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单词 property
释义

propertyn.

Brit. /ˈprɒpəti/, U.S. /ˈprɑpərdi/
Forms:

α. Middle English properete, Middle English propirte, Middle English propirtee, Middle English propirtie, Middle English propperte, Middle English propte (transmission error), Middle English propurte, Middle English propurtee, Middle English propurty, Middle English (in a late copy) 1500s–1600s propertye, Middle English–1500s proparte, Middle English–1500s properte, Middle English–1500s propertee, Middle English–1500s propyrte, Middle English–1500s propyrtee, Middle English–1500s propyrtie, Middle English–1600s propertie, Middle English– property; Scottish pre-1700 proparte, pre-1700 properte, pre-1700 propertee, pre-1700 propertey, pre-1700 propertte, pre-1700 propirete, pre-1700 propiretie, pre-1700 propirte, pre-1700 propirtee, pre-1700 propirtie, pre-1700 propirty, pre-1700 propirtye, pre-1700 propperte, pre-1700 proppertie, pre-1700 propperty, pre-1700 propurtie, pre-1700 propyrte, pre-1700 1700s propertie, pre-1700 1700s– property.

β. Middle English–1500s proprete, Middle English–1500s propretee, Middle English–1500s propretie, 1500s–1600s proprety; Scottish pre-1700 proprete, pre-1700 propretee.

γ. Middle English proprite, Middle English–1500s propryte, Middle English–1500s proprytee, 1500s proprytye, 1600s proprity; Scottish pre-1700 proprite, pre-1700 proprytee.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French properté, proprieté.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman properté, propertee, propertie, propretee, proprité, Anglo-Norman and Middle French propreté (c1225 in Old French, also as propritei ), variants (probably after propre proper adj.) of proprieté propriety n. Compare Middle French, French propreté decent dress and manners (1538), neatness (1671) < propre proper adj. + -té -ty suffix1.
1.
a. Usually with the and of. The characteristic quality of a person or thing; (hence) character, nature. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) Gen. xxxi. 47 His breþeren..maden a hyllock..þe whyche Laban clepide a hyllock of wytnes & Iacob a hypyll of wytnessing, eyþer after þe properte [L. proprietatem] of his tonge.
a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) 3973 Who-so kan knowe þe properte, Enuyus man may lyknyd be To þe Iawnes.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Melibeus (Hengwrt) l. 415 The propretee of a fool is this, he troweth lightly harm of euery wight and lightly troweth alle bountee in hym self.
a1500 (?c1414) Paraphr. Seven Penitential Psalms 21 Thowȝ I thi mercy deserve nowȝt, Ȝyt it is thi propirte, To spare hem that mekely sowȝt.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 626 As the Roose in his Radness is Richest of floures..So passis þi propurty perte wemen all.
1544 Letanie in Exhort. vnto Prayer sig. Ciii O God, whose nature & propertie is euer to haue mercy, and to forgyue.
1568 T. Hill Proffitable Arte Gardening (rev. ed.) ii. xxii. f. 87v The Rue of propertie, doth dryue away al venemous beastes & wormes.
1651 R. Baxter Plain Script. Proof Infants Church-membership & Baptism 10 It is the property of error to contradict it self.
1703 W. Burkitt Expos. Notes New Test. Mark vi. 6 It is the Property and Practice of prophane Men, to take occasion..to despise their Persons, and to reject their Doctrine.
b. An attribute, characteristic, or quality. In earlier use sometimes: a distinctive, essential, or special quality; a peculiarity.
