343/1 in Chron. I At the charges and only expenses of these .vj. abbeys. 1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 93 In thir only mantilis in the nyt seasone thay rowit thame selfes. 1653 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures xxx. 118 Maintained at the Kings onely charge. 1653 H. Holcroft tr. Procopius Persian Wars i. 3 in tr. Procopius Hist. Warres Justinian These onely Hunnes have white bodies. 1709 J. Addison Tatler No. 117. ⁋4 She was turned into a Man, and by that only Means avoided the Danger. 1741 C. Middleton Hist. Life Cicero I. Pref. 35 The power was retained; with this onely difference, that [etc.]. 1774 Considerations Legislative Authority Brit. Parl. 21 Those, who are bound by Acts of Parliament, are bound for this only reason, because they are represented in it. 1877 E. S. Dallas Kettner's Bk. of Table 423 Shalot Sauce is the same as what is called Sharp Sauce or Sauce Piquante, with this only difference—that to the latter there is added pickled gherkins. Compounds onlie begetter n. (also only begetter) the sole originator (in later use chiefly with archaic spelling in allusion to Shakespeare: see quot. 1609). ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > [noun] > agent or person who causes > solely onlie begetter1609 1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets Inscript. To the onlie begetter of these insving sonnets. 1937 N. Marsh Vintage Murder vii. 81 The Firm..was founded and built up by Mr Meyer... He was..the onlie begetter. 1969 Australasian Post (Melbourne) 19 June 40/3 Isadora Duncan was..the onlie begetter of all the trends in ‘free dance’ which are now so familiar to us. 1989 Ambit No. 118. 28 Bob's father was the only begetter of the Golden Boy chain of family restaurants. 2000 Times 12 May i. 22/5 Not many of us are as fecund inventors of vocabulary as Shakespeare, Carroll, Joyce (the onlie begetter of ‘quark’), or Orwell (thoughtcrime, oldspeak, black-white). This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online June 2022). onlyadv.conj.prep.α. Old English ænlice, Middle English aneli (northern), Middle English anelie (northern), Middle English anely (northern), Middle English anli (northern), Middle English anly (northern), Middle English anyly (northern), Middle English aynli (northern), 1800s– yanly (English regional (northern)); Scottish pre-1700 anelie, pre-1700 anellie, pre-1700 anely, pre-1700 anly, pre-1700 anyely. β. Middle English hondely, Middle English oenli, Middle English ondely, Middle English ondly, Middle English oneli, Middle English onelich, Middle English oneliche, Middle English onelych, Middle English onelyk, Middle English oniliche, Middle English onle, Middle English onleche, Middle English onley, Middle English onli, Middle English onlich, Middle English onliche, Middle English onlike, Middle English onlych, Middle English onlyche, Middle English oonelich, Middle English oonleche, Middle English oonlich, Middle English oonliche, Middle English oonely, Middle English oonle, Middle English oonli, Middle English oonlie, Middle English oonlyche, Middle English oonlye, Middle English ounly, Middle English wonly, Middle English wonlyche, Middle English–1500s oonly, Middle English–1700s onely, Middle English–1700s onley, Middle English–1700s onlie, Middle English– only, 1500s onlye, 1500s–1600s onelie, 1800s– on'y (English regional (south-western)); Scottish pre-1700 onelie, pre-1700 onely, pre-1700 onelye, pre-1700 onle, pre-1700 onlely, pre-1700 onlie, pre-1700 onllie, pre-1700 onlye, pre-1700 ounlie, pre-1700 1700s– only. A. adv. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > quality of being special or extraordinary > [adverb] > in a way that is unparalleled or unique onlyOE unilichec1300 unlike?c1335 incomparablyc1422 sans-peer1426 incomparable1482 uncomparably1548 peerless1596 matchlessly1598 peerlessly1600 unimitably1622 unparalleledly1639 matchlessc1650 uniquely1805 unapproachably1846 unsurpassably1859 OE Ælfric Lives of Saints (Julius) (1881) I. 210 Þa wearð lucia on slæpe, and geseah agathen betwux engla werodum, ænlice gefretewode. OE Ælfric Lives of Saints (Julius) (1900) II. 404 Thomas him andwyrde, Ænlice þu spræce. OE Ælfric's Colloquy (1991) 48 Ut..obseruetis uosmet eleganter ubique locorum : þæt ge healdan eow sylfe ænlice on ælcere stowe. a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 1443 Eliezer..brogt him a wif... He luuede hire on-like and wel. a1425 in M. Day Wheatley MS (1921) 11 (MED) Thow bare Ihesu with-oute payne And onely had a child..With-outen losyng of thy maydenhede. 