单词 | belie |
释义 | † believ.1 Obsolete. 1. a. transitive. To surround, encompass. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > surrounding > surround or lie around [verb (transitive)] befong971 beclipc1000 begoc1000 belieOE bestandc1000 to go about ——OE umbegangc1200 behema1250 befallc1275 berunc1275 girdc1290 bihalvena1300 umlapa1300 umlaya1300 umlouka1300 umbegoc1300 belayc1320 halsea1340 enclose1340 umbelapa1350 embracec1360 betrendc1374 circlec1374 umbecasta1375 to give about1382 environa1393 umbeclipa1395 compassa1400 encircle?a1400 enourle?a1400 umbegivea1400 umbeseta1400 umbeliec1400 umbetighc1400 enroundc1420 measurec1425 umbsteadc1450 adviron?1473 purprise1481 umbeviron1489 belta1500 girtha1500 overgirda1500 engirt15.. envirea1513 round?a1513 brace1513 umbereach1513 becompass1520 circuea1533 girtc1540 umbsetc1540 circule1553 encompass1555 circulate?a1560 ingyre1568 to do about1571 engird1573 circumdate1578 succinge1578 employ1579 circuate1581 girdle1582 wheel1582 circumgyre1583 enring1589 ringa1592 embail1593 enfold1596 invier1596 stem1596 circumcingle1599 ingert1599 engirdle1602 circulize1603 circumscribe1605 begirt1608 to go round1610 enwheela1616 surround1616 shingle1621 encirculize1624 circumviron1632 beround1643 orba1644 circumference1646 becircle1648 incircuitc1650 circumcinge1657 circumtend1684 besiege1686 cincture1789 zone1795 cravat1814 encincture1820 circumvent1824 begirdle1837 perambulate1863 cordon1891 OE Genesis A (1931) 229 Seo æftre [ea] Ethiopia land and liodgeard beligeð uton. c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) iii. l. 3285 (MED) Dymmed with skies foule..with tempest al be-leyn. 1627 T. May tr. Lucan Pharsalia (1631) iii. 219 From Pholoe Beely'd with Centaures. b. transitive. spec. To surround with an army, besiege, beleaguer. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > attack > action or state of siege or blockade > besiege or blockade [verb (transitive)] belieOE besita1100 beset?c1225 assiege1297 besiege1297 belayc1320 umsiegea1325 ensiegec1380 environa1382 to set before1382 siege1390 forset?a1400 foldc1400 setc1400 to lay siege to, unto, about, against, beforec1449 oppugn?a1475 pursue1488 obsess1503 ferma1522 gird1548 begird1589 beleaguer1590 block1591 invest1591 intermure1606 blockade1684 to lay blockade to1713 leaguer1720 to form the siege1776 cerne1857 OE Ælfric Old Eng. Hexateuch: Josh. (Claud.) vii. 9 Ealle ðas landleoda belicgað us mid fyrde & urne naman adylegiað. a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 51 (MED) He gederede michel ferde..and bilai þe burh. c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) l. 5368 He was bilayn in þat cite. c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 4483 Now haþ þe A[meral] by-leyn hem þer. c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) iii. l. 1782 (MED) Priamus so sore hath hem be-leyn On euery half. a1525 Eng. Conquest Ireland (Trin. Dublin) (1896) 104 (MED) Obreen..was belyggynge lymeryke with ful grete hostes. a1639 J. Spottiswood Hist. Church Scotl. (1655) v. 259 Lord Claud Hamilton belyed Paslay. 2. a. intransitive. With to. To lie near, be close to. Chiefly figurative: to relate or belong to, be concerned with. Also transitive. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > owning > belong [verb (intransitive)] limp858 longlOE belielOE fallc1175 rine?c1225 belongc1330 pertaina1382 bec1384 appertain1416 cohere1634 the world > space > distance > nearness > be near [verb (intransitive)] belielOE anear1582 neighbour1592 the world > relative properties > relationship > relevance or pertinence > [verb (intransitive)] belimpOE beholda1067 belielOE pertaina1325 pendc1330 appendc1386 appertainc1386 holdc1430 pretenda1470 recorda1500 depend1525 extenda1533 inherea1628 to make to ——1645 apply1741 lOE Writ of Edward the Confessor, Winchester (Sawyer 1154) in F. E. Harmer Anglo-Saxon Writs (1952) 400 Ic cyþe eow þæt ic hebbe bicweðen Portland & eall þæt ðerto bilyð in to Gealden Mynstre on Wyncheastre. a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 61 (MED) Þo forsinegede men, þe habbeð þo sinnes don þe biliggeð to here shrifte. a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 15 Þe six werkes of þesternesse þe biliȝe to nihte. a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 147 Þerto [sc. to Cappadocia] be-lyeþ [L. subjacet] Cilicia. a1500 Ratis Raving (Cambr. Kk.1.5) l. 134 in R. Girvan Ratis Raving & Other Early Scots Poems (1939) 4 Infortone thar next belys. 