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单词 promiscuous
释义

promiscuousadj.adv.

Brit. /prəˈmɪskjʊəs/, U.S. /prəˈmɪskjəwəs/
Forms: 1500s– promiscuous, 1800s– permiscuous (nonstandard); Scottish pre-1700 promikuosus (transmission error), pre-1700 promiscuis, pre-1700 promiscuouse, pre-1700 promiscuus, pre-1700 promixuous, pre-1700 promuscuous, pre-1700 1700s– promiscuous.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin, combined with an English element. Etymons: Latin prōmiscuus , -ous suffix.
Etymology: < classical Latin prōmiscuus common, shared, general, indiscriminate, (in grammar) of common gender ( < prō- pro- prefix1 + miscēre to mix: see mix v.) + -ous suffix. Compare post-classical Latin promiscere to mix up (4th cent.). Compare also Middle French, French promiscue (a1592), French promiscueux (1893), Spanish promiscuo (mid 16th cent.), Portuguese promíscuo (1671), Italian promiscuo (a1535). Compare promiscous adj.
A. adj.
1.
a. Done or applied with no regard for method, order, etc.; random, indiscriminate, unsystematic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > judgement or decision > misjudgement > indiscriminateness > [adjective] > not discriminated
undistinct1534
promiscuous1570
muddy?1571
confounded1572
confuse1577
undistinguished1598
indistinct1604
indistinguished1608
confused1611
muddied1647
indiscriminate1649
indiscriminated1669
undiscriminated1768
unselect1826
unspecialized1874
1570 T. Norton Disclosing of Great Bull sig. B.iij (As most part of beastes be) redy to promiscuous & vnchosen copulations.
1601 J. Wheeler Treat. Commerce 13 It is most profitable both for the Prince and Countrie, to vse a governed Companie, and not to permitt a promiscuous, stragling, & dispersed trade.
1678 R. L'Estrange tr. Epistles xxiv. 184 in Seneca's Morals Abstracted (1679) The Common and promiscuous Lot both of Good Men, and Bad.
1717 A. Pope tr. Homer Iliad III. xii. 84 In one promiscuous Carnage crush'd and bruis'd.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1772 I. 365 Johnson: Promiscuous hospitality is not the way to gain real influence.
1854 J. H. Newman Lect. Hist. Turks i. ii. 33 At Metz he [sc. Attila] involved in one promiscuous massacre priests and children.
1890 M. Oliphant Kirsteen I. vii. 124 I'm not a man for weirdless nonsense and promiscuous dancing and good money thrown away on idle feasts.
1929 Oxf. Poetry 21 The loud sea freed From windless smooth restraints Cracks promiscuous volleys of whips.
1991 Independent on Sunday 19 May 12/8 Policies such as the peanut programme have survived..through ‘log-rolling’—the promiscuous vote swapping among farm members with different interests.
b. Of an agent or agency: making no distinctions; undiscriminating.In later use frequently with connotations of sense A. 1c.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > judgement or decision > misjudgement > indiscriminateness > [adjective]
blinda1400
unchoosinga1586
undiscerning1589
unrespective1609
irrespecting1625
promiscuous1633
incurious1645
indistinct1650
irrespective1650
uncritical1659
indiscerning1664
undistinguishing1665
undistinguishable1702
unrefining1735
indiscriminating1754
undiscriminating1776
indiscriminate1792
unfastidious1816
rough1819
lumping1827
indistinguishing1828
unparticularizing1828
farraginous1837
imperceiverant1844
scattergun1845
undistinctive1851
indiscriminative1854
unselecting1895
scattershot1961
1633 E. Porter in Donne's Poems 405 Why should death, with a promiscuous hand, At one rude stroke impoverish a land?
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 310/1 Promiscuous Birds..feed on Flesh, Insects, Fruit, or Grain, as the Raven.
1704 R. Nelson Compan. Festivals & Fasts i. xxiv. 255 The Dispensations of God's Providence towards Men..are very promiscuous.
a1763 W. Shenstone Ess. vi, in Wks. (1765) II. vi. 21 A well-discriminated landscape was..to be preferred to a distant and promiscuous azure.
1802 G. V. Sampson Statist. Surv. Londonderry 129 No clover sown, on account of promiscuous flocks of sheep, which are emphatically called pirates.
1868 R. Owen On Anat. Vertebr. III. 293 The diprotodont [type of dentition] obtains in the majority of the Australasian marsupials, and is associated usually with vegetarian or promiscuous diet.