1554 N. Ridley Wks. (1841) 370 In them whom they only esteemed for their priests and sages. c1600 (?c1395) Pierce Ploughman's Crede (Trin. Cambr. R.3.15) (1873) 534 Afterward anoþer onliche he blissede, Þe meke. 1611 B. Jonson Catiline v. sig. M4 That renowm'd good man, That did so only' embrace his Countrey. View more context for this quotation 2. Solely, merely, exclusively; with no one or nothing more besides; as a single or solitary thing or fact; no more than. Also, with a verb or verb phrase: no more than, simply, merely.Only may limit the statement to a single or defined person, thing, or number, either as distinguished from more, or as opposed to any other. a. Preceding the word or phrase which it limits. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > state or quality of being simple, unmixed, or uncompounded > [adverb] > simply, only, or merely butOE onlya1325 alone?c1335 purelya1375 alonelya1400 nobbuta1400 simplya1400 plain1535 barely1577 merelyc1580 purea1616 singly1655 just1668 sommer1835 maara1931 a1325 Statutes of Realm in MS Rawl. B.520 f.65v (MED) Þerbez onliche tuuei writes of wuche comez tuueine assoines generalliche. c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 1513 Þe king louede is wif..Þat al is herte onliche on hire on he caste. c1380 G. Chaucer Second Nun's Tale 20 Slouthe hir holdeth in a lees Oonly for to slepe and ete and drynke. a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) i. 317 I speke onliche as of the dede, Of which I nevere was coupable. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 275v The camele haþ no teeþ in eiþer iowe, but oonly byneþe. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) 13737 Anli he wiþ-outen synne. c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) 1749 Heȝest of alle oþer, saf onelych tweyne. a1450 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Lamb.) (1887) i. 2370 (MED) He ne askede non oþer þyng Bot onlike his doughter ȝyng. a1450 St. Edith (Faust.) (1883) l. 3529 Bot duden wonlyche after þe deuellys rede. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Tobit x. 5 All ye thinges that we haue are onely in the. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Edward IV f. ccxlv All these faire wordes, wer onely delaies to protracte tyme. 1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice iv. i. 429 I will haue nothing else but onely this. View more context for this quotation 1613 F. Beaumont Knight of Burning Pestle ii. sig. D2v Now Fortune, if thou bee'st not onely ill, Shew me thy better face. a1633 Visct. Falkland Hist. Edward II (1680) 96 'Tis onely one. 1651 R. Baxter Plain Script. Proof Infants Church-membership & Baptism 5 God doth not reveal his truth onely or chiefly to the learned. 1654 J. Bramhall Just Vindic. Church of Eng. ii. 20 We did not judge him, or punish him,..but only defended our selves, by guarding his blowes, and repelling his injuries. 1722 D. Defoe Moll Flanders 144 I brought him three Children, but only the first of them liv'd. 1751 S. Johnson Rambler No. 156. ⁋14 To distinguish..that which is established because it is right, from that which is right only because it is established. 1801 Sporting Mag. 19 114 I will not denominate your coursing correspondent a Yorkshire bite, for he only snaps. 1805 T. Harral Scenes of Life I. 194 It is true, I have been only twice. 1839 C. Dickens Nicholas Nickleby xliv. 436 ‘He's dying’—‘He isn't, he's only pretending.’ 1845 M. Pattison in Christian Remembrancer Jan. 77 One of those devoted..attachments, of which only a mother or nurse are thought capable. 1899 Literary Guide 1 Oct. 146/2 Certain doctrines were imparted only to initiates. 1911 H. S. Harrison Queed v. 56 She had only pretended to die in order to make a fade-away with the gate receipts. 