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单词 path
释义

pathn.1

Brit. /pɑːθ/, /paθ/, U.S. /pæθ/ (in sense 2)Brit. /pɛθ/, U.S. /pɛθ/
Forms: early Old English paat, early Old English paed, early Old English paeð, Old English pad (in a late copy), Old English pæþ, Old English pæð, Old English poþ (in compounds, in a late copy), Old English–early Middle English pað, Old English (rare)–early Middle English peð, Old English–Middle English paþ, Old English–Middle English peþ, late Old English poð (in compounds), late Old English– path, early Middle English pædes (plural, probably transmission error), Middle English paaþ, Middle English paath, Middle English paþe, Middle English paththe, Middle English paþþe, Middle English payþe, Middle English payth, Middle English–1500s patth, Middle English–1500s patthe, Middle English–1600s pathe; Scottish pre-1700 paithe, pre-1700 peathe, pre-1700 peith, pre-1700 pethe, pre-1700 pethth, pre-1700 1700s peath, pre-1700 1700s– path, pre-1700 1700s– peth, pre-1700 1800s– paith.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian path (West Frisian paad, East Frisian (Saterland) pad, East Frisian (Wangeroog) path), Middle Dutch pad, pat (Dutch pad), Middle Low German pāt, pat, Old High German phad, pfad (Middle High German phat, German Pfad); further etymology uncertain, perhaps borrowed early < an Iranian language (see note below).The word is apparently restricted to West Germanic; there is no evidence in Gothic or the early Scandinavian languages (but perhaps compare Finnish pade valley, probably < a Germanic language). The forms show that the word must have been in West Germanic before the Christian era. The form of the consonants is problematic. While the final fricative suggests the regular operation of the First Germanic Consonant Shift (Grimm's Law), the origin of the initial p- is debated: according to Grimm's Law, an underlying Indo-European p- should have shifted to f- ; alternatively, Germanic p- could derive from Indo-European *b- , the existence of which is uncertain. The most widely accepted theory sees the word as a borrowing from Iranian, in which Indo-European p- is preserved, and there is alternation between forms with -t- and forms with -θ- ; compare Avestan pantā (nominative), paθō (genitive) way, Old Persian pathi- , ultimately < the same Indo-European base as find v. (compare found v.1). This explanation does however pose historical problems, given the limited distribution of the Germanic word. An alternative suggestion assumes a borrowing from an unattested Gaulish term ( < the same Celtic root as Old Welsh, Welsh pant valley, of unknown origin; compare sense 2a). While this model can account for the consonants, the vowel quantity is unexplained (a long vowel would be expected). H. Kuhn ( Zeitschr. Mundartforschung (1961) 28 4, 14) lists the word with a small number of West Germanic terms with unshifted initial p- , which he regards as deriving from a pre-Germanic Indo-European substratum; he regards path as being ultimately < the same Indo-European root as foot n. and int. In Old English the stem vowel typically alternates between æ and a, with the latter occurring before endings containing a back vowel, and the former occurring elsewhere (see A. Campbell Old Eng. Gram. (1959) §157); however, there is much analogical levelling. Old English forms with o as stem vowel are attested only when the word is the second element of compounds, and result from low stress (see A. Campbell Old Eng. Gram. (1959) §335). The evidence sometimes adduced for an Old English feminine by-form paþu is late and doubtful.
I. Physical uses.
1.
a. A way or track formed by the continued treading of pedestrians or animals, rather than one deliberately planned and made; a narrow unmade and (usually) unenclosed way that people on foot can use. In later use also: a way specifically made for people on foot, as in a park or alongside a road.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, passage, or means of access to a place > [noun]
patheOE
gangOE
gangwayOE
passagec1300
wenta1325
goingc1350
transit1440
way-wenta1450
accessa1460
traduct1535
conveyance1542
ancoming1589
passado1599
avenue1600
passageway?1606
pass1608
way-ganga1628
approach1633
duct1670
waygate?c1690
way-goa1694
vent1715
archway1802
passway1825
approach road1833
fairway1903
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > track, trail, or path > [noun]
styc725
patheOE
stighta1340
trod-gatea1400
tread14..
pathwaya1450
terry1563
trod1570
trade way1589
track1643
trod-way1660
drifta1711
roadie1768
loke1787
trace1807
trail1807
trackway1818
mud pike1851
dirt track1902
eOE Royal Charter: Wihtred of Kent to St. Mary's Church, Lyminge (Sawyer 19) in H. Sweet Oldest Eng. Texts (1885) 428 Terminos, id est, bereueg et meguines paed et stretleg.
