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单词 partisan
释义

partisann.1

Brit. /ˌpɑːtᵻˈzan/, /ˈpɑːtᵻz(ə)n/, U.S. /ˈpɑrdəz(ə)n/, /ˈpɑrdəˌzæn/
Forms:

α. 1500s partesant, 1500s parteson, 1500s partisance (plural), 1500s partesin, 1500s partison, 1500s partissaunte, 1500s partysan, 1500s partyzyne, 1500s pertisant, 1500s pertysanstes (plural), 1500s–1600s partezan, 1500s–1600s pertison, 1500s– partisan, 1600s partesan, 1600s partizane, 1600s– partizan; also Scottish pre-1700 partasome, pre-1700 partesane, pre-1700 partesene, pre-1700 partesin, pre-1700 parteson, pre-1700 particane, pre-1700 partisand, pre-1700 partisen, pre-1700 partisences (genitive, irregular), pre-1700 partisine, pre-1700 partizan, pre-1700 partizen, pre-1700 partizone.

β. 1600s–1700s pertuisan, 1600s–1700s pertuisane, 1700s partuisan, 1700s partuisane, 1800s pertuizan (archaic).

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French partizaine.
Etymology: < Middle French partizaine, partisanne, partizane (1466 as partrizienne ; French †partisane , now pertuisane : see note) < Italian partigiana (1451; in regional (chiefly northern) use also partesana ), feminine form corresponding to partigiano (see partisan n.2), apparently so called because it was regarded as the characteristic weapon of such forces in 15th-cent. Italy. Compare post-classical Latin partesana (1454 in an Italian source, 1488), partisana (1493), pertixana (1474), Spanish partesana (end of 16th cent.), Dutch bardezaan, bardisaan (a1596), Middle Low German bardeszan (1540; also bordesan, partesane), German Partisane (1485 as partisän), Swedish bardisan (1546 as bartissan), Danish partisan (1538 as bartisan).The forms pertuisan , pertuisane (see β forms) reflect the alteration of the Middle French etymon after pertuis hole (c1140 in Old French; < pertuiser ; compare pierce v.), resulting in Middle French, French pertuisane (1528; 1471 as pertuisegne ). Intermediate Middle French forms in pert- are attested from 1468 (pertizenne , also pertizanne ) and are perhaps reflected in English in the form pertison (see α. forms).
1.
a. A type of spear used in the 16th and 17th centuries, with a long, triangular, double-edged blade, with two (more rarely one) upturned flukes at its base. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > spear or lance > [noun] > barbed spear
crooka1500
partisan1542
pheona1618
harpoon1625
angon1683
jag-spear1864
1542 in M. Hayward 1542 Inventory of Whitehall (2004) II. 954 Item thertye and Seven Pertysanstes partely gilt garnisshid with grene vellat and frrengid with grene and white silke.
?a1549 Inventory Henry VIII (1998) I. 104/1 Partysans staved garnyshed with velvet parcell gilte.
1556 J. Heywood Spider & Flie lii. 25 Byls, bowes, partisance, pikes.
1574 J. Baret Aluearie P 124 A Partyson, a iauelyne to skirmish with. Hasta velitaris.
1582 Rates Custome House (new ed.) sig. Dvj Partesants or Bore speares vngilt the dosen xxvi.s. viij.d.
1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies vii. xxiv. 570 Shewing their swordes, lances, pertuisans, and other armes.
1625 G. Markham Souldiers Accidence 5 Their weapons..shall be faire Partizans of strong and short blades.
1688 J. S. Mil. Discipl. 40 The Pike and Partisan are the onely Arms proper to stop the fury of the Cavalry.