(a) Of a thing.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > disposition or character > [noun]
heartOE
erda1000
moodOE
i-mindOE
i-cundeOE
costc1175
lundc1175
evena1200
kinda1225
custc1275
couragec1300
the manner ofc1300
qualityc1300
talentc1330
attemperancec1374
complexionc1386
dispositiona1387
propertyc1390
naturea1393
assay1393
inclinationa1398
gentlenessa1400
proprietya1400
habitudec1400
makingc1400
conditionc1405
habitc1405
conceitc1425
affecta1460
ingeny1477
engine1488
stomach?1510
mind?a1513
ingine1533
affection1534
vein1536
humour?1563
natural1564
facultyc1565
concept1566
frame1567
temperature1583
geniusa1586
bent1587
constitution1589
composition1597
character1600
tune1600
qualification1602
infusion1604
spirits1604
dispose1609
selfness1611
disposure1613
composurea1616
racea1616
tempera1616
crasisc1616
directiona1639
grain1641
turn1647
complexure1648
genie1653
make1674
personality1710
tonea1751
bearing1795
liver1800
make-up1821
temperament1821
naturalness1850
selfhood1854
Wesen1854
naturel1856
sit1857
fibre1864
character structure1873
mentality1895
mindset1909
psyche1910
where it's (he's, she's) at1967
the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > [noun] > a property, quality, or attribute
i-cundeOE
kindOE
thingOE
quality1340
virtue1340
assizea1375
propertyc1390
principlea1398
conditionc1460
faculty1490
predicatea1513
epitheton1547
passion1570
propriety1584
affection1588
attribute1603
qualification1616
appropriate1618
intimacy1641
bedighting1674
belonger1674
cleaver1674
interiority1701
internal property1751
predicable1785
coloration1799
internality1839
the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > [noun] > a characteristic
privilegec1225
distinctionc1374
propertyc1390
tachea1400
pointa1425
specialty?a1425
difference?c1425
conditionc1460
markc1522
touch1528
specialty1532
differentia1551
character?1569
formality1570
particularity1585
peculiar1589
accent1591
appropriation1600
characterism1603
peculiarity1606
resemblance1622
propera1626
speciality1625
specificationa1631
appropriament1633
characteristic1646
discrimination1646
diagnostic1651
characteristical1660
stroke1666
talent1670
physiognomya1680
oddity1713
distinctive1816
spécialité1836
trait1864
flavour1866
middle name1905
discriminant1920
discriminator1943
the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > character or nature > [noun]
birtha1250
the manner ofc1300
formc1310
propertyc1390
naturea1393
condition1393
qualitya1398
temperc1400
taragec1407
naturality?a1425
profession?a1439
affecta1460
temperament1471
essence?1533
affection1534
spirit?1534
temperature1539
natural spirit1541
character1577
complexion1589
tincture1590
idiom1596
qualification1602
texture1611
connativea1618
thread1632
genius1639
complexure1648
quale1654
indoles1672
suchness1674
staminaa1676
trim1707
tenor1725
colouring1735
tint1760
type1843
aura1859
thusness1883
physis1923
c1390 G. Chaucer Parson's Tale 640 Euery fals lyuynge hath his propretee in hym self, that he that wole anoye another man, he anoyeth first hym self.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 26 Þe wit of gropinge haþ þis propirte [L. hoc..proprium est] þat he is in alle þe parties of þe body out take heer & lockes & nailles.
c1440 S. Scrope tr. C. de Pisan Epist. of Othea (St. John's Cambr.) (1970) 35 And as there is nothinge so evill but that it hath some good propirte, the mone yeueth chaste condicion.
a1500 R. Henryson tr. Æsop Fables: Cock & Jasp l. 120 in Poems (1981) 8 This iolie iasp hes properteis seuin: The first, of cullour it is meruelous.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection i. sig. Aiiiiv The philosophers had such..desyre to knowe the natures and properties of thynges.
1551 W. Turner New Herball sig. A iv In pontike wormwode is there no smalle astringent propertie.
1620 tr. G. Boccaccio Decameron I. iii. ix. f. 109v The Ring he made most precious and deere account of, and neuer tooke it off from his finger, in regard of an especial vertue and property, which he well knew to be remaining in it.
1664 H. Power Exper. Philos. i. 35 Though heat hath that killing property, yet it seems that cold hath not.
1713 G. Berkeley Three Dialogues Hylas & Philonous i. 34 Again, have you not acknowledged that no real inherent Property of any Object can be changed, without some Change in the thing itself?
1777 J. Priestley Matter & Spirit (1782) I. xix. 218 Truth is only a property, and no substance whatever.
1832 D. Brewster Lett. Nat. Magic i. 5 The property of lenses and mirrors to form erect and inverted images of objects.
1868 J. N. Lockyer Elem. Lessons Astron. (1879) vii. xli. 241 It is one of the properties of a triangle that the three interior angles taken together are equal to two right angles.