1522 Worlde & Chylde (de Worde) (1909) sig. B.iiv Coueyte..no good that hym be lythe. b. intransitive. To be proper or appropriate to, esp. as a duty or responsibility; to be applicable. Also impersonal: it is proper or requisite. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > suitability or appropriateness > be suitable, appropriate, or suit [verb (intransitive)] > be fitting or proper i-burec1000 shallc1000 belongOE becomec1175 fallc1175 beliea1225 ferea1300 longc1350 beseemc1384 pertainc1384 it is worthy thata1398 accordc1400 foldc1400 affeir1415 fit1574 suit?1591 sort1595 a1225 ( Rule St. Benet (Winteney) (1888) lv. 111 Ðeos foresceawung belið to þære abbodesse [L. penes abbatissam est; OE Corpus Cambr. ðæs abbodes foresceawunge sceal beon be þysum]. c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) l. 8713 (MED) He..was icrouned king..Of þe bissop of londone, as to him bilay. a1400 in K. W. Engeroff Untersuchung ‘Usages of Winchester’ (1914) 50 Also twey coroners by-lyþ þat þer be in Wynchestre. a1400 in K. W. Engeroff Untersuchung ‘Usages of Winchester’ (1914) 70 (MED) Chese, botere..and smere, þare þe kynges wyȝte by-lyþ shal nyme as meche of þe halue peyse as of þe hole wyȝte. a1400 in K. W. Engeroff Untersuchung ‘Usages of Winchester’ (1914) 84 (MED) Þere þat a-tachement ne by-lyth nouȝt. 3. transitive. To have sexual intercourse with. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > engage in sexual activity with [verb (transitive)] > have sexual intercourse with mingeOE haveOE knowc1175 ofliec1275 to lie with (or by)a1300 knowledgec1300 meetc1330 beliea1350 yknowc1350 touchc1384 deala1387 dightc1386 usea1387 takec1390 commona1400 to meet witha1400 servea1400 occupy?a1475 engender1483 jangle1488 to be busy with1525 to come in1530 visitc1540 niggle1567 mow1568 to mix one's thigh with1593 do1594 grind1598 pepper1600 yark1600 tumble1603 to taste of1607 compressc1611 jumble1611 mix?1614 consort?1615 tastea1616 bumfiddle1630 ingressa1631 sheet1637 carnal1643 night-work1654 bump1669 bumble1680 frig?c1680 fuck1707 stick1707 screw1719 soil1722 to do over1730 shag1770 hump1785 subagitatec1830 diddle1879 to give (someone) onec1882 charver1889 fuckeec1890 plugc1890 dick1892 to make a baby1911 to know (a person) in the biblical sense1912 jazz1920 rock1922 yentz1924 roll1926 to make love1927 shtupa1934 to give (or get) a tumble1934 shack1935 bang1937 to have it off1937 rump1937 tom1949 to hop into bed (with)1951 ball1955 to make it1957 plank1958 score1960 naughty1961 pull1965 pleasurea1967 to have away1968 to have off1968 dork1970 shaft1970 bonk1975 knob1984 boink1985 fand- a1350 in G. L. Brook Harley Lyrics (1968) 45 (MED) When þe ledy liht byleyn, ant lyueþ by þat he lahte. a1450 Quixley's Ballades in Yorks. Archæol. Jrnl. (1909) 20 45 (MED) Tarquinius..be force of his luxure Chaste Lucresse..bylay. a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. xxxii. 432 I slew my father, and syn bylay My moder. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022). believ.2 I. Established senses. 