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Partisan or Pertuisan, a Weapon like a Halbard, sometimes us'd by Lieutenants of Foot.
1805 W. Scott Lay of Last Minstrel iv. xvii. 108 On battlement and bartizan Gleamed axe, and spear, and partizan.
1855 J. L. Motley Rise Dutch Republic II. ii. ix. 63 Others had the partisans, battle-axes, and huge two-handed swords of the previous century.
1885 E. Castle Schools & Masters of Fence 44 The hastate weapons: pike, partisan..and poleaxe.
1967 F. Wilkinson Swords & Daggers i. 36 The partizan..had a long, broad blade tapering to a point and too small parrying blades situated at the base.
1986 B. B. Broughton Dict. Medieval Knighthood 364 Partisan, staff weapon of the pole type with a two-edged straight blade introduced during the reign of Edward III.
b. Such a weapon borne ceremonially by civic and other guards.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > halberd > [noun]
weyc1275
poleaxe1294
billc1300
glaivec1450
langue de boeuf1450
halberd1497
budgea1522
brown-bill1589
ox-tongue1611
partisan1611
Lochaber axe1618
feather-staff1622
halberd staff1687
battle-axe1709
ko1923
society > authority > office > symbol of office or authority > [noun] > staff or rod > carried by guards
partisan1611
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Pertuisane, a Partisan, or leading staffe.
1667 E. Chamberlayne Angliæ Notitia: 1st Pt. (1684) i. 213 Of the Yeomen of the Guard..One half..bear in their hands..partizans.
1681 London Gaz. No. 1661/3 His Royal Highness was received by the Provost, Magistrates and Council, and by a Band of the Young Men of the Town, bearing Gilded Partisans.
1828 W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth viii, in Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. I. 194 They have brought two town-officers with their partizans, to guard their fair persons, I suppose.
1846 F. W. Fairholt Costume in Eng. 341 One of King Charles II.'s yeomen of the guard has been here copied... He carries a partisan in his right hand, and a sword by his side.
1980 Daily Tel. 17 Nov. 18 Once inside the building the Yeoman's pikes (properly called partizans) are left in the Prince's Chamber.
2000 Charlotte (N. Carolina) Observer (Nexis) 21 Mar. (Travel section) It's technically called a partizan and is a ceremonial spear. It's 8 feet long.
2. A soldier or civic guard armed with a partisan. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > armed man > [noun] > halberd
bill1495
bill-hagera1500
halberdier1517
billman1530
halberds1543
glaive1577
halberdman1595
partisan1649
society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > soldier by branch of army > [noun] > member of national or municipal guard
halberdier1517
partisan1649
stationary1698
milicien1760
gendarme1796
municipal1837
national1843
carabiniere1847
Pasdaran1979
Pasdar1980
1649 King Charls his Tryal 3 The Lord President..with neer fourscore of the Members of the said Court. having sixteen Gentlemen with Partizans..marching before them, came to the place..and the Partizans dividing themselves on each side of the Court before them.
1693 London Gaz. No. 2869/2 First marched the City Partizanes in new Liveries bare-headed.
1820 W. Scott Abbot II. iii. 94 They..were fighting hard, when the provost, with his guard of partizans, came in.., and staved them asunder with their halberts.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