OE Antwerp Gloss. (1955) 140 Semita, manna pað. Callis, deora pað.
OE Homily: De Temporibus Anticristi (Corpus Cambr. 419) in A. S. Napier Wulfstan (1883) 192 Snaca on wege and næddre on pæðe.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) 562 Leode nere þar nane..buten westiȝe pædes [c1300 Otho paþes].
c1350 Nominale (Cambr. Ee.4.20) in Trans. Philol. Soc. (1906) 12* (MED) Sylden waxus gres in the path.
a1450 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Lamb.) (1887) i. 8432 Of þe Walsche he tok to companies, Paþes to waite, & stretes, & styes.
a1500 tr. Lady Prioress in J. O. Halliwell Select. Minor Poems J. Lydgate (1840) 114 (MED) He thought yt was a longe waye to the pathes end.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. i. sig. A4v That path they take, that beaten seemd most bare.
1637 J. Milton Comus 2 Their way Lies through the perplex't paths of this dreare wood.
1644 in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 142 Then this deponent went out of the Path and tooke a Pochery tree between this deponent and him to see what he was a doeing.
1751 T. Gray Elegy xxix. 11 Slow thro' the church-way path we saw him born.
1791 A. Radcliffe Romance of Forest I. ii. 65 Paths can't be made without feet.
1837 E. Bulwer-Lytton Ernest Maltravers I. i. i. 10 There is no path across it that I can discern.
1908 E. F. Benson Climber 45 Lucia was in the garden, walking up and down the gravel path.
1947 M. Lowry Under Volcano i. 15 Narrow grass paths, trodden by cactus farmers coming home from work.
2001 A. O'Hare Green Eyes ix. 116 If this is a path, it was made by the wee people or, more than likely, rabbits.
b. A specially laid track for runners or other sportspeople. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > [noun] > course or track
coursec1320
race1612
piste1696
route1771
track1836
path1883
athletics track1952
parcours1971
1883 Harper's Mag. Nov. 907/2 St. Paul's School..has..a quarter-mile cinder path.
1901 Oxf. Mag. 24 Apr. 291/1 The path [for foot-racing]..after the recent frosts was loose and crumbling.
1995 Daily Mail Ski Mag. Feb.–Mar. 88 Oslo boasts the 1952 Olympic natural luge run. It's a 1500m floodlit path down a hill, not some namby-pamby iced track.
c. A flat circular track on which the wheels or rollers of a mounted gun or a machine travel, e.g. when changing azimuth. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > [noun] > path or track for machine
race1819
path1888
1888 Daily News 16 July 3/1 The turret paths of the Inflexible... These paths—that is, the circular planes on which the rollers for the revolving of the turrets travel—are of cast iron.
1913 N.E.D. at Track sb. An iron path or pair of rails which a carriage in a machine or a gun-chassis traverses.
2. Chiefly English regional (northern) and Scottish. In later use usually in form peth.
a. A valley. Obsolete. rare.Only in Old English (Northumbrian).
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > hollow or depression > [noun]
pathOE
slackc1400
navela1425
trough1513
nook1555
falling1565
swale1584
hella1653
depression1665
holl1701
sag1727
dip1783
recession1799
holler1845
sike1859
sitch1888
sulcus1901
OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: Luke iii. 5 Omnis uallis implebitur : eghuelc pæð uel dene [OE West Saxon Gospels: Corpus Cambr. denu] gefylled bið.
OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: Luke xvi. 26 Inter uos et nos chaos magnum firmatum est : bituih iuih & usih dene uel pæð [OE West Saxon Gospels: Corpus Cambr. dwolma] micel gefæstnad is.
b. A steep path or road.Frequently in the names of places and streets.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > [noun] > steep
path1487
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, passage, or means of access to a place > [noun] > upwards > steep
path1487
pull1766
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xviii. 366 Ane craggy bra..And a gret peth wp for to gang.
