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单词 be away
释义

> as lemmas

to be away
b. In predicative use, chiefly as to be away.
(a) Expressing motion so as to become distant from a place; that is departing or setting off, esp. at speed or in haste.See also to be well away at well adv. and n.4 Phrases 5.
ΚΠ
1784 in G. Caw Poet. Museum 152 Sae now they're away for Liddisdale, E'en as fast as they cou'd them hie.
1873 W. Black Princess of Thule xii. 193 The stag..was away like lightning down the bed of the stream.
1969 A. Cordell Song of Earth (1972) xviii. 159 I..gave the heels to the big grey mare, and we were away.
2005 C. Cleave Incendiary 159 Follow me. Petra was away. She was dashing between the racks grabbing clothes off the rails and throwing them over her arms.
(b) colloquial and regional (chiefly Scottish and Irish English). Chiefly with the present tense of be. Just going away, about to leave, leaving, e.g. I'm away home now.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > immediacy > [adverb]
soonc825
ratheeOE
rathelyeOE
rekeneOE
rekenlyOE
thereright971
anonOE
forth ona1000
coflyc1000
ferlyc1000
radlyOE
swiftlyc1000
unyoreOE
yareOE
at the forme (also first) wordOE
nowOE
shortlya1050
rightOE
here-rightlOE
right anonlOE
anonc1175
forthrightc1175
forthwithalc1175
skeetc1175
swithc1175
with and withc1175
anon-rightc1225
anon-rights?c1225
belivec1225
lightly?c1225
quickly?c1225
tidelyc1225
fastlyc1275
hastilyc1275
i-radlichec1275
as soon asc1290
aright1297
bedenea1300
in little wevea1300
withoute(n dwella1300
alrightc1300
as fast (as)c1300
at firstc1300
in placec1300
in the placec1300
mididonec1300
outrightc1300
prestc1300
streck13..
titec1300
without delayc1300
that stounds1303
rada1325
readya1325
apacec1325
albedenec1330
as (also also) titec1330
as blivec1330
as line rightc1330
as straight as linec1330
in anec1330
in presentc1330
newlyc1330
suddenlyc1330
titelyc1330
yernec1330
as soon1340
prestly1340
streckly1340
swithly?1370
evenlya1375
redelya1375
redlya1375
rifelya1375
yeplya1375
at one blastc1380
fresha1382
ripelyc1384
presentc1385
presently1385
without arrestc1385
readilyc1390
in the twinkling of a looka1393
derflya1400
forwhya1400
skeetlya1400
straighta1400
swifta1400
maintenantc1400
out of handc1400
wightc1400
at a startc1405
immediately1420
incontinent1425
there and then1428
onenec1429
forwithc1430
downright?a1439
agatec1440
at a tricec1440
right forth1440
withouten wonec1440
whipc1460
forthwith1461
undelayed1470
incessantly1472
at a momentc1475
right nowc1475
synec1475
incontinently1484
promptly1490
in the nonce?a1500
uncontinent1506
on (upon, in) the instant1509
in short1513
at a clap1519
by and by1526
straightway1526
at a twitch1528
at the first chop1528
maintenantly1528
on a tricea1529
with a tricec1530
at once1531
belively1532
straightwaysa1533
short days1533
undelayedly1534
fro hand1535
indelayedly1535
straight forth1536
betimesc1540
livelyc1540
upononc1540
suddenly1544
at one (or a) dash?1550
at (the) first dash?1550
instantly1552
forth of hand1564
upon the nines1568
on the nail1569
at (also in, with) a thoughtc1572
indilately1572
summarily1578
at one (a) chop1581
amain1587
straightwise1588
extempore1593
presto1598
upon the place1600
directly1604
instant1604
just now1606
with a siserary1607
promiscuously1609
at (in) one (an) instant1611
on (also upon) the momenta1616
at (formerly also on or upon) sight1617
hand to fist1634
fastisha1650
nextly1657
to rights1663
straightaway1663
slap1672
at first bolt1676
point-blank1679
in point1680
offhand1686
instanter1688
sonica1688
flush1701
like a thought1720
in a crack1725
momentary1725
bumbye1727
clacka1734
plumba1734
right away1734
momentarily1739
momentaneously1753
in a snap1768
right off1771
straight an end1778
abruptedly1784
in a whistle1784
slap-bang1785
bang?1795
right off the reel1798
in a whiff1800
in a flash1801
like a shot1809
momently1812
in a brace or couple of shakes1816
in a gird1825
(all) in a rush1829
in (also at, on) short (also quick) order1830
straightly1830
toot sweetc1830
in two twos1838
rectly1843
quick-stick1844
short metre1848
right1849
at the drop of a (occasionally the) hat1854
off the hooks1860
quicksticks1860
straight off1873
bang off1886
away1887
in quick sticks (also in a quick stick)1890
ek dum1895
tout de suite1895
bung1899
one time1899
prompt1910
yesterday1911
in two ups1934
presto changeo1946
now-now1966
presto change1987
1887 R. L. Stevenson in Leisure Hour Jan. 26 I'm weariet, an' here I'm awa to my bed.
1917 R. Graves Fairies & Fusiliers 24 I'm away to the rain-blown hill.
1985 J. Sullivan Only Fools & Horses (1999) I. 4th Ser. Episode 2. 213 I'm away now, boys. So I'll see you later... I'm off now, Del alright son.