partisann.2adj.

Brit. /ˌpɑːtᵻˈzan/, /ˈpɑːtᵻz(ə)n/, U.S. /ˈpɑrdəz(ə)n/, /ˈpɑrdəˌzæn/
Forms: 1500s pertisann, 1500s pertisen, 1500s– partizan, 1600s partizane, 1600s partizant, 1600s partizen, 1600s partuysan, 1600s pertisant, 1600s– partisan.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French partisan.
Etymology: < Middle French, French partisan adherent of a party (last quarter of the 15th cent. as partysan ), combatant in a small unit (1678), combatant not in the regular army (1827), also as adjective in sense ‘declaring oneself in favour of’ (1580), ‘factious’ (1616) < Italian partigiano (in regional (chiefly northern) use also partesano , partisano ) defender of a party (1312), also as adjective in sense ‘partial, biased’ (14th cent.) < parte part n.1 + -igiano , suffix found in many ethnic names (e.g. parmigiano parmesan adj.) and also in borghigiano (noun) villager, (adjective) living in or relating to a village, valligiano (noun) inhabitant of a valley, (adjective) born or living in a valley, and occasionally in occupational terms (e.g. artigiano artisan n., cortigiana courtesan n.2).In sense A. 2c partly after Serbian partizan, and partly after Russian partizan, both ultimately from the same source.
A. n.2
1. An adherent or proponent of a party, cause, person, etc.; esp. a devoted or zealous supporter; in early use esp. such a person used as a bodyguard. Also with unfavourable connotation: an unreasoning, prejudiced, or blindly fanatical adherent.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > party or faction > [noun] > a factionary or partisan
factionary1555
partisan1555
parter1567
factioner1579
partialist1597
factionist1609
sider1616
partian1624
partiary1624
sidesman1647
factioneerc1710
sectionary1835
partyist1854
factionalist1882
sectionist1893
factional1904
1555 R. Eden tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde ii. iii. f. 62 Theyr newe capitayne..placed his souldiers as pleased hym in the forwarde and rereward, and sume as pertisens [tergiductores] abowt his owne person.
1569 T. Stocker tr. Diodorus Siculus Hist. Successors Alexander i. iv. 6 [To] haue a number of men in euery citie to be his Pertisannes or garde.
1595 S. Daniel First Fowre Bks. Ciuile Warres ii. iv. sig. G2v These partizanes of factions, often tride.
1600 E. Blount tr. G. F. di Conestaggio Hist. Uniting Portugall to Castill 292 The Portugals, pertisants vnto Anthonie.
1621 Knolles's Gen. Hist. Turkes (ed. 3) 1298 They made themselues partisans to the one to oppresse the other.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding iv. xix. 360 If any one should a little catechise the greatest part of the Partisans of most of the Sects in the World, he would not find..that they have any Opinions of their own.
1711 J. Swift Examiner No. 40. ⁋5 All the heresies in politics profusely scattered by the partizans of the late administration.
1757 E. Burke Philos. Enq. Sublime & Beautiful iii. §4. 79 How are the partizans of proportional beauty agreed?
1780 J. Bentham Introd. Princ. Morals & Legisl. (1789) ii. §4 A partizan of the principle of asceticism.
1818 T. Jefferson Anas Pref. 4 Feb. in Writings (1903) I. 267 It could not but occur to every one that these separate independencies, like the petty States of Greece,..would become at length the mere partisans & satellites of the leading powers of Europe.
1866 G. MacDonald Ann. Quiet Neighb. (1878) xii. 234 The clergy~man must never be a partisan.
1874 J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People vi. §1. 274 The Duke of Gloucester..had now placed himself at the head of the partizans of the war.
1915 W. Cather Song of Lark i. ix. 68 Lily's partisans urged that she was much prettier than Thea.
1934 R. Lynd Both Sides of Road xiv. 92 There is not a vegetable so mean that the initiate gardener cannot become its enthusiastic partisan.
1988 P. Gay Freud iv. 199 He appointed himself Freud's heated partisan, energetically defending psychoanalytic innovations.
2001 Brill's Content Feb. 155/1 Several groups disseminated the Nixon myth—Republican partisans, media pundits, network newsmagazines, and historians.
2. Military.
a. A member of a small body of light or irregular troops operating independently and engaging in surprise attacks, etc.; a guerrilla. Also in extended use.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > guerrilla > [noun]
statizer1616
privateer1676
partisan1692
bush-fighter1760
guerrilla1809
guerrillero1832
filibuster1861
mujahid1885
urban guerrilla1946
society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > soldier by type of service > [noun] > irregular
ribaldc1330
leaper1604
partisan1692
rapparee1692
1692 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) II. 523 Leiutenant collonel Manwaring..brought in 50 French partizans, with excellent arms.
1810 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1836) VI. 319 The numerous bands of partizans which are carrying on a destructive warfare.
1827 W. Scott Life Napoleon VII. ii. 36 The qualities of a partizan, or irregular soldier, are inherent in the national character of the Spaniard.
1986 E. Acton Russia iii. 43 The retreating [French] army was ravaged by hunger, cold, disease and ever more audacious and vicious assaults by peasant partisans.
2001 K. Glowczewska tr. R. Kapuściński Shadow of Sun 172 Tutsi partisans (called ‘cockroaches’ by the Hutus) burn villages and slaughter the locals.
b. A commander of such a body of irregular troops; a guerrilla leader. Now historical and rare (U.S. in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > leader or commander > [noun] > irregular
partisan1706
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) (at cited word) In the Art of War, a good Partisan is an able Soldier well skill'd in commanding a Party.