1496 in T. Dickson Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1877) I. 297 To draw the gunnis in peththis and myris.
1528 in R. K. Hannay Acts Lords of Council Public Affairs (1932) 289 And that thai mete the said abbot..at the uvir pethis of Colbrandspeth apoun Monunday nixtocum.
1627 Rep. Parishes Scotl. (1835) 102 Auldhamstokis, fortie fywe landis and ane corne mylne quhairof sume lyis benethe the peithis and sume abowe the peithis.
1723 W. McFarlane Geogr. Coll. Scotl. (1906) I. 127 The Peth of Drone which peth is a highway through that chain of hills.
1770 Session Papers in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. s.v. Peth, The old roads..were full of wet holes, steep ascents and descents, paths and short turns.
1856 G. Henderson Pop. Rhymes Berwick 165 And ere he got far down the peth, The storm was like to stop his breath.
1881 J. S. Neish Byways 158 Doon the Paith he ran as if there were a hunder at his tail.
1924 Kelso Chron. 8 Feb. He [sc. a dog] got over dyke and hedge and was immediately weerin' the runaway sheep in the ‘Peth’.
1999 Northern Echo (Nexis) 12 July 8 The short stretch of road between the Magdalene Steps and Elvet Bridge was historically called Souter Peth - the steep road (peth) of the shoemakers.
c. A stretch of road in a hollow or deep cutting.Only in place names.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > [noun] > cut through a wood or rock
trenchc1405
holleway?a1500
path1548
cut1730
hollow-way1765
score1790
shute1879
1548 W. Patten Exped. Scotl. B ij We marched an viii. mile til we came to a place called ye Peaths [i.e. Cockburnspath]. It is a valey..a xx. skore [yards] brode from banke to banke aboue... So stepe be these bankes on eyther syde and depe to the bottom [etc.].
1855 Notes & Queries 12 74 A fatal accident had occurred to a person ‘going down the peth’, a hollow wooded part of the road [near Durham].
1904 J. T. Fowler Let. in N.E.D. (at cited word) Two of the main roads leading into and out of Durham are in cuttings through hills and are called respectively ‘Crossgate Peth’, or ‘The Peth’,..and ‘Shincliffe Peth’.
3.
a. Physiology. A neural pathway (pathway n. 1b).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > biological processes > action of nervous system > [noun] > nerve-path
nerve path1867
brain path1877
nerve route1879
path1881
pathway1885
1881 A. L. Ranney Appl. Anat. Nerv. Syst. iii. 299 It is as certainly proved that the motor impulses travel along the anterior half of the spinal cord, while the path of sensory impressions is intimately associated with the posterior half.
1902 H. E. Santee Anat. Brain & Spinal Cord (ed. 2) x. 190 The sensory paths conduct two varieties of impulse.
1942 F. A. Mettler Neuroanat. x. 201 There are thus two paths for delicate tactile sensations: a long, crossed path and an uncrossed one.
1950 Physiol. Rev. 30 461 An extrapyramidal path..appears to diverge from the cortico-spinal tract in the pons.
1990 Brain 113 531 The neuronal pathway involved could be the same. The first and principal one is the striato-pallido-thalamo-cortical loop and cortico spinal path.
b. A vessel or duct in the body. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > vascular system > [noun] > vessel
waya1382
vessel1398
vas1578
watercourse1615
aqueduct1712
path1904
1904 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 10 Sept. 585 It is doubtful if the cells leave the tissues by any other channels than the lymph paths.
c. Biochemistry. A metabolic pathway (pathway n. 2a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > biological processes > metabolism > [noun] > pathway
pathway1905
path1909
hexose monophosphate shunt1953
pentose cycle1956
pentose shunt1957
pentose phosphate cycle1958
pentose phosphate pathway1958
pentose phosphate shunt1964
1909 A. E. Garrod Inborn Errors Metabolism i. 7 This conception of the permanency of the metabolic paths is no new one.
1927 M. Bodansky Introd. Physiol. Chem. xi. 270 The possible paths of metabolism of this amino acid are the following.
1977 Jrnl. Toxicol. & Environmental Health 3 139 Norgestrel follows metabolic paths similar to those of norethindrone.
1994 Amer. Jrnl. Human Genetics 55 1019 That this result is obtained in primarily normotensive, nonobese families, suggests the connection involves normal metabolic paths.