1916 E. A. Mackintosh in B. Gardiner Up Line to Death (1976) 94 You were only David's father, But I had fifty sons. 1951 E. Lambert Twenty Thousand Thieves iii. xii. 235 It's only two days to pay day. 1994 S. Sonnett Restraint ix. 102 I was only borrowing the money..I would make it up to them. 2002 N.Y. Times 13 June a24/1 The dioceses send part of their money to Rome, but only the bishops know how much. b. (a) Following the word or phrase which it limits. ΚΠ c1350 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Harl. 874) (1961) 121 (MED) Who is þat ne shal dreden þee & heriȝen þi name, for þou onlich art ful of pyte? a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) Gen. xlvii. 25 Our helþe is in þi honde; our god onely [a1425 L.V. oneli oure God] beholde vs, & glally we sall serue to þe kyng. a1425 (a1400) Prick of Conscience (Galba & Harl.) (1863) 1338 (MED) Þe world prayses nan, bot þa anly Þat til alle worldes welthes er happy. a1475 Visio Philiberti (Brogyntyn) in J. O. Halliwell Early Eng. Misc. (1855) 25 On thi God wonly set thin herte. c1475 (a1400) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 310 To haue crist oonliche heere patroun. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Ecclus. xxiv. 34 I haue not laboured for my self onely. 1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Matt. vi. 47 Loke upon the best thynges, eyther onely or chiefly. 1598 Acct. Bk. W. Morton f. 11 Wpone..hidis onleye. 1655 Marquis of Worcester Cent. Inventions in H. Dircks Life (1865) 416 To raise Water with two Buckets onely. 1763 J. Brown Diss. Poetry & Music vi. 104 What belongs to Nature only, Nature only can complete. 1838 E. Bulwer-Lytton Leila i. iii. 23 In one only of the casements. 1876 J. B. Mozley Serm. preached Univ. of Oxf. iv. 108 His human character is not benevolence only. 1939 G. Greene Confidential Agent i. ii. 72 She mustn't know. You and me only. 1984 A. Brookner Hotel du Lac ix. 120 Her bedroom, a cool room which got the morning sun only. 2000 Independent on Sunday 26 Mar. (Reality section) 30/2 There are also powerful drugs to stop migraine attacks (triptans) which are prescription only. ΚΠ a1575 N. Harpsfield Treat. Divorce Henry VIII (1878) (modernized text) 59 Their second counsell of Toledo..being..of eight only bishops. 1624 W. Bedell Copies Certaine Lett. vi. 92 In two onely leaues of his booke, a certaine..Scholler did discouer thirtie..falsifications. 1656 Earl of Monmouth tr. T. Boccalini Ragguagli di Parnasso ii. xiv. 229 Amidst as many other Silver Balls as there are Sciences, three only Golden Balls are placed. 1851 H. Melville Moby-Dick cxxx. 591 He ate in the same open air; that is, his two only meals,—breakfast and dinner. c. Placed away from the word or phrase which it limits, esp. preceding the main verb.Frequent in speech, where stress and pauses eliminate ambiguity; often avoided by careful writers. ΚΠ 1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 333 b/1 Luke is only with me. 1531 St. German's Fyrste Dyaloge in Englysshe (new ed.) vii. f. xx The eldest sone shall onlye enheryte his father. 1540 T. Cromwell Let. 12 June in R. B. Merriman Life & Lett. T. Cromwell (1902) II. 265 Unto the whiche god I have onlye Commyttyd my Sowlle. 1598 R. Grenewey tr. Tacitus Annales iii. iv. 69 Vipsania his mother died, onely of all Agrippas children, of a naturall death. 1661 A. Marvell Let. 9 Mar. in Poems & Lett. (1971) II. 20 I onely write this word to let you know that [etc.]. 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics ii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 94 When Beasts were only slain for Sacrifice. View more context for this quotation 1703 N. Rowe Fair Penitent ii. ii. 23 Brutes and boys are only taught with blows. 1842 Ld. Tennyson Lady Clara Vere de Vere in Poems (new ed.) I. 158 'Tis only noble to be good. 1871 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues I. 270 I only asked the question from habit. 1978 M. Lavin Tales Bective Bridge (rev. ed.) 20 Two big sheds that only need a bit of fixing, to be ideal for my purposes. 1988 Bella 4 Apr. 29/1 I've been seeing a much older man who says he only wants to be friends. 