1710 London Gaz. No. 4724/3 The same Partisan having roaded some Days in this Neighbourhood with a strong Party,..all possible Precautions are taken.
1760 Hist. in Ann. Reg. 26/2 This march would have been thought an astonishing exploit in a partizan at the head of a small and disencumbered corps.
1853 J. H. Stocqueler Mil. Encycl. 208/1 Partisan,..also means an officer sent out upon a party, with the command of a body of light troops, generally under the appellation of the partisan's corps.
1907 J. W. Schultz My Life as Indian iv. 49 Heavy Breast, a grim and experienced warrior.., was to be our partisan, or leader.
c. A guerrilla or resistance fighter, esp. in Italy or eastern Europe during the Second World War (1939–45); spec. (also partizan) a member of the communist-led resistance forces in Yugoslavia. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > guerrilla > [noun] > specific
jay-hawker1860
bushwhacker1862
comitadji1903
chetnik1909
partisan1917
shifta1920
fellagha1922
maquisard1944
mujahidin1947
Tupamaro1969
terr1976
1917 Times 22 May 5/2 They [sc. the new government in Russia] do not intend to brook defiance of law and order, such as that shown by Lenin's partisans in commandeering Mme. Keshinskaya's villa.
1939 C. Gubbins (title) Partisan leader's handbook.
1944 Hutchinson's Pict. Hist. War 27 Oct. 1943–11 Apr. 1944, 414 In the autumn of 1941 Marshal Tito's partisans began a wild and furious war for existence against the Germans.
1958 P. Kemp No Colours or Crest vi. 100 He arrived with thirty Partisans, saying he intended to lay an ambush in exactly the same place as ours.
1972 Mil. Affairs 36 112 The author's personal experiences as a member of the British Military Mission to the leader of the Yugoslav partizans, Josip Broz Tito.
1993 Soldier of Fortune Feb. 49/1 It was led by Major Frank Jaks, our S-3 who..had in his teenage years been an anti-Nazi partisan in Yugoslavia.
B. adj.
1. Military. Of, composed of, or relating to military partisans; of or relating to irregular or guerrilla warfare. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warriors collectively > bands of guerrillas spec. > [adjective]
partisan1708
1708 London Gaz. No. 4447/3 Our Partisan Parties have lately been very successful.
1731 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. II Partisan Party, a small body of Infantry commanded by a Partisan, to make an incursion upon the enemy, to lurk about their camp to disturb their foragers, and to intercept their convoys.
1827 W. Scott Life Napoleon VII. ii. 36 The general system of Guerilla, or partizan warfare [in Spain].
1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. III. xii. 226 The Enniskilleners had never ceased to wage a vigorous partisan war against the native population.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 844/2 He [sc. Cornwallis] suffered the loss of two detachments sent at intervals to disperse various partisan corps of the Americans.
1942 Daily Tel. 22 May 1/3 Behind the fighting front the Russian ‘partisan front’ in the German rear forms a skeleton army.
1978 A. Price '44 Vintage xix. 220 He got back in..in 1939... France in '40, then the Middle East... And finally Yugoslavia as a weapons adviser to a big Partisan outfit.
2001 Kenyon Rev. Winter 92 Here he called on the Slovenian homeguards to join the partisan resistance.
2. gen. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a partisan; supporting a cause, party, or person, esp. zealously or blindly; one-sided, prejudiced.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > party or faction > [adjective]
factious?1527
partakingc1547
sided1603
factionarya1616
sidingc1625
factional1629
partified1715
partisaning1788
partisan1805
1805 M. Warren Hist. Amer. Revol. III. xxxi. 432 The people may again be reminded, that the elective franchise is in their own hands; that it ought not to be abused, either for personal gratifications, or the indulgence of partisan acrimony.
1842 A. Strickland Lives Queens of Eng. II. 380 Nothing but partisan malice could blame such hospitality.
1882 B. A. Hinsdale Garfield & Educ. ii. 363 One spot..across which the shadow of partisan politics has never fallen.
1906 J. London White Fang iv. iv. 225 The display on both sides, the quickness of the one and the steadiness of the other, had excited the partisan spirit of the crowd.
1962 E. Waugh in Month Nov. 305 He fell under the spell of Dr Jagan, but without becoming oppressively partisan.
2000 Amer. Heritage Nov. 60/1 Straw polls began to appear in the heavily partisan press.

Compounds

partisan ranger n. U.S. History (in the American Civil War) a member of an irregular detachment of the Confederate army (cf. ranger n.1 5).
ΚΠ
1862 N.Y. Times 18 May 3/1 The Richmond papers publish large numbers of advertisements urging enlistment in companies of ‘Partisan Rangers’.
1885 Cent. Mag. 30 396/1 Partisan rangers..picking off an English officer with as little ruth as they felt in shooting a stag.
1944 W. H. Herbert Fighting Joe Hooker xiii. 186 This, along with the successful raids of Mosby, the Confederate Partisan Ranger, against Heintzelman's generals.., left the Federals little to be happy about.
1998 S. E. Woodworth Art Command in Civil War iii. 54 Life in the partisan rangers was easygoing, with the men often enjoying the comforts of home while ostensibly serving the Southern cause.

Derivatives

ˈpartisan-like adj.
ΚΠ
1841 I. Taylor Spiritual Christianity 190 None commands our servile or partisanlike support.
2002 Turkish Daily News (Nexis) 22 May Kutan..claimed that funds were being allocated in a partisan-like manner for the municipalities that did not face a disaster.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.11542n.2adj.1555
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