1931 B. Marshall Father Malachy's Miracle ii. 24 He is famed for..his promiscuous association with gay young women.
1995 Daily Tel. 15 May 14/7 Customers are very promiscuous and may well sign up to schemes..and then get loyalty fatigue.
c. spec. Of a person or animal: undiscriminating in sexual relations. Also (of sexual intercourse, relationships, etc.): casual, characterized by frequent changes of sexual partner. Cf. promiscuity n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > [adjective] > promiscuous
harlotry1579
light o' love1589
trolloping1701
promiscuous1804
wutless1853
slutty1912
make-out1949
slack1951
swinging1964
bed-hopping1979
bonking1987
1804 S. T. Coleridge Coll. Lett. (1956) II. 1119 He is..addicted to almost promiscuous Intercourse with women of all Classes.
1879 Harlequin Prince Cherrytop 29 Better frig, howe'er the mind it shocks, Than from promiscuous fucking catch the pox.
1900 A. Lang Hist. Scotl. I. i. 5 People..still polyandrous or promiscuous in the relation of the sexes.
1912 Bulletin (Sydney) 15 Feb. 13/2 The myrnonga is a person of more promiscuous habits [than the combo] who..prowls with furtiveness when the moon is young.
1924 C. Connolly Let. Dec. in Romantic Friendship (1975) 32 I am not promiscuous but I can't be loyal to an icicle.
1955 G. Greene Quiet Amer. ii. ii. 130 One starts promiscuous and ends like one's grandfather, faithful to one woman.
1978 S. Herzel in P. Moore Man, Woman, & Priesthood viii. 119 It is precisely because men can compartmentalize that they are more easily promiscuous than women.
2004 Metro 8 Nov. (London ed.) 15/4 Sperm from different males competes, especially among promiscuous animals such as chimpanzees.
2. Consisting of assorted parts or elements grouped or massed together without order; mixed and disorderly in composition or character; (with plural noun) of various kinds mixed together. Now archaic and rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > [adjective]
confusec1384
yblent1426
intermellé1487
farraginary1538
puddled1559
confused1576
promiscuous1579
pell-mell1584
ravelleda1586
mingle-mangle1589
rumblingc1598
skimble-skamble1598
huddle1601
plundered1601
promiscual1602
jumbled1611
promiscous1656
bedevilled1755
helter-skelter1785
muddly1829
hugger-mugger1840
wildered1853
pied1870
deurmekaar1871
mixed-up1888
screwed-up1942
snafu1942
scrambled1951
untogether1969
the world > relative properties > relationship > variety > [adjective] > miscellaneous or heterogeneous > incongruously mixed
medleya1400
intermellé1487
farraginary1538
hotchpotch1556
promiscuous1579
hotchpot1588
pied1594
motley1601
hodge-podge1602
promiscual1602
macaronic1611
farraginous1616
throughother1626
mishmash1652
promiscous1656
hotchpotchly1674
hodge-podging1772
hashy1781
mixty-maxty1786
motleyed1798
gallimaufrical1836
odd-and-end1836
chow-chow1844
speckled1845
ragbag1882
disherent1890
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > [adjective] > specifically of a single thing
promiscuous1579
1579 T. Rogers tr. J. Habermann Enimie of Securitie 316 We..rightlie deserue that barbarous, and vngodlie nations, shoulde..make vnmerciful hauocke of the promiscuous multitude.
1621 R. Burton Anat. Melancholy Democritus to Rdr. 20 Hee told him that hee saw a vast multitude and a promiscuous.
1663 S. Butler Hudibras: First Pt. i. i. 8 It had an odde promiscuous Tone, As if h' had talk'd three parts in one.
1715 A. Pope Temple of Fame 9 Sudden I heard a wild promiscuous Sound.
1752 D. Hume Ess. & Treat. (1777) I. 222 The characters of nations are very promiscuous in the temperate climates.
1817 J. Bentham Plan Parl. Reform Introd. 209 The promiscuous multitude being by intellectual weakness prepared for the reception of mental poison.
1830 C. Lyell Princ. Geol. I. iii. 37 [Woodward] conceived..‘the strata to have settled down from this promiscuous mass’.
1875 A. Helps Social Pressure xx. 291 What Milverton contemptuously would call our miscellaneous and promiscuous essays.
1900 J. K. Jerome Three Men on Bummel vii. 152 This promiscuous and desultory warbling of his must, one feels, be irritating to the precise German mind; there is no method in it.