2001 Linedancer Mag. Oct. 61/2 A disease that only affects boys. 3. In correlative constructions using not only: usually with contrast expressed by but, but also, also, etc., but occasionally implied (see also but conj. 11b(b)). ΚΠ a1325 (c1280) Southern Passion (Pepys 2344) (1927) 890 (MED) Ne wasch nouȝt onliche my ffet, bote boþe hond & heued. c1350 Ayenbite (1866) App. 265 Naȝt onlyche beuore gode ac be-uore alle men. a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) v. 6367 (MED) Noght onliche of the wommen tho, Bot of the chaste men also. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) 338 He wroȝt noȝt anly wit his hande, bot sayde wit worde. ?a1475 (a1396) W. Hilton Scale of Perfection (Harl. 6579) i. vii. f. 4v (MED) Hem liketh..to þynke sum time of þe blissed name of Ihesu..& nauȝht only þat name, bute alle oþer preyeres. 1515 R. Pace in J. S. Brewer Reign Hen. VIII (1884) I. xi. 270 Surely he would have out of your chapel not children only but also men. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. ciiijv Not onely now..but also after. 1682 G. Wheler Journey into Greece i. 18 We had time not only to see the Town, but the places circumjacent also. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver II. iv. vi. 95 I was not only endowed with the Faculty of Speech, but likewise with some Rudiments of Reason. 1871 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues II. 25 They not only tell lies but bad lies. 1918 W. Cather My Ántonia ii. iii. 178 Mr. Harling not only demanded a quiet house, he demanded all his wife's attention. 1987 P. McCabe Bad News at Black Rock ix. 169 Collins not only did reviews, she incorporated bites from interviews into pieces. 2001 Daily Tel. 27 Nov. 16/1 I want the courts to think very carefully not only about perhaps not using custody but, if they can, issuing shorter sentence lengths. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > one > only one > [adverb] > without addition onlya1375 alonelya1393 solarly1657 a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) 3799 We schul..þis werre bring to ende onliche ȝourh [read þourh] godes grace & ȝour gode dede. a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1872) IV. 321 (MED) At Ierusalem was a leche þat heled sike men onliche wiþ a word. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) 3574 (MED) Whenne þat he bicomeþ olde..Only to lyue trauaile him þink. 1495 Trevisa's Bartholomeus De Proprietatibus Rerum (de Worde) iii. xix. sig. dviv By smellynge oonly he knowyth bytwene herbes good and venymous. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Edward IV f. ccxxxiiv He was restored to his kyngdome, and made kyng onely by his ayde. a1555 J. Philpot Exam. & Writings (1842) 66 Master doctor hath affirmed that these words..spoken by the priest, only do make the Sacrament. 1624 T. Heywood Γυναικεῖον i. 30 The Phrygian pipe was onely sufficient to yeeld musicke to her sacrifices, for that was no sooner heard but they fell into a divine rapture resembling madnesse. 1760 T. Warton Idler 16 Feb. 49 His Eye was so piercing, that..he could blunt the Weapons of his Enemies only by looking at them. 1801 J. Strutt Glig-gamena Angel-ðeod i. i. 10 The see of Norwich, only, was in possession of no less than thirteen parks. 5. Emphasizing the contrary nature of a consequence. a. Followed by a dependent infinitive clause: with no other consequence or result than. ΚΠ 1621 M. Wroth Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania 319 He recouerd..only to be made more miserable. 1639 G. Rivers Heroinæ 80 So was I wound up to the height of happinesse and honour, only to fall never to rise again. 1792 M. Wollstonecraft Vindic. Rights Woman v. 196 To open her mind only to make the darkness and misery of her fate visible. 1836 R. M. Bird Sheppard Lee II. xi. 53 I had entered the philanthropist's body only to be murdered. 1892 Youth's Compan. 21 July 369/1 Two persons each of whom suspected the other of a deep-laid, malign plan, and each gave time and anxiety to the discovery of that plan, only to find in the end that neither had any plan except to watch the other. 1914 E. R. Burroughs Tarzan of Apes xxv. 338 How could she have..raised him to such a pinnacle of hope only to cast him down to such utter depths of despair! 1954 J. B. G. Thomas On Tour 68 Birt, normally the safest of place kickers, made his mark, only for the ball to be sliced towards the corner flag. 1976 I. M. Lewis Social Anthropol. in Perspective x. 338 Successful men pull themselves up by their bootstrings only to collapse again under the strain of retaining prominence. 