1911 E. Rutherford in Jrnl. Soc. Chem. Industry 30 662/2 Chemical properties very similar to those of barium.
1953 N. Tinbergen Herring Gull's World xvii. 144 Various properties of the eggs, such as colour, or shape.
1988 P. Gay Freud i. 44 Fleischl-Marxow..was if anything more enthusiastic about the curative properties of cocaine than Freud himself.
2005 Scotland on Sunday (Nexis) 19 June 25 The rescue mask.., much loved thanks to its amazing properties—it will boost the complexion and soothe tired skin.
(b) Of a person or divine being. Now regional.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > [noun] > a property, quality, or attribute > of a person
propertya1398
proprietya1400
the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > [noun] > a property, quality, or attribute > of God
propertya1628
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 12 By help of god to speke of þe propirtees [L. de proprietatibus] of aungels .
a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1869) I. 138 Crist..telliþ þe heieste proprete þat falliþ to a good herde.
a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. xxx. f. xii Hauynge great experience in hawkynge & huntynge and other properties apperteyny[n]ge to a Gentylman.
1556 J. Olde tr. R. Gwalther Antichrist f. 70v The persone of Antichrist, his nature, disposicion,..and all his propreties.
1614 R. Brathwait Schollers Medley 91 The perfect Idiome and Character of his Natiue Properties is already depictured.
a1628 J. Preston New Covenant (1634) 38 A man that hath excellent gifts and graces himselfe, he cannot convey them to another, but that is the propertie of God, that is peculiar to him alone.
1638 W. Chillingworth Relig. Protestants i. v. §13. 257 This is..to..take upon you the property of God, which is to know the hearts of men.
1642 T. Fuller Holy State v. xiii. 409 He hath this property of an honest man, that his word is as good as his hand.
1794 W. Godwin Caleb Williams III. xiv. 260 I am sorry for your ill properties; but I entertain no enmity against you.
1821 W. Scott Kenilworth II. ix. 231 One, of whom he used to say, he knew no virtuous property.
1903 Eng. Dial. Dict. IV. 631/1 Ma moother had varra good properties; she always made us wark and put wer things away.
c. Logic. Any attribute, characteristic, or quality of an object; spec. (a) (in Aristotelian logic) a characteristic which is peculiar to a particular kind of thing but is not part of its essence or definition (one of the four, or later five, predicables); = proprium n. 1a; (b) an attribute or characteristic corresponding to a one-place predicate.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > ancient Greek philosophy > post-Socratic philosophy > [noun] > Aristotelianism > elements of
material cause1393
matterc1395
matter subjecta1398
predicamenta1425
quality?1537
first substance1551
predicable1551
property1551
proprium1551
transcendent1581
final cause1587
category1588
habit1588
ante-predicament?1596
postpredicament1599
entelechy1603
transumption1628
secondary1656
objective cause1668
transcendental1668
general substance1697
third man1801
thought-form1834
posterioristic universal1902
ousia1917
1551 T. Wilson Rule of Reason sig. Bvijv Properte, is a natural pronenes, & manner of doyng, whiche agreeth to one kinde, and to the same onely and that euermore.
1628 T. Spencer Art of Logick 62 Properties be not adjuncts: for, adiuncts doe outwardly befall the subiect... Properties..are necessary emanations from the principles of nature.
1701 tr. F. Burgersdijck Introd. Art Logick 31 The Predicables are five in Number, viz. Genus, Species, Difference, Property and Accident.
1725 I. Watts Logick i. ii. §3. 28 A secondary essential Mode is any other Attribute of a Thing, which is not of primary Consideration: This is called a Property: Sometimes indeed it goes toward making up the Essence, especially of a complex Being..; sometimes it depends upon, and follows from the Essence of it; so Volubility, or Aptness to rou, is the Property of a Bow, and is derived from its Roundness.
1870 W. S. Jevons Elem. Lessons Logic (1880) xii. 102 Property..may perhaps be best described as any quality which is common to the whole of a class, but is not necessary to mark out that class from other classes.
1916 H. W. B. Joseph Introd. Logic (ed. 2) iv. 96 The notion of essence, and the distinction between essence and property, are not applicable in the same way to every subject.