II. Extended and abstract uses.
4. A course of action; a way of proceeding; a mode of behaviour or conduct; esp. a way of life leading to a spiritual goal. Also: a sequence of events or operations; the course of a person's life; (occasionally) a line of thought, argument, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > [noun] > (a) course of conduct or action
wayeOE
pathOE
waya1225
tracea1300
line13..
dancea1352
tenor1398
featc1420
faction1447
rink?a1500
footpath1535
trade1536
vein1549
tract1575
course1582
road1600
country dance1613
track1638
steeragea1641
rhumb1666
tack1675
conduct1706
walk1755
wheel-way1829
OE King Ælfred tr. Psalms (Paris) (2001) xxiv. 3 Gedo me þine wegas cuðe, and lær me þine paðas.
OE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Tiber. B.iv) anno 1067 Heo sceolde..þone kyng gerihtan of þam dweliandan pæðe.
a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 131 (MED) Godes paðes ben ure gode dedes..þe us shule leden to eche liue.
a1300 (?c1175) Poema Morale (McClean) 311 in Anglia (1907) 30 236 (MED) Go we alle in þilke paþ, & he us wule bringe..biuore þe heuenkinge.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1965) Psalms xliii. 19 Oure herte wente nott awei bacward, & þou boowedist doun oure paþes fro þi weie.
c1450 (?c1408) J. Lydgate Reson & Sensuallyte (1901) 2213 I shal folwen and pursywe Your pathis pleynly and doctryne.
c1484 (a1475) J. de Caritate tr. Secreta Secret. (Takamiya) (1977) 122 (MED) God conferme and make þe strong..in þe path of trewth.
1539 Bible (Great) Psalms xvi. 11 Thou shalt shewe me ye path of lyfe.
1567 Compend. Bk. Godly Songs (1897) 97 The paithis of the Iust, God dois direct.
1642 T. Fuller Holy State iv. xix. 340 Seldome two successive Kings tread in the same path.
1682 Sir T. Browne Christian Morals i. 1 Tread softly and circumspectly in this..narrow Path of Goodness.
1751 T. Gray Elegy ix. 7 The paths of glory lead but to the grave.
1781 W. Cowper Truth 301 The path to bliss abounds with many a snare.
1881 B. Jowett tr. Thucydides Hist. Peloponnesian War I. 29 The true path of expediency is the path of right.
1918 M. A. Lowndes Out of the War? vi. 91 The odd-tempered and queer-natured naval officer whom Fate had flung across her path.
1996 Independent 20 Aug. i. 12/8 He was non-judgmental, encouraging each individual to find his or her path.
5.
a. The course along which a person or thing moves or passes; an imaginary line representing this.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > [noun] > course or direction of movement
runeeOE
runningOE
pathOE
wayOE
tracea1300
coursec1380
coursec1380
racec1390
recourse?c1425
situation1517
journey?a1560
track1565
roadway1600
career?1614
direction1665
by-run1674
sensea1679
meith1726
heading1841
OE Exodus 488 Wlance ðeode ne mihton forhabban helpendra pað, merestreames mod.
a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Psalms viii. 9 The fischis of the see; that passen bi the pathis of the see.
a1450 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Lamb.) (1887) i. 12100 Hys folk was ioiful & gl[a]dly let, ffor þeire pathe fare to Bareflet.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms lxxvi[i]. 19 Thy waye was in the see, and thy pathes in the greate waters.
a1618 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Diuine Weekes & Wks. (1621) i. iv. 81 If all these Lights still in one path should prance.
1680 J. Flamsteed Doctr. Sphere i. iii. 6 Every..Point on the Globe..describes a Circle about its Axis, which I call the Path of the Vertex.
1795 C. Hutton Math. & Philos. Dict. II. 603 Trajectory, a term often used generally for the path of any body moving either in a void, or in a medium that resists its motion.