2001 A. Gurnah By Sea ii. 59 Cursing Rachel and Jeff for having stolen me away from the detention centre..only to bring me to this dungeon. b. In a main clause (frequently following a modal verb or to serve and infinitive): inevitably although contrary to intention or desire. ΚΠ 1621 G. Hakewill King David's Vow vi. 225 Any of the rest, nay all the rest without it, serving only to make a servant more disposed & more able too, as well for the plotting as the acting of villany. 1660 R. Coke Elements Power & Subjection 45 in Justice Vindicated This unlimited power of doing anything with impunity, will only beget a confidence in kings of doing what they list. 1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding iii. x. 246 This reference of the name, to a thing..only serves the more to involve us in Difficulties. 1787 R. Burns Let. to J. Smith 11 June Should I stay..at home, I would only dissipate my little fortune. 1858 C. S. Middleton Shelley I. xvii. 168 He..shall never cease thirsting, but, striving ever to quench his thirst..shall only render it so much the more the famine of his nature. 1889 Sat. Rev. 14 Sept. 288/1 Any actual quarrel between these Powers or powerlets could only end to the disadvantage of the Sultan. 1973 Times Lit. Suppl. 16 Mar. 288/5 If you improve the housing conditions of the working class, they will only put coals in the bath. 1991 J. Phillips You'll never eat Lunch in this Town Again (1992) 98 Redford..sports lots of scarves and mufflers and hats and shades, which only make him look more Redfordish. 6. With a word or phrase expressing time: not until, not before, not earlier than. only just: in the immediate past (see just adv. 3b).Only may precede or follow the word or phrase expressing time. ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > antecedence or being earlier > [adverb] > not earlier or before no sooner1408 only1676 1676 J. Glanvill Ess. Pref. sig. a3 I have now only cast it into the form of a Discourse. 1768 L. Sterne Sentimental Journey I. 19 I have only just set out upon my travels; and shall learn better manners as I get along. 1791 G. Washington Let. in Writings (1892) XII. 9 Your..letter..came to my hands the day before yesterday only. 1846 R. C. Trench Notes Miracles Introd. iv. 57 The flower dropped off only as the fruit was being formed. 1898 Westm. Gaz. 23 Feb. 5/3 A woman..yesterday killed herself. She was only married on Saturday. 1930 N. Coward Private Lives i. 37 Victor. Have you been here long? Sybil. No, we only arrived to-day. 1989 Austin (Texas) Amer.-Statesman 29 Apr. a7/1 Only then did the White House take its first cautious steps. 2000 K. Shamsie Salt & Saffron (2001) xviii. 186 I had only just learnt to drive. 7. [Compare German nur.] As much as, just (just adv. 6c). Frequently in conditional clauses introduced by if.Probably a development from the sense ‘no more than’. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > [adverb] > as much (as) just1551 only1782 1782 J. H. St. J. de Crèvecoeur Lett. from Amer. Farmer i. 3 Only think of a London man going to Rome! Where is it that these English folks won't go? 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. ix. 410 [They] would willingly join to effect it, if only they could obtain the help of such a force..as might secure those who should rise in arms. 1875 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) III. 193 He is coming..if you will only wait. 1888 Sunday Talk June 345/1 If I could only give you one-half of the stories..I would make the best article I have yet written. 1955 J. P. Donleavy Ginger Man viii. 78 If we could only get out into the country for a few days. 1982 H. Engel Murder on Location 84 Oh if I could only tell you half of it. 2001 N.Y. Times 11 Nov. iv. 2/4 Now, if we could only find a way to roust our cat from the sofa. 8. South African colloquial. As an intensifier: really, certainly. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > [adverb] > assuredly, indeed soothlyc825 forsoothc888 wiselyc888 sooth to sayOE i-wislichec1000 to (‥) soothOE iwis?c1160 certesa1250 without missa1275 i-witterlic1275 trulyc1275 aplight1297 certc1300 in (good) fayc1300 verily1303 certain1330 in truthc1330 to tell (also speak, say) the truthc1330 certainlya1375 faithlya1375 in faitha1375 surelya1375 in sooth1390 in trothc1390 in good faitha1393 to witc1400 faithfullyc1405 soothly to sayc1405 all righta1413 sad?a1425 in certc1440 wella1470 truec1480 to say (the) truth1484 of a truth1494 of (a) trotha1500 for a truth?1532 in (of) verity1533 of verityc1550 really1561 for, in, or into very?1565 indeed1583 really and truly1600 indeed and indeed1673 right enough1761 deed1816 just1838 of a verity1850 sho1893 though1905 verdad1928 sholy1929 ja-nee1937 only1975 deffo1996 1975 ‘Blossom’ in Darling (Durban) 9 Apr. 95 Jislaaik, but you only feel a naartjie riding in the back of a truck with three drums of pig swill..for company. 1983 Sunday Times (Johannesburg) 8 May 21 Bliksem, these outjies from the South can only box. 1991 in Dict. S. Afr. Eng. on Hist. Princ. (1996) at Lank [Informant, Johannesburg] It was a lank kif jol at Susan's last night, hey! After the exams we're only going to have a lank lekker peace-out on the beach, man. B. conj. 1. The only thing to be added being; with this restriction, drawback, or exception; but (adversative); on the other hand, on the contrary. ΚΠ c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) 1 Cor. vii. 39 Be she weddid to whom she wole, oonly [L. tantum] in the Lord. a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Gal. v. 13 Britheren, ȝe ben clepid in to fredom; oneli ȝeue ȝe not fredom in to occasioun of fleisch. 1579 G. Fenton in tr. F. Guicciardini Hist. Guicciardin Ep. Ded. Onely the man for his integritie and roundnes was such one, as [etc.]. a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) ii. ii. 224 Spend all I haue, onely giue me so much of your time in enchange of it, as [etc.] . View more context for this quotation 1625 S. Purchas Pilgrimes II. 1117 They know not how to..refine the same [sugar-canes], onely they eat them raw. 1662 A. Marvell Let. 8 May in Poems & Lett. (1971) II. 250 Onely Colonell Gilby will tell you all when he comes down. 1796 C. Burney Mem. Life Metastasio I. 64 No matter; only will there be room for us all? 1877 C. H. Spurgeon Serm. XXIII. 179 Many a man would have become wise, only he thought he was so already. 1920 V. Woolf Diary (1979) II. 33 I..would like to catch the trick in his style—only I fear its thinking. 1994 i-D Oct. 116/2 Stuart is..after Flynn Boyle—but she wants Eddy, only he can't decide if he's gay or straight. 2001 C. Glazebrook Madolescents 212 Nosy cow, I'd flick her the finger only she's too stuck up to know what it means. 2. Were it not that, but that. ΚΠ a1766 F. Sheridan Concl. Mem. Miss Sidney Bidulph (1770) IV. 187 And only my uncle Bidulph is fonder of my sister than he is of me, my vanity would carry me away for want of a little ballast. a1774 O. Goldsmith tr. P. Scarron Comic Romance (1775) II. xix. 162 At length their passion became so violent, that only there was no bloodshed, Pyramus and Thisbe were nothing to them for affection and sincerity. 1802 H. Martin Helen of Glenross II. 226 Only he is very melancholy, he would be agreeable. 1901 M. Franklin My Brilliant Career iii. 16 Only I promised to stick to the missus a while I'd scoot tomorrer. 1914 J. Joyce Dubliners 146 Only I'm an old man now I'd change his tune for him. C. prep. 1. Except. only for: except for, but for, were it not for. ΚΠ 1541 T. Elyot Image of Gouernance xiv. f. 24 Only by violence they coulde not be broughte to their shyppes. 1664 S. Pepys Diary 22 Apr. (1971) V. 130 My wife and I in their coach to Hide parke. And pleasant it was, only for the dust. 1668 S. Pepys Diary 22 Aug. (1976) IX. 285 It is true..that our whole office will be turned out, only me. 1737 S. Berington Mem. G. di Lucca 295 The Project might easily take, only for the horrid Wickedness of the Fact. 1747 tr. Mem. Nutrebian Court I. 38 Ridiculing all forms of worship..only their own. 1811 A. de Beauclerc Ora & Juliet I. 30 Only for my tea, I should have had the head-ache. 1887 Notes & Queries 18 June 501/2 For many years the following notice was painted up at Bolton railway station: ‘Do not cross the line only by the bridge’. 