1. transitive. To deceive by lying, tell a lie to. rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > deceive [verb (transitive)] aschrenchc885 blendc888 swikec950 belirtOE beswike971 blencha1000 blenka1000 belieOE becatchc1175 trokec1175 beguile?c1225 biwrench?c1225 guile?c1225 trechec1230 unordainc1300 blink1303 deceivec1320 feintc1330 trechetc1330 misusea1382 blind1382 forgo1382 beglose1393 troil1393 turnc1405 lirt?a1425 abuse?a1439 ludify1447 amuse1480 wilec1480 trump1487 delude?a1505 sile1508 betrumpa1522 blear1530 aveugle1543 mislippen1552 pot1560 disglose1565 oversile1568 blaze1570 blirre1570 bleck1573 overtake1581 fail1590 bafflea1592 blanch1592 geck?a1600 hallucinate1604 hoodwink1610 intrigue1612 guggle1617 nigglea1625 nose-wipe1628 cog1629 cheat1637 flam1637 nurse1639 jilt1660 top1663 chaldese1664 bilk1672 bejuggle1680 nuzzlec1680 snub1694 bite1709 nebus1712 fugle1719 to take in1740 have?1780 quirk1791 rum1812 rattlesnake1818 chicane1835 to suck in1842 mogue1854 blinker1865 to have on1867 mag1869 sleight1876 bumfuzzle1878 swop1890 wool1890 spruce1917 jive1928 shit1934 smokescreen1950 dick1964 OE Wærferð tr. Gregory Dialogues (Corpus Cambr.) (1900) i. iv. 40 Forþon þe we men syndon & beoþ ful oft belogene [L. fallimur] fram oþrum mannum. 1799 C. Ludger tr. A. von Kotzebue Reconciliation ii. vii. 54 God have mercy on thee, fellow, if thou has belied me. 1912 J. P. Reid Skipper's Daughters 110 I wadna belie you. It's the truth I'm tellin'. 2. transitive. To tell lies about; esp. to slander or libel, to calumniate. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > slander or calumny > slander or calumniate [verb (transitive)] to say or speak shame of, on, byc950 teleeOE sayOE to speak evil (Old English be) ofc1000 belie?c1225 betell?c1225 missayc1225 skandera1300 disclanderc1300 wrenchc1300 bewrayc1330 bite1330 gothele1340 slanderc1340 deprave1362 hinderc1375 backbite1382 blasphemec1386 afamec1390 fame1393 to blow up?a1400 defamea1400 noise1425 to say well (also evil, ill, etc.) of (also by)1445 malignc1450 to speak villainy of1470 infame1483 injury1484 painta1522 malicea1526 denigrate1526 disfamea1533 misreporta1535 sugill?1539 dishonest?c1550 calumniate1554 scandalize1566 ill1577 blaze1579 traduce1581 misspeak1582 blot1583 abuse1592 wronga1596 infamonize1598 vilify1598 injure?a1600 forspeak1601 libel1602 infamize1605 belibel1606 calumnize1606 besquirt1611 colly1615 scandala1616 bedirt1622 soil1641 disfigurea1643 sycophant1642 spatter1645 sugillate1647 bespattera1652 bedung1655 asperse1656 mischieve1656 opprobriatea1657 reflect1661 dehonestate1663 carbonify1792 defamate1810 mouth1810 foul-mouth1822 lynch1836 rot1890 calumny1895 ding1903 bad-talk1938 norate1938 bad-mouth1941 monster1967 ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 55 Þe treowe is ofte mis trouwed. & þe sakelese biloȝen. for wane of witnesse. c1350 (a1333) William of Shoreham Poems (1902) 81 (MED) Wytnesses false and fele By-lowen hyne for hate. c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. ii. l. 22 Mede..hath..ylakked my lemman..And bilowen hire to lordes. c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. v. l. 414 I haue leuere..lesynges to laughe at and belye my neighbore. 1481 W. Caxton tr. Hist. Reynard Fox (1970) 90 He belyeth me falsely. 1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius 490 Wherein you doe unhonestlye slaunder him and belye him, without cause. 1620 Bp. J. Hall Honor Married Clergie iii. iii. 269 Where is the shame of this Romane Priest, whiles he so manifestly belies our holy, reuerend, worthy Master Foxe? 1667 S. Pepys Diary 26 June (1974) VIII. 294 Saying that he had belied him to our King. 1730 M. Tindal Christianity as Old as Creation I. xi. 161 The Consequence of belying the followers of Wickliff, was the Statute de Hæretico comburendo. 1763 D. Hume Hist. Eng. (new ed.) VII. lxiv. 448 It was rendered criminal to belie the subjects to the king, or create in him an ill opinion of them. 1766 D. Hume Let. 26 June (1932) II. 56 I shall charitably suppose, that some infamous Calumniator has belyed me to you. 1798 M. Edgeworth & R. L. Edgeworth Pract. Educ. I. 209 They have belied me that went behind my back to tell your honour the contrary. 1827 G. M'Caul Philos. Mind & Matter vi. 155 If he belied you when you were alive, he will not shrink from doing so when you are silent; as he will be the more sure of doing it with impunity, for fear often restrains defamers. 