1805 R. Southey Madoc ii. xiv. 305 The populace..follow to the palace in his path.
1879 R. S. Ball Mech. 138 The curved path in which the ball will move.
1991 Jrnl.-Reg. (Medina, N.Y.) 25 Feb. 5/1 She was westbound on Center Street when Moriarty crossed in front of her path.
b. Mathematics. A continuous mapping of a real interval into a space; a single continuous unbranched series of nodes and lines in a graph.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > arithmetic or algebraic operations > transformation > [noun] > correspondence > into or from a space
path1912
vector field1922
scalar field1932
net1939
1912 Ann. Math. 14 88 Whenever there is an edge by which this path approaches a vertex, since the number of 1-edges at this vertex is even, there is a 1-edge by which the path can go away.
1939 M. H. A. Newman Elem. Topol. Plane Sets of Points vi. 143 Paths and loops are not merely sets of points.
1992 J. G. Oxley Matroid Theory i. 11 Let Pi be the path from u to v in G whose edge set is Cie.
6. Railways. A place or gap in a timetable allotted or available to an individual train over a given route. Also train path.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > [noun] > operation of railways > schedule of individual train
path1961
1961 Guardian 28 Apr. 30/4 The code..will indicate the class of train..and the number of its ‘path’ on operational timing.
1971 D. J. Smith Discovering Railwayana x. 60 Train path, vacant line in the timetable which may be used by an extra train.
1986 Railway Mag. Sept. 561/1 BR..has to provide the crews as well the paths.
2003 This is Local London (Nexis) 26 Feb. The railway link to London has no spare train paths.
7. Computing. A location or route as specified by a pathname; a pathname.
ΚΠ
1973 S. D. Crocker Request for Comments (Network Working Group) (Electronic text) No. 33. 4 The link number identifies over which of 256 logical paths (links) between the sending host and the receiving host the message will be sent.
1983 8th Conf. Local Computer Networks 83 The NAR table, a sort of routing table designed for addressing, reveals the relations between the naming neighbour (adjacent in a naming path) and physical neighbours (in same address space).
1994 What PC? Oct. 21/2 As with previous versions, you can set up simple aliases for directories, so you can access files without having to type in long paths.

Compounds

C1.
a.
path-side n.
ΚΠ
1597 J. Gerard Herball ii. 476 A Wilde creeping Pinke, which groweth..by the path side as you go from Redriffe to Greenewich.
1797 M. Robinson Walsingham I. xi. 171 I..lay down by the path-side.
1853 H. D. Thoreau in Putnam's Monthly Mag. Mar. 324/1 A little one-story chapel-like building..close to the path-side.
1990 I. M. Banks Use of Weapons (1991) ii. 205 The field and woods, the path sides and river banks were full of unnameable flowers of every colour.
b.
path-deep adj. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1816 L. Hunt Story of Rimini ii. 7 The sides, path-deep, are crowded round about.
C2.
path-breaker n. [compare German Bahnbrecher trail-blazer (late 18th cent.)] a person who or thing which opens up a path (literal and figurative), esp. a way for others to follow in a particular subject or field; a trailblazer, a pioneer.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > advancement or progress > [noun] > pioneering or breaking new ground > a pioneer
pioneer1605
outstarter1738
advance guard1759
path-breaker1843
pathfinder1847
torch-bearer1847
path-hewer1879
pacesetter1895
pacemaker1905
trail-blazer1908
style-setter1959
1843 Knickerbocker 21 333 A new set of path-breakers arrived in sight.
1905 Daily Chron. 15 Nov. 4/3 A gentle path-breaker in her chosen..field of the delineation of child life and child millinery.
2002 Austral. Financial Rev. (Nexis) 30 Sept. 63 Australia would be a path-breaker if it did move to eliminate the bond market.
path-breaking adj. [compare German bahnbrechend trail-blazing (mid 19th cent.)] pioneering in some subject.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > advancement or progress > [noun] > pioneering or breaking new ground
pioneership1834
path-breaking1886
pace-setting1893
trail-breaking1912
1886 Atlantic Monthly Nov. 650/1 This path-breaking idea first found expression in Congress.
1914 R. M. Jones Spiritual Reformers 16th & 17th Cent. iv. 46 A man of heroic spirit and a path-breaking genius.
2002 India Today Internat. (U.K. Special ed.) 23 Sept. 42/3 The path-breaking work of Indian artists of the 15th and 16th centuries.