2000 D. Dillon Return of Busby Babes 113 That's us away, she goes and kisses the good bit of his cheek.
2011 Belfast Tel. (Nexis) 8 Oct. (Final ed.) 2 I've been up for hours. I'm away home for a sleep.
extracted from awayadv.adj.n.
to be away
7. In predicative use, as to be away. Expressing the condition resulting from deprivation, loss, or extinction: gone (from existence); (formerly) vanished, destroyed, consumed; (now only) dead; in a faint. Now Scottish, Irish English (northern), and Manx English.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > dead person or the dead > [adverb]
awayOE
asleep1297
with one's heels foremost (also forward)1637
irresuscitably1834
the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > invisibility > [adverb] > vanishingly > vanished
awayOE
gone with the wind1896
OE tr. Medicina de Quadrupedibus (Vitell.) x. 264 Nim wulle & wæt mid biccean hlonde, wrið on þa weartan & on þa wearras; hraþe hi beoð awege.
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 616 Noe..sag erðe drie & te water awai.
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 2504 Our bred, our wyn ys al away.
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) iv. l. 623 A blase of fyr, now briht & now away.
c1475 (a1400) Sir Amadace (Taylor) in J. Robson Three Early Eng. Metrical Romances (1842) 32 (MED) On quat maner spendutte he his gud, That thusgate is away?
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Jer. xxxi. 15 Rachel mournynge for hir children, and wolde not be comforted, because they were awaye.
a1614 J. Melville Autobiogr. & Diary (1842) 36 He marked him, when all thought he was away, to lift upe his hands that war bund befor him.
1787 R. Burns Poems (new ed.) 150 Your mortal Fae is now awa', Tam Samson's dead!
1818 Edinb. Mag. & Literary Misc. Dec. 503/2 My dochter was lang awa [= in a swoon], but whan she cam again, she tauld us, etc.
1990 B. Whyte Red Rowans & Wild Honey (1991) 40 Aye, Maggie, it's been a lang time, and Sandy's awa.
extracted from awayadv.adj.n.
to be away
8. In predicative use, chiefly as to be away.
a. Expressing the state or condition resulting from departure or displacement: gone (from a place); absent (esp. from home, school, or place of work).In quot. OE with worth v.1 and reflexive pronoun in the dative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > absence > [adverb] > of the state resulting from removal
awayOE
OE Ælfric Old Test. Summary: Maccabees (Julius) in W. W. Skeat Ælfric's Lives of Saints (1900) II. 80 Mathathias..towearp þæt deofolgild, and wearð him awege.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 6955 Forrþi wass swiþe wel ðatt iosæp wass aweȝȝe.
c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 2582 Þi wiif is now oway.
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 2095 Þei..turned aȝein..& told he was a-weie.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 9702 What is wisdome be pees awaye?
c1450 (a1425) Metrical Paraphr. Old Test. (Selden) l. 2657 He was a way when þei lest wend.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue ii. v. sig. Givv Three maie keepe a counsell, if two be awaie.
1647 A. Cowley Spring in Mistress ii How could it be so fair and you away?
1838 E. Bulwer-Lytton Alice I. ii. iii. 22 I must give you a holiday task to learn while I am away.
1915 V. Bell Lett. (1993) 177 I'm afraid that being away will make it almost if not quite impossible for me to do the other dresses.
2001 Cosmopolitan Dec. 172/2 Your sis asks you to take care of her dog while she's away.
b. colloquial (originally Australian). In prison. Cf. to put away 2f at put v. Phrasal verbs 1, to go away 5b at go v. Phrasal verbs 1.
ΚΠ
1894 A. B. Paterson in Bulletin (Sydney) 15 Dec. 1 I thought a lawyer ought to know—I don't know what to say, You'll have to do without him, boss, for Peter is—away.
1925 S. Scott Human Side Crook Life 299 The world will begin to think that I must have been ‘away’.
2003 New Yorker 18 Aug. 117/1 In northeast Oklahoma City, the question ‘Where he away at’? is widely understood to mean, In what prison is he serving time?
c. figurative. colloquial (chiefly Irish English and Scottish). Originally: under the influence of the fairies. Subsequently: mad, out of one's wits, in a world of one's own; in a drunken or drug-induced state. See also Phrases 3.
ΚΠ
1899 W. B. Yeats Wind among Reeds 67 Those that are at times ‘away’, as it is called, know all things, but are afraid to speak.
1907 J. M. Synge Aran Islands i. 46 He has seen two women who were ‘away’ with them [sc. the fairies], one a young married woman, the other a girl.
1938 S. MacManus Rocky Road to Dublin viii. 70 Roisin, looking at him with pain in her eyes, said to her husband, ‘He's away. He must have met the mist and been taken in it.’
1959 J. Berryman 77 Dream Songs i. 3 It was the thought that they thought they could do it made Henry wicked and away. But he should have come out and talked.
1974 M. C. Gerald Pharmacol. xi. 206 The user [sc. of barbiturates] experiences a euphoric feeling, reported as being ‘high’, ‘calm’, or ‘away’.
1988 M. Munro Patter: Another Blast 3 The guy's no right in the heid, pal, he's away.
extracted from awayadv.adj.n.
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