1904 Harper's Mag. Feb. 398/2 I had rather an enemy should bury me quick than a friend belie me when I am dead. 3. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lie, tell (lies) [verb (transitive)] lie1377 forgec1386 to belie the truthc1400 tellc1400 to tell (formerly to make) a liec1400 sayc1460 to face (a person) with a lie1530 cog1570 c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. x. l. 22 Þei lede lordes with lesynges and bilyeth treuthe. 1528 W. Tyndale Obed. Christen Man f. xxi What stereth them so furiously to rage and to belye the trueth. 1565 J. Rastell Replie Def. Truth sig. †v Let no protestant belie the truthe. a1634 W. Austin Devotionis Augustinianæ Flamma (1635) 123 The Judge of Heaven is judg'd; the Truth be-lide. 1664 J. Aynsloe Besome of Truth 5 He, with many more which I might mention of his Brotherhood, makes it their work to bely the Truth. 1727 Christianity & Free-thinking 118 A Man has Honesty enough to stand it out..rather than belie the Truth. 1794 J. Haggitt Count de Villeroi i. ii. 61 No, I will not so belie the truth. b. transitive. To give a false representation or account of, to misrepresent; to be misleading with regard to. Also: to be at variance or incompatible with. †Also intransitive (obsolete. rare). ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > misrepresentation > misrepresent [verb (transitive)] disguise1398 colourc1400 abuse?a1439 wrest1524 beliec1531 to spell (one) backward1600 misuse1609 bowa1616 falsify1630 misrepresent1633 traduce1643 garble1659 miscolour1661 misrender1674 travesty1825 misdescribe1827 skew1872 misportray1925 c1531 G. Joye Lett. Ashwell to Lyncolne sig. Bv Thus is the..swete gospel of Christe belyed shamefully and blasphemed. 1582 W. Allen Briefe Hist. Glorious Martyrdom sig. e7v I wil not belie my self, for so should I condemne my owne soule. 1600 W. Cornwallis Ess. I. xxii. sig. M6 It is a straunge thing how men bely themselues: euery one speakes well, and meanes naughtily. 1649 J. Milton Εικονοκλαστης xv. 143 He a declar'd Papist, if his own Letter to the Pope..bely him not. 1709 Lady M. W. Montagu Let. 21 Aug. (1965) I. 10 I know not..how much my face may belie my heart. 1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones III. x. viii. 45 Echo seemed so pleased to repeat the beloved Sound, that if there is really such a Person, I believe Ovid hath belied her Sex. 1751 E. Haywood Hist. Betsy Thoughtless III. xxii. 276 She thought she saw something so gay and sparkling in the eyes of mr. Trueworth, as denoted his mourning habit belied his heart. 1814 Ld. Byron Lara i. xxi. 398 His brow belied him if his soul was sad. 1851 C. Kingsley Yeast xv You are an Englishman..unless your physiognomy belies you. 1871 R. Ellis tr. Catullus Poems x. 16 They grow quantities, if report belies not. c1921 D. H. Lawrence Mod. Lover (1934) 195 His reputation as a spoon would not belie him. He had lovely lips for kissing. 1933 E. Waugh Let. 1 Jan. (1980) 68 The Governor..is a man prematurely aged whose unhinged mind belies his venerable white beard. 1966 C. Achebe Man of People iii. 39 The Minister sprang at him with an agility which completely belied his size and condition. 2003 U.S. News & World Rep. 21 July 40/3 While that's technically true, it really belies the real situation. 2009 Nat. Hist. Mag. 118 31 No, they are mammals—African hyraxes—whose low metabolic rate and varying body temperature belie their mammalian heritage. c. transitive. To disguise (a person or thing); to conceal the true character or identity of; to conceal the fact of. Chiefly literary. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > conceal by disguise [verb (transitive)] beclout?c1225 disguisea1375 veilc1384 dissimule1485 counterfeit1490 dissemble?1507 guisea1510 wry1567 discountenance1574 conceal1598 belie1610 dislikena1616 obvolve1623 transvest1649 travesty1665 mask1847 camouflage1917 1610 G. Fletcher Christs Victorie 35 A painted face, belied with vermeyl store. 