path-cleaver n. Obsolete rare = path-breaker n.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > traveller > [noun] > explorer or discoverer
finder1405
explorer1577
Columbus1593
pioneera1817
explorator1836
pathfinder1840
path-cleaver1896
trail-blazer1908
trail-hound1931
1896 Godey's Mag. Apr. 360/1 The indefatigable path-cleaver who crossed mountains even the Indians believed impassable.
path difference n. Physics a difference in path length.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > science of sound > sound-waves > [noun] > path followed by
path difference1900
path length1900
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > light > emission of light, radiation > [noun] > optical path > calculation of
path difference1900
ray tracing1918
ray trace1942
1900 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) A. 193 349 V is the visibility-function, in terms of u, the path-difference.
1929 J. K. Robertson Introd. Physical Optics ix. 186 If the thickness of the film gradually increases, the path difference between..pairs of interfering rays will do so also.
1962 A. Nisbett Technique Sound Studio i. 28 (caption) The effective path difference (i.e. the extra distance travelled by the [sound] wave to reach the back of the ribbon 1) is equivalent to the distance D round the magnet pole-piece 2.
1988 D. J. Tritton Physical Fluid Dynamics (BNC) (ed. 2) 428 Whether this interference is constructive or destructive depends on the optical path difference.
path-energy n. Physics rare the part of the kinetic energy of a body resulting from its linear (as opposed to angular) motion.
ΚΠ
1912 F. Soddy Matter & Energy v. 126 There must be continual readjustments..between the path-energy, spin-energy, and wobble-energy.
pathfarer n. [perhaps after wayfarer n.] Obsolete rare a person who travels along a path.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > traveller > [noun] > by road
wayferendeOE
wayfaring manOE
way-goera1382
wayferer1388
dustyfoota1400
wayfarerc1430
thorough-farer1628
roadster1834
road-farer1845
pathfarer1880
roadman1906
1880 G. Meredith Tragic Comedians I. vi. 129 One who knew how to outstrip pathfarers.
path-fly n. Obsolete a kind of fly or other flying insect (not identified), said to breed on paths.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [noun] > member of > unspecified
path-fly1634
toddy fly1681
dog-bee1838
1634 T. T. de Mayerne et al. Moffett's Insectorum Theatrum (new ed.) i. xii. 75 In semitis..invenitur..unde ab Anglis vocatur The gray path flye.
1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. Path-fly, the name given by us to the fly called in Latin humisuga; it is found in foot-paths, and supposed to live by sucking the ground.
path-heat n. Physics rare = path-energy n.
ΚΠ
1899 N. Lockyer in Nature 20 Apr. 585/2 To get concrete images of these effects we spoke of path-heat, spin-heat, and wobble-heat.
1912 F. Soddy Matter & Energy v. 125 A colloquial way of describing these various kinds of heat energy is by the terms path-heat, spin-heat, and wobble-heat.
path-hewer n. rare = path-breaker n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > advancement or progress > [noun] > pioneering or breaking new ground > a pioneer
pioneer1605
outstarter1738
advance guard1759
path-breaker1843
pathfinder1847
torch-bearer1847
path-hewer1879
pacesetter1895
pacemaker1905
trail-blazer1908
style-setter1959
1879 J. Tyndall Fragm. Sci. (ed. 6) II. xiv. 342 Two great Path-hewers, as the Germans call them.
1907 C. Snyder World Machine p. v Geometer and traveller, physiologist and polyhistor, path-hewer and sage.
path length n. Physics the length of the path followed by a light ray, sound wave, etc., in travelling between one point and another (in the case of light usually after allowing for the retarding effect of the medium: cf. optical path n. (a) at optical adj. and n. Compounds).
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > science of sound > sound-waves > [noun] > path followed by
path difference1900
path length1900
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > light > emission of light, radiation > [noun] > optical path
optical path1893
optical length1894
path length1900
Rayleigh limit1922
eikonal1923
1900 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) A. 193 354 Other sets of molecules with other velocities and path-lengths will give other sets of lines.