1899 T. Watts-Dunton Aylwin vii. 238 I've been a-listenin' to a v'ice as nobody can't hear on'y me. 1914 J. Joyce Dubliners 44 Threaten her and say what he would do to her only for her dead mother's sake. 1934 S. O'Casey Pound on Demand in Windfalls 195 Who else could he be, only Mr. Adams? 1955 M. Allingham Beckoning Lady xi. 161 The only artists I've ever met were just like me only more so. 1990 J. McGahern Amongst Women 147 Only for Rose I don't know how he'd manage. 2. With that-clause as object (forming a compound conjunction): except that, were it not that, but for the fact that. ΚΠ 1706 S. Clarke Let. to Mr. Dodwell 29 That there is no real difference between the Platonical Notions and those of the new Testament, only that That which the Platonists call Mind [Νοῦς]..the Sacred Writers call [Πνεῦμα] Spirit. 1771 Hist. Sir William Harrington II. xlii. 167 Only that I know you don't love bustle, I should wish you here. 1804 ‘E. de Acton’ Tale without Title III. 241 Something like a castle in miniature, only that its windows were modern. 1845 M. J. Higgins in New Monthly Mag. Aug. 575 I would see and get it done at once, only that I am in doubt as to the best means. 1861 Amer. Agriculturist Jan. 14/3 Charred meats, bread toasted black, etc., are familiar examples [of charcoal], only that in these cases the heating is done in the open air. 1914 E. R. Burroughs Tarzan of Apes ix. 105 Tarzan of the Apes lived on in his wild, jungle existence with little change for several years, only that he grew stronger and wiser. 1992 Poor Richard's Saratoga Jrnl. July 7/4 Parachuting is similar to parasailing only that the line is released and you parachute down into the water. Phrases P1. all only (an emphatic variant of only in various senses, at length treated as one word): see alonely adv. and adj. P2. only but (also but only): (a) only, merely; (b) except only. Now poetic. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > state or quality of being simple, unmixed, or uncompounded > simple or unmixed [phrase] > simply, merely, or nothing but not buta1382 but only1478 in simple1548 tout court1747 tout simple1930 tout simplement1939 the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > quality of being exclusive > exclusiveness [preposition] > except or excepting > excepting only all saving butc1450 only but1478 1478 W. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 178 Paid..for the tythyngys ondely but in corn whan it was jnned in-to the barn—xxiiij li. a1525 Bk. Chess l. 416 in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1923) I. 94 [A king] suld bot onelye haue a quene. a1564 Q. Kennedy Breif Tracteit in 2 Eucharistic Tracts (1964) 126 To think þat it Is onely bot ane figure and taken. 1605 G. Chapman Al Fooles in Wks. (1873) I. 180 Now heere all are pleas'd, Onelie but Cornelio. 1678 J. Dryden All for Love ii. 17 You but only beg'd a last farewel. 1711 Light to Blind in 10th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1885) App. v. 127 The first dessigne was onely but to show the rebells, that the..garrison was watchful. ?1728 R. Blair Poem Dedicated to Memory Mr. William Law 5 For if, in darker Points, we were deceiv'd, 'Twas only but observing how thou liv'd. 1806 H. H. Brackenridge Gaz. Publ. 206 And only but a natural fool, Would take in head to fight or fence; Or 'gainst the slander break his shins. 1842 W. C. Bennett My Sonnets (1843) ii They shall rank him next only but to thee In their deep, holy, hatred. 1914 W. S. Blunt Poet. Wks. 137 Fear thou nought at our hand, nay, only but fair dealing. 1975 S. Heany New Sel. Poems (1992) vi White skulls and black skulls and yellow skulls, and some with full teeth, and some haven't only but one. P3. (it's) only me (also him, her, a specified person, etc.), used as an expression of familiarity or reassurance. ΚΠ 1760 G. Calman Polly Honeycombe 30 ‘Here's somebody coming.’ ‘Hush!—Stay!—O no! it's only Nurse.’ 1782 F. Burney Cecilia I. i. viii. 112 Everybody stared; but Mrs. Harrel cooly said, ‘Dear, it's only the man-hater!’ c1847 J. M. Morton Box & Cox in M. R. Booth Eng. Plays of 19th Cent. (1973) IV. 231 Open the door! It's only me, Mrs. Bouncer! 1909 E. Nesbit Daphne in Fitzroy St. x. 152 ‘It's only me, miss,’ said the sailor-hatted charwoman. 