1634 Bp. J. Hall Contempl. Hist. New Test. (STC 12640.7) i. 435 If we had been on the Scaffold to see a man challenging the dogs in the disguise of a Bears-hide, would we have said, Now two beasts are fighting? The Shape therefore may well belie the Substance. 1697 J. Dryden Alexander's Feast ii. 2 A Dragon's fiery Form bely'd the God: Sublime on Radiant Spires He rode. 1725 E. Fenton in A. Pope et al. tr. Homer Odyssey I. iv. 618 A Boar's obscener shape the God belies. 1730 A. Pope Temple of Fame in Wks. III. 154 His horn'd head bely'd the Libian God. 1759 J. Fortescue Diss., Ess. & Disc. I. xxiii Flow'ry deceit, and dark-designing fraud; Hypocrisy, with cherub-face belied, Mask'd hatred, quer'lous strife, and envy rude. 1810 A. Cunningham et al. Remains Nithsdale & Galloway Song 280 To belie the form of God in the unholy semblance of cats. 1863 M. Oliphant Rector & Doctor's Family viii. 146 in Chrons. Carlingford Spring had begun to show faintly in the lengthening days—spring, that so often belies itself, and comes with a serpent's tooth. 1970 L. Deighton Bomber (1972) xi. 151 The grimy condition of the coasters was belied by the fresh rain that had glossed their decks and given their hulls the polish of old jackboots. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > dissimulation, pretence > pretend, simulate, feign [verb (transitive)] > lay claim to, personate counterfeitc1290 colour1419 personate1604 affecta1616 belie1616 sham1699 assume1714 personify1779 1616 B. Jonson Challenge at Tilt in Wks. I. 998 Art thou still so impudent, to belie my figure? that in what shape soeuer, I present my selfe, thou wilt seeme to be the same? 1660 J. Dryden Astræa Redux 11 Durst with horses hoofs that beat the ground And Martial brass bely the thunders sound. 1700 J. Dryden tr. Ovid Ceyx & Alcyone in Fables 373 Morpheus..express'd The Shape of Man, and imitated best; The Walk, the Words, the Gesture cou'd supply, The Habit mimick, and the Mien bely. 1744 J. Thomson Spring in Seasons (new ed.) 43 The modest-seeming Eye, Beneath whose beauteous Beams, belying heaven, Lurk searchless Cunning, Cruelty, and Death. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > false assertion > assert falsely [verb (transitive)] feigna1300 liea1300 pretend1395 belie1561 misallege1566 pretence1567 perjurea1586 soothe1591 falsify1606 mislaya1626 misaffirma1631 1561 J. Daus tr. H. Bullinger Hundred Serm. vpon Apocalips xli. 269 He..belied him self to be the prophet of God. 1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius 110 b Whiche..is most falsely belyed upon him. 1659 J. Milton Considerations touching Hirelings 66 To bely divine autoritie, to make the name of Christ accessory to violence. 5. transitive. To call false, contradict as a lie or a liar; to deny the truth or truthfulness of. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > denial or contradiction > deny or contradict [verb (transitive)] withquethec888 withsake971 falsea1225 withsay?c1225 denyc1300 again-saya1382 naitc1390 nitec1390 naya1400 nicka1400 warna1400 denytec1420 traversea1450 repugnc1456 unsayc1460 renay1512 disavow?1532 disaffirm1548 contradict1582 fault1585 belie1587 infringe1590 dementie1594 abnegate1616 negate1623 nege1624 abrenounce1656 nay-saya1774 negative1784 dement1884 1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. 1158/2 This that I haue said, I will..stand vnto, for I will neuer beelie my selfe. 1611 Bible (King James) Jer. v. 12 They haue belyed the Lord, and said; It is not he. View more context for this quotation 1626 T. Hawkins tr. N. Caussin Holy Court I. i. 21 I will not be-lye the law of my Maister. 1649 tr. Alcoran 45 If they bely thee, know, they belyed the Prophets that were before thee. 1683 J. Oldham Poems & Transl. 172 Commend her Beauty, and bely her Glass, By which she every morning primes her Face. 1841 G. Borrow Zincali I. ii. viii. 352 They..never failed to contradict themselves, by permitting some expression to escape which belied their assertions. 