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单词 plebe
释义

pleben.

Brit. /pliːb/, U.S. /plib/
Forms: late Middle English– plebe, 1800s pleib (irregular).
Origin: Either (i) a borrowing from French. Or (ii) a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French plebe; Latin plēb-, plēbs.
Etymology: < (i) Middle French plebe, French plèbe (mass noun) the ordinary people of ancient Rome (c1355; rare), the common people, the lower classes, the mob (1792), or its etymon (ii) classical Latin plēb-, plēbs (see plebs n.). Compare Spanish plebe (c1400), Portuguese plebe (15th cent.), Italian plebe (1313). Compare slightly later plebs n.Sense 1a suggests that Latin plēbs , usually a mass noun, may have been analysed as a plural. This reanalysis may have been encouraged by the occasional occurrence in post-classical Latin of a plural plebes in the sense ‘peoples’, and perhaps also by the existence of a classical Latin variant form plēbēs , singular mass noun (see plebs n.). In sense 2 perhaps independently shortened from plebeian n. Compare slightly later pleb n. 2. The following apparently represents an error, probably scribal, for Latin tribuni plebis (the edition followed ( C. Babington Rolls Series 41 (1869) II. 273) reads plebis, but gives plebes as the reading of the manuscript; it is uncertain whether plebis represents an emendation or the reading of another manuscript, as London, British Library, MS Additional 24194, the main source of variant readings in this edition, reads at this point trybunes pleb): a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 273 After consuls tribunes plebes and doctores rulede the comounte anon to Iulius Cesar his tyme [L. deinde tribuni plebis et dictatores rem publicam tractabant usque ad Julium Cæsarem].
1. Roman History.
a. Usually in plural. A member of the ordinary people of ancient Rome; a plebeian (plebeian n. 1).
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > the common people > [noun] > one of the common people > ancient Roman
plebeian1533
plebe1583
1583 Sir T. Smith's De Republica Anglorum i. xvi. 20 The patricij many yeares excluding the plebes from bearing rule, vntill at last all magistrates were made common betweene them.
1710 A. Evans Apparition 27 Do the Patricii and Plebes dread?
1750 Biographia Classica (ed. 2) II. 68 The Authority of the Senate, the Commands of the Plebes or lower Orders, the Authority of the Magistrates and the power of the People he only seems to have delivered.
1836 T. Doubleday Caius Marius i. i. 4 He! the Patrician of the Plebes! Marius; That bear with gilded collar!
1851 W. Smith School Dict. Greek & Rom. Antiq. 195/2 The tribes were to..determine on all matters affecting the whole nation, and not such only as might concern the plebes.
1981 Christian Sci. Monitor (Nexis) 30 Mar. b14 The plebes revolted and won the right to shout ‘Veto!’ against unjust actions of the government.
2004 Idaho Falls Post Reg. (Nexis) 25 May b6 The plebes, soldiers, slaves and patricians were roles drawn out of a can by Midgett's third-graders.
b. These people as a group; = plebs n. 2. Also: the commonalty of any other nation. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > the common people > [noun]
folkc888
peoplea1325
frapec1330
commona1350
common peoplea1382
commonsa1382
commontya1387
communityc1400
meiniec1400
commonaltya1425
commonsa1500
vulgarsa1513
many1526
meinie1532
multitude1535
the many-headed beast (also monster)1537
number1542
ignobility1546
commonitya1550
popular1554
populace1572
popularya1578
vulgarity?1577
populacya1583
rout1589
the vulgar1590
plebs1591
mobile vulgusc1599
popularity1599
ignoble1603
the million1604
plebe1612
plebeity1614
the common filea1616
the herda1616
civils1644
commonality1649
democracy1656
menu1658
mobile1676
crowd1683
vulgusa1687
mob1691
Pimlico parliament?1774
citizenry1795
polloi1803
demos1831
many-headed1836
hoi polloi1837
the masses1837
citizenhood1843
John Q.1922
wimble-wamble1937
1612 T. Heywood Apol. for Actors ii. 35 All other roomes were free for the plebe or multitude.
1614 J. Sylvester Bethulia's Rescue iii. 391 But still the Plebe, with thirst and fury prest, Thus roaring, raving, 'gainst their Chiefs contest.
1635 T. Heywood Hierarchie Blessed Angells vi. Dial. 363 The Plebe with the motion seem'd content, Proserpine smil'd and Cerb'rus howl'd consent.
2. U.S. colloquial (frequently derogatory). A newly entered cadet at a military or naval academy; a freshman. Cf. pleb n. 2.Also attributive, as plebe class, plebe year, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > learning > learner > [noun] > novice or beginner
younglingOE
new-comeOE
novice1340
ginner?c1400
beginner1470
apprentice1489
prentice1489
infant1526
freshmana1557
intrant1560
enterer1565
puny?1570
weakling1575
new comeling1587
novist1587
incipient1589
puisne1592
abecedary1596
neophyte1600
abecedarian1603
bachelor1604
novelist?1608
alphabetary1611
breeching boy1611
tiro1611
alphabetarian1614
principiant1619
unexperienced1622
velvet head1631
undergraduatea1659
young stager1664
greenhorn1672
battledore boy1693
youngster1706
tironist1716
novitiatea1734
recruit1749
griffin1793
initiate1811
Johnny Newcome1815
Johnny Raw1823
griff1829
plebe1833
Johnny-come-lately1839
new chum1851
blanc-bec1853
fledgling1856
rookie1868
elementarian1876
tenderfoot1881
shorthorn1888
new kid1894
cheechako1897
ring-neck1898
Johnny1901
rook1902
fresh meat1908
malihini1914
initiand1915
stooge1930
intakea1943
cub1966
society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > soldier by type of service > [noun] > student cadet
cadet1775
plebe1833
pleb1838
beast1871
snooker1872
yearling1885
1833 in Mil. & Naval Mag. (U.S.) (1834) Oct. 85 My drill master, a young stripling, told me I was not so ‘gross’ as most other pleibs, the name of all new cadets.
1834 Mil. & Naval Mag. (U.S.) June 281 I was reckoned, already, as one of a class of cadets. To be sure, it was the ‘plebe class’; but what of this?
1860 in Amer. Hist. Rev. (1928) 33 601 In most of our tents the cadets and plebes live together, 2 cadets, and 2 plebes to wait on them generally.
1948 A. Menjou & M. M. Musselman It took Nine Tailors 26 A plebe is the dirt beneath an upperclassman's shoes; but to add insult to injury, a plebe has to clean and polish the shoes while he is being stepped on.
1977 Time (Atlantic ed.) 19 Sept. 39/3 That summer, it [sc. West Point] enrolled its first women plebes—and now has 177 female cadets.
1994 New Yorker 10 Oct. 11/1 The newly commissioned Naval Academy graduate soon found out that he could not treat proud and competent American sailors the way he had been allowed and encouraged to treat plebes.

Compounds

plebeskin n. slang clothing worn by or issued to new cadets.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [noun] > for specific purpose > civilian
coloured clothesa1753
mufti1816
plain clothes1822
cit1835
plebeskin1888
civvies1889
1888 N.Y. World 22 July in J. S. Farmer Americanisms (1889) The fourth class entered camp on Monday, but are still wearing their plebeskins. They will don their dress coats the first week in August, when they enter the battalion.
2004 www.aog.usma.edu 22 Dec. (O.E.D. Archive) Class of 1944... Last class to be issued Plebeskins (trousers) with buttons instead of a zipper.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1583
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