1921 Chatterbox 263/1 ‘Well, it's only Mr. Drayton,’ said Marjory, a little regretfully. ‘Only me, eh?’ remarked Mr. Drayton. 1957 Woman's Day (N.Y.) July 62/1 Beansy speaks the new English and makes my father awfully angry. ‘It's all chop-chop. It's only Stu.’ 1993 E. Nash Strawberries & Wine 248 ‘It's alright, Cassie. It's only me’ he said softly, but she had known that it was, and she wasn't afraid. 2000 J. Griffiths Grip on Thin Air 61 The artless voice on the telephone whispering It's only me when really it is I all the time. P4. only not: all but, little else than. Now archaic. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > similarity > [adverb] > almost or nearly nigheOE well-nigheOE forneanc1000 well-nearc1175 almostc1261 nighwhatc1300 nearhandc1350 nigh handa1375 nigh handsa1375 as good asc1390 into (right) littlea1413 unto litea1420 nigh byc1430 nearbyc1485 near handsa1500 as near as1517 mosta1538 next door1542 wellmost1548 all but1590 anewst1590 uneath1590 next to1611 nearlya1616 thereaboutsa1616 welly1615 thereabout1664 within (an) ames-ace ofa1670 anear1675 pretty much1682 three parts1711 newsta1728 only not1779 partly1781 in all but name1824 just about1836 nentes1854 near1855 nar1859 just1860 not-quite1870 nearabouta1878 effectively1884 nigh on1887 1779 S. Johnson Smith in Pref. Wks. Eng. Poets IV. 59 I was only not a boy. 1834 W. F. P. Napier Hist. War Peninsula IV. xiv. vi. 203 The fortresses were..only not abandoned to the enemy. 1862 J. M. Neale Safe Home (hymn) i Torn sails, provision short, And only not a wreck. 1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 41/1 There, an utterly fallen man..and only not bereft of his intellectual force, he lingered but a few months before the approach of death. P5. only too: see too adv. 5d. Compounds only-born adj. ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > birth > [adjective] > born > only-begotten one-gottena1382 one-begottenc1384 only-born1567 the world > life > biology > biological processes > procreation or reproduction > [adjective] > begotten > only ankennedOE one-gottena1382 one-begottenc1384 only-begotten?a1425 only-born1567 society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > child > relationship to parent > [adjective] > only child one-gottena1382 one-begottenc1384 only-begotten?a1425 only1483 only-born1567 only-childish1938 1567 Compend. Bk. Godly Songs (1897) 54 Lord Jesus Christ, Sone onlie borne Of thy Father celestiall. 1608 A. Willet Hexapla in Exodum 126 His first borne, which also may bee his only borne. 1761 Andromache to Pyrrhus 23 Say! alas have I decreed My Son to Death, my only Born to bleed? 1845 F. W. Faber Rosary 4 Jesu! kind visitant of earth, Of sinless and of painless birth, Thy Mother's only-born. 1870 E. Cook Poet. Wks. 30 The Baron weeps... His soul's adored; his house's pride; His only born, is dead. 1902 J. B. Stephens Poet. Wks. 77 Blessèd Virgin, pure and holy, Mother of the Only-born. ΚΠ 1871 J. H. Newman Arians 4th Cent. (ed. 3) ii. 233 The Arians..explain the word Only-begotten in the sense of only-created. ΚΠ a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) Gen. xxii. 2 Abraham..take þi only geten [L. unigenitum] sonn. ?a1430 T. Hoccleve Mother of God l. 115 in Minor Poems (1970) i. 55 By his sone oonlygeten. 1578 J. Rolland Seuin Seages 48 Howbeit he be my onlie gottin Chylde. 1640 B. Jonson Eupheme x, in Wks. 263 To him should be her Judge, true God, true Man, Jesus, the onely gotten Christ! only loved adj. ΚΠ c1450 (a1400) Orologium Sapientiæ in Anglia (1888) 10 386 (MED) Euery devoute and loved disciple of wisdame in this daye schalle in his entente come to his oonly-loved spowse, dyuyne wisdame. 1638 J. Ford Fancies v My onely lov'd Lord, all your feares are henceforth Confin'd unto a sweet and happie pennance. 1789 H. Brooke Vestal Virgin ii. iii Ah, my only loved! What mean these gushing floods, these deep fetch'd sobs..? 1839 F. D. B. Hemans Wks. 11 The only beautiful that change no more—The only loved!—the dwellers on the shore Of spring fulfill'd! 1923 H. Derozio Poems i With roses dress each raven tress, My only loved Dildar! This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.OEadj.eOEadv.conj.prep.OE |
随便看 |
|
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。