1871 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues I. 169 The admission of that, he replied, would belie our former admissions. 1910 New Schaff-Herzog Encycl. Relig. Knowl. VI. 475/2 That he [sc. Pope Liberius] directly belied his earlier position can be asserted only on the ground of doubtful documents. ΚΠ 1600 B. Jonson Every Man out of his Humor Dram. Pers. sig. Aiiiv Fastidius Briske..cares not what Ladies fauor he belies. ?1608 S. Lennard tr. P. Charron Of Wisdome i. v. 20 They that belie their owne physiognomie, are rather to be punished than others, because they..deceiue the world. 1698 J. Norris Pract. Disc. Divine Subj. IV. 27 If a Man..does not appear to bely his Discourse by his Practice. 1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 356 Who in his last acts does not wish to belye the tenour of his life. View more context for this quotation 1813 P. B. Shelley Queen Mab iv. 56 Those who dare belie Their human nature. 1868 M. E. Grant Duff Polit. Surv. 196 Her life as a nation will not belie her great gifts as a country. 1868 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (1876) II. viii. 207 But..he grossly belied his faith. 7. transitive. To show to be false, prove false or mistaken; to fail to fulfil (expectations, etc.). ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > contrary evidence > contradict, go against [verb (transitive)] traverse1491 to make against ——a1540 contradict1593 to give the lie (to)1593 dementie1594 belie1624 militate1642 contravenea1670 disconfirm1827 contra-indicate1880 1624 R. Montagu Gagg for New Gospell? xxv. 201 Iacob saith, Gen. 48. 16. The Angell which redeemed mee (you read, deliuereth mee) from all euill, blesse these Lads: where, first, you bely your owne reading. 1685 tr. B. Gracián y Morales Courtiers Oracle 7 It is the victory of an able man to correct, or at least bely the censure. 1703 J. Gordon Char. Generous Prince 252 Probus..did not belie his name, being a very good Man. 1781 W. Cowper Retirem. 714 Novels..Belie their name, and offer nothing new. 1833 H. Martineau Tale of Tyne iii. 53 There was..a quaver of the voice which belied what he said. 1857 H. T. Buckle Hist. Civilisation Eng. I. vi. 296 The subsequent actions of Arthur did not belie his supernatural origin. 1893 Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 56 341 The postulate of free will and moral responsibility assumed by the classical school is belied by physio-psychology. 1901 Calcutta Rev. July 142 Lord Northcote..has not belied expectations, and further, has won the esteem, and even the affection of Bombay. 1961 Daily Herald (Chicago) 20 Apr. 1/5 The record turnout belied theories that the citizenry would suffer from election fatigue and neglect the polls after township and school elections. 2002 K. Matinuddin Nuclearization S. Asia vi. 124 This was only a smoke screen as the facts belie the assertion. 8. transitive. Perhaps: to spread lies around or throughout. Obsolete. rare. N.E.D. (1887) defines as ‘Perhaps: to fill with lies’, following Johnson's Dictionary from the 4th, Dublin, edition (1775) onwards, and this interpretation has been reproduced by most later editors of Shakespeare. Earlier editions of Johnson cited this passage as an example of the sense ‘to calumniate’. However it makes a distant but clear allusion to Virgil’s Fama in Aeneid 4.173–88, who spreads calumnies around all corners of the world rather than calumniating them. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lie, tell (lies) [verb (transitive)] > fill with lies beliea1616 a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iii. iv. 36 'Tis Slander..whose breath Rides on the posting windes, and doth belye All corners of the World. View more context for this quotation This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < v.1OEv.2OE |
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