1951 W. H. Auden Nones (1952) 5 Pawed-at and gossiped-over By the promiscuous crowd.
3. Chiefly Grammar. Of common gender; of either sex, of both sexes. Cf. epicene adj. 1. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > sex and gender > [adjective] > having characteristics of both sexes
bisexed1605
hermaphroditical1605
epicene1607
hermaphrodite1607
hermaphroditic1631
promiscuousa1637
androgynal1646
masculo-feminine1646
androgynous1651
ambosexous1656
hermaphroditish1764
androgyne1765
bisexual1793
hermaphrodital1823
heautandrous1837
amphigonic1876
intersexual1916
intersex1920
intersexed1921
harumphroditic1924
man-womanly1929
ambosexual1931
bi-gendered1976
a1637 B. Jonson Eng. Gram. i. x, in Wks. (1640) III The Promiscuous, or Epicene, which understands both kindes.
1714 T. Ruddiman Rudim. Lat. Tongue i. 6 We have excepted out of the Number of Genders the Epicene or Promiscuous Gender.
1878 L. Villari tr. P. Villari Life & Times Machiavelli (1898) I. iii. vii. 130 There were three sexes, male, female and promiscuous.
2003 V. Law Hist. Linguistics in Europe iv. 71 There are epicene or promiscuous nouns, such as passer, ‘sparrow’.
4. Chiefly slang (depreciative). That forms part of a mixed or undifferentiated company. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > malediction > [adjective] > ribald or scurrilous
foulOE
ribaldya1438
ribaldousc1440
villainous1470
ribald?a1500
ribaldious?1518
ribaldry1519
ribaldish?1533
rabulous1538
reprobriousa1539
ribaldrous1565
scurrile1567
profane1568
swearing1569
ribaldly1570
scurrilous1576
tarry1579
Fescennine verses1601
scogginly1620
ribaldrious1633
rotten in one's head1640
Billingsgate1652
promiscuous1753
blackguarding1789
blue1832
society > society and the community > social relations > association, fellowship, or companionship > a company or body of persons > [adjective] > miscellaneous (of company)
mixed1611
promiscuous1753
society > society and the community > social class > the common people > socially inferior person > [adjective] > including those who are
mixed1611
promiscuous1753
1753 T. Smollett Ferdinand Count Fathom I. xxix. 210 One may see with half an eye, that he is no better than a promiscuous fellow.
1785 G. Crabbe News-paper 15 This, like the public inn, provides a treat, Where each promiscuous guest sits down to eat.
1889 F. E. Gretton Memory's Harkback 58 ‘Go back to bed, you promiscuous old bird!’ ‘Promiscuous’ was just then a term in slang use.
5. colloquial. Casual, careless (cf. sense B. 2). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > indifference > [adjective]
carelessOE
negligentc1390
recklessc1425
neutral1494
indifferent?1520
undifferentc1540
uncareful1560
unmindful1560
unaddicted1583
unmindful1585
perfunctory1602
disinteressed1603
come day, go day (God send Sunday)1616
disinteresteda1631
Laodicean1633
vacanta1639
unconcerned1645
easy1649
mawkish1679
indifferinga1694
concernless1706
unminding1714
nonchalanta1734
coolrife1768
uninterested1772
uncaring1786
tooth-picking1814
pococurante1815
pococurantish1821
insouciant1829
non-committal1829
don't-care1830
promiscuous1837
don't-carish1838
unpartial1840
noncurantist1882
noncuranta1913
casual1916
Gallionic1920
disengaged1958
1837 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xxxiii. 361 I walked in..just to say good mornin', and went in a permiscuous manner up stairs, and into the back room.
1883 L. Oliphant Altiora Peto I. 5 On the beach, where he will, in the most promiscuous and accidental manner, certainly go for a stroll.
6.
a. Biology. Of a protein, organism, etc.: able to infect or interact with, or bind non-specifically to, a variety of hosts or targets.
ΚΠ
1972 Evolution 26 388 During such crises [sc. pollen shortage] oligolectic bees visit flowers taxonomically unrelated to their host plant. Such ‘promiscuous’ behaviour may provide local populations the chance to discover appropriate alternative pollen sources.
1979 Science 19 Oct. 296/3 It is not known whether this promiscuous binding occurs among the α and β subunits of A.
1995 Sci. Amer. Feb. 40/2 RNA polymerase is a rather promiscuous molecule, unable to distinguish between the promoter and other DNA sequences.
2005 Nature 9 June 750/3 Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are exceptionally promiscuous with respect to the host plants they colonize.
b. Genetics. Designating a DNA sequence common to more than one of the genomes within a eukaryotic cell. Cf. promiscuity n. 4.