1956 Nature 10 Mar. 469/1 An important omission..is mention of the practical difficulty of measuring path-lengths sufficiently accurately in testing insitu concrete structures by the pulse velocity method.
1994 New Scientist 10 Dec. 20/3 This is possible with a set of servo-controlled mirrors acting as an ‘optical delay line’, evening up the path lengths.
path master n. North American historical a public official in charge of supervising local road construction and repair.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > builder > [noun] > builders or maintainers of roads
waymaker?c1475
roadman1788
road-maker1792
path master1799
roadsman?1807
Macadamite1821
macadamizer1824
road breaker1834
grader1870
asphalter1880
linesman1888
lengthman1902
highway patrol1909
1799 Upper Canada Gaz. (York) 29 June 3/2 The public are much indebted to Mr. John McDougal, who was appointed one of the path-masters.., for his great assiduity and care in getting the streets cleared of the many and dangerous..constructions therein.
1869 Ann. Rep. Commissioner Agric. 1868 348 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (40th Congr., 3rd Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc.) XV The immediate supervision of construction and repairs is generally under the direction of local ‘road supervisors’, or ‘path masters’.
1968 E. S. Russenholt Heart of Continent iv. xi. 206 The Department of Agriculture orders that pathmasters cut weedy grain, and have the work charged to landowners.
pathname n. Computing a description of where a file or other item is to be found in a hierarchy of directories, servers, or other storage locations.
ΚΠ
1970 E. W. Meyer Request for Comments (Network Working Group) (Electronic text) No. 82 Files are organized hierarchically and will fill out as years go by. Documents are referenced by pathnames.
1995 UNIX for Dummies (ed. 2) 55 To tell UNIX which file you want to use, you type its pathname.
1999 C. Brookmyre One Fine Day in Middle of Night (2000) 190 Matt had freeze-framed on the landing in mid-step.., explanations whizzing through his head like path-names on a computer search-routine.
path-racer n. a bicycle made for racing on a prepared path or track.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > vehicle propelled by feet > [noun] > cycle > bicycle > other types of bicycle
forty-four1821
roadster1875
rear-steerer1882
pneumatic1890
path-racer1896
featherweight1901
free-wheeler1908
fairy cycle1920
superbike1935
sit-up-and-beg1939
bakfiets1956
high-riser1965
all-terrain cycle1970
chopper1971
mountain bike1972
shopper1973
mixte1975
BMX1978
cruiser1978
ojek1983
boda boda1995
e-bike1998
fixie2001
ghost bike2004
1896 Westm. Gaz. 21 Nov. 7/2 His prettiest machine being a fine path-racer.
2000 J. Hoff & M. Yeates Cooper's Wife is Missing viii. 383 Con Brennan left Cork city on his bicycle, a twenty-pound Raleigh path-racer.
path-racing n. bicycle racing on a prepared path or track.
ΚΠ
1908 Daily Chron. 30 Sept. 6/4 The path-racing season was practically ended by a most successful meeting at Herne Hill, when..two record trials were successfully made.
1997 Roanoke Times & World News (Nexis) 1 Sept. c1 Virginia's gradual move from path-racing sprints to course-racing distance contests.
path-walker n. a person who walks along a path or paths; spec. one employed to check and maintain a towpath.
ΚΠ
1887 Cent. Mag. Sept. 704/1 The path-walker is..plugging the smallest holes with sod.
1995 Poetics Today 16 218 Each path has had a long history, many branching pathways, countless maps and guides, and numerous outstanding path-walkers.
pathworking n. a technique of guided meditation (frequently using tarot cards or the Kabbalah).
ΚΠ
1983 D. Ashcroft-Nowicki Shining Paths 12 Pathworking is a fairly new term for what used to be called ‘scrying in the spirit’..the ability to project the mindself into a series of situations, landscapes, and events.
2001 Kindred Spirit Summer 87/1 (advt.) Life-path and soul purpose readings, path-working skills, star journeys.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pathn.2

Brit. /pɑːθ/, /paθ/, U.S. /pæθ/
Forms: 1900s– path, 1900s– path. (with point).
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: pathology n.
Etymology: Shortened < pathology n.
colloquial.
= pathology n. 3a. Usually attributive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > study of disease > [noun]
pathology1611
path1937
1937 ‘J. Bell’ Murder in Hosp. xii. 233 He does not appear to have had any path. tests done.
1944 ‘H. Ashton’ Yeoman's Hosp. xi. 239 I always hoped he'd land that job he wanted..in the Path. Lab. there.
1965 K. Giles Some Beasts no More v. 137 Sir Shelly diagnosed leukemia and it was confirmed by path. Prognosis was twelve months.
1978 N. Freeling Night Lords xiv. 61 You find a suicide which..is a phony. We wait for the path. report.
1997 Big Issue 29 Sept. (Student Suppl. '97) 7/3 Your putative shag will expect your idea of fun to be playing footie with a severed head down the path lab.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pathv.

Brit. /pɑːθ/, /paθ/, U.S. /pæθ/
Forms: Old English pæþþan, Old English pæððan, Old English peððan, 1500s– path.
Origin: Probably of multiple origins. Partly a word inherited from Germanic. Probably also partly formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: path n.1
Etymology: In Old English, cognate with or formed similarly to Middle Low German pedden to tread (German regional (Low German) padden , (Low German: Bremen) pedden to tread, step repeatedly), Old High German pfadōn to go, walk (Middle High German phaden to walk on a path, German regional (Swiss) pfaden to make a path) < the Germanic base of path n.1; compare pad v.1 In later use probably independently < path n.1 With sense 3 compare earlier pathed adj. Compare also pathe v.
1. transitive. To go on or along (a course, way, etc.); to traverse. Now chiefly poetic.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > [verb (transitive)] > go along a way or road
patheOE
road1627
eOE Metres of Boethius (transcript of damaged MS) xxxi. 10 Sume fotum twam foldan peððað, sume fierfete.
OE Riddle 72 12 Ic þæh on lust, oþþæt ic wæs yldra ond þæt an forlet sweartum hyrde, siþade widdor, mearcpaþas Walas træd, moras pæðde.
1577 G. Whetstone Remembraunce Gaskoigne xiv I left this vaine to path the vertuous waies.
1598 M. Drayton Englands Heroicall Epist. (new ed.) f. 57 Pathing yong Henries vnaduised wayes.
1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion ii. 24 Where, from the neighbouring hills her passage Wey doth path.
1728 A. Ramsay Robert Richy & Sandy 32 My tup that bears the bell And paths the snaw.
1807 J. Barlow Columbiad v. 167 The dales disclose Their meadows path'd with files of savage foes.
1861 E. Atherstone Israel in Egypt xxvii. 465 Some..Headforemost leaped; with mad hope, even on foot, To path the sea-depths.
1909 M. J. Cawein Giant & Star 161 I pathed the snow from barn to house.
2000 Wasafiri Autumn 24/1 That reaper, they tell me, is death. I see a peasant pathing his way through annoying dust with his crescent tool.
2. intransitive and reflexive. To go on or as on a path; (figurative) to pursue one's course. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > move in a certain direction [verb (intransitive)]
goeOE
wendOE
makeOE
aim?a1400
to make one's waya1425
reflect1547
work1566
to make up1596
path1597
sway1600
tend1648
vergea1661
steer1693
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > move in a certain direction [verb (reflexive)]
path1597
1597 M. Drayton Englands Heroicall Epist. Notes f. 5 This riuer did so strangely path it selfe, that the foote seemed to touch the head.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Julius Caesar (1623) ii. i. 83 For if thou path thy natiue semblance on, Not Erebus it selfe were dimme enough, To hide thee from preuention. View more context for this quotation
3. transitive. To make or beat down (a path or way) by treading. Chiefly figurative: to establish firmly, to entrench. Only in past participle. Cf. pathed adj. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > track, trail, or path > [verb (transitive)] > beat a path
treada1425
to beat a path1589
path1642
1642 D. Rogers Naaman 423 [They] become more pathed in their sinnes by much beating upon.
a1653 H. Binning Serm. (1845) 138 They choose the way that is best pathed and trodden.
1765 J. Brown Christian Jrnl. 280 What a mercy for weak and halt me, that the way is here pathed.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

> see also

also refers to : -pathcomb. form
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n.1eOEn.21937v.eOE
see also
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