ΚΠ
1982 J. Ellis in Nature 21 Oct. 678/2 Promiscuous DNA is defined as a nucleotide sequence which occurs in more than one of the three membrane-bound organellar genetic systems of eukaryotic cells, and should be distinguished from the DNA of promiscuous plasmids, which can be transferred to a wide range of prokaryotic cells.
2001 Gene 271 193 A promiscuous nuclear sequence containing a mitochondrial DNA fragment was isolated from rice.
B. adv.
1. = promiscuously adv. 1; indiscriminately; at random. Now rare (colloquial in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > [adverb]
pelly mellya1500
ribble-rabble?a1525
confusely1540
huddlea1555
confusedly1566
pell-mell1579
tag-rag1582
helter-skelter1593
promiscuously1593
pell-mell1596
confusively1599
mel-pella1600
promiscually1602
squimble-squamble1611
promiscuous1616
clutteringly1624
promiscously1635
perplexly1670
skimble-skamble1775
skimper-scamper1778
hodge-podge1848
hugger-mugger1880
rumble-jumble1887
muddledly1914
the mind > attention and judgement > judgement or decision > misjudgement > indiscriminateness > [adverb]
indifferentlyc1374
indistinctlyc1420
confusedly?1531
undistinctly1548
confusely?c1550
without respect?c1550
without choice1576
intermixedlya1586
unrespectively1586
pell-mell1587
promiscuously1593
mixedly1597
indiscriminate1598
promiscually1602
swoopstake1603
promiscuous1616
irrespectively1624
muddily1648
indiscriminately1652
humdrum1660
indiscriminally1665
undistinguishingly1665
indeterminatelya1676
indiscriminatively1684
indistinguishably1689
indiscretely1698
indistinctively1699
undiscerningly1707
uncritically1763
indiscriminatingly1824
undiscriminatingly1894
unfastidiously1929
1616 R. S. in T. Adams Divine Herball (front matter) f. A4 Truely thou dost the world disclose, which growes, Promiscuous; here a Thorne, & there a Rose.
1695 J. Addison To the King 110 And Planks, and Arms, and Men promiscuous flow'd.
1746 P. Francis & W. Dunkin tr. Horace Satires ii. ii. 191 Roast, and boil'd, when you promiscuous eat, When Fowl and Shell-fish in Confusion meet.
1813 P. B. Shelley Queen Mab ii. 24 Old age and infancy Promiscuous perished.
1902 ‘O. Henry’ in Ainslie's Mag. Mar. 128/1 The harness was piled, promiscuous, upon the wagon tongue, soaking up the dew.
1939 W. Westrup in Outspan (Bloemfontein) 18 Aug. 87/1 I don't interfere if a man wants a bit o' meat in the close season, but I reckon he didn't oughter kill sorter promiscuous.
2. colloquial. = promiscuously adv. 2; without ceremony; casually. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [adverb] > incidentally or by the way
incidently1529
occursively1592
emergently1660
en passant1665
incidentally1665
incidentarilya1670
casually1697
promiscuously1791
overly1825
promiscuous1826
the mind > will > intention > unintentional or unplanned character > [adverb] > in unplanned manner
suddenly1340
of unwarninga1400
on, upon, rarely of, in (a) suddenty1469
casuallya1549
extemporea1556
of (upon) this sudden1572
extemporally1577
at (the or a) volley1578
on (or o') the volley1578
extrumpery1582
unpremeditately1607
extemporary1610
extempory1623
extemporarily1667
impromptu1669
ad aperturam libri1679
unpremeditatedly1694
impulsively1768
extemporaneously1791
promiscuously1791
spontaneously1799
on (also upon) the spur of the moment (or occasion, etc.)1801
spontaneous1810
promiscuous1826
improvisedly1851
off-handedly1876
at the first jet1878
off the cuff1927
off the top of one's head1939
off the wall1966
1826 B. Disraeli Vivian Grey I. ii.xii. 170 I do wish you'd come in some day quite promiscuous.
1875 A. C. Swinburne Let. 5 Nov. (1960) III. 82 It turned up promiscuous when at last wanted after ten years.
1901 ‘A. Forbes’ Odd Fish 92 You get a barrel o' the reds, and send it aboard just permiscuous like.
1970 M. Chisholm McAllister says No xiv. 113 She walked her horse toward him and said: ‘Did you have to kill him?’.. ‘You think I'd shoot a man promiscuous?’ he asked gruffly.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.adv.1570
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