1947 H. Reichenbach Elem. Symbolic Logic §17. 83 The term ‘property’..is usually applied only to one-place situational functions.
2002 R. Knowles Shakespeare's Arguments with Hist. i. 15 Cicero in effect had already taken on board the predicables, i.e. that which can be predicated of any thing (genus, species, difference, property, accident).
d. Linguistics. An intrinsic aspect or function; a distinctive feature or attribute (in various uses). Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > linguistics > [noun] > distinguishing feature
marker1933
property1953
1953 C. E. Bazell Ling. Form iii. 38 The acoustic and articulatory property-complexes are ‘genuine’ aspects of the phonemes.
1962 E. F. Haden et al. Resonance-theory for Ling. iv. 49 Every entity in language has a Property and a Form... The Property of each entity is internal to it, corresponding to its function in the complex of which it is a part.
1965 N. Chomsky Aspects Theory Syntax iv. 160 In any given linguistic system lexical entries enter into intrinsic semantic relations of a much more systematic sort than is suggested by what has been said so far. We might use the term ‘field properties’ to refer to these..aspects.
2. The quality of being proper or appropriate; fitness, fittingness, suitability; the proper use or sense of words. Cf. propriety n. 5b, 6. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > suitability or appropriateness > [noun]
covenablenessa1382
covenabletec1384
propertya1387
abilitya1398
congruencec1430
conveniencec1430
meetnessc1449
congruencya1513
conveniency1526
congruity1530
familiarity1551
suitableness1594
familiarnessa1617
idoneity1617
connaturalnessa1628
suitability1648
adequateness1650
adaptness1657
competibilitya1660
accommodateness1660
adaptation1663
adaptedness1673
evenliness1674
condecence1678
decorousness1678
feating1682
resemblance1715
idoneousness1727
appropriateness1731
favourableness1775
adaptitude1806
adaptment1831
the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > meaning > meaning of linguistic unit > literal meaning > [noun]
letter1340
propertya1387
lecturec1475
propriety1648
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 109 Þat ryuer of Mercie was somtyme þe marke and mere bytwene þe kyngdom of Mercia and þe kyngdom of Norþhumberlond; þat may be i-schewed in tweie maneres: first by þe propurte [?a1475 anon. tr. by the significacion; L. per significationem] of þis word Mersee, þat is as moche to mene, as asse [read a se] þat is a bound and a mere; for he departeþ oon kyngdom from anoþer.
c1400 J. Gower Eng. Wks. (1901) II. 490 So hath the werre as ther no proprite.
a1464 J. Capgrave Abbreuiacion of Cron. (Cambr. Gg.4.12) (1983) 222 And Herri Percy, aftir þe propirté of his name, percid or presed, in so fer þat he was ded, and no man wist of whom.
a1500 (a1400) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 353 (MED) Þat is good loue of þe fire of charite, and is clepid benignitie by propirte of word.
1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. xv. sig. Hivv All kyndes of writyng must also be sought for; nat for the histories only, but also for the propretie of wordes, whiche communely do receiue theyr autoritie of noble autours.
1627 W. Sclater Briefe Expos. 2 Thess. 252 Though in large sense it may be stiled Excommunication,..yet, in propertie of speach, is not so.
1673 Gentlewomans Compan. 54 The neatness and property of your Clothes... Property, I call a certain suitableness and convenience, betwixt the Clothes and the Person.
1740 G. Cheyne Ess. Regimen 136 With infinite Variety, Justness, and Property.
3.
a. Something belonging to a thing; an appurtenance; an adjunct. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > possessions > [noun] > appurtenance(s)
appurtenance1377
propertyc1390
depending1436
longingc1449
appurtenant1483
appertaininga1597
assign1604
appertainmenta1616
concerns1818
pertaining1869
c1390 Cato's Distichs (Vernon) 493 in F. J. Furnivall Minor Poems Vernon MS (1901) ii. 595 Þe propertes of nature, Redi to þe þei be [L. Comoda nature nullo tibi tempore deerunt].
a1425 (?c1375) N. Homily Legendary (Harl.) in C. Horstmann Altengl. Legenden (1881) 2nd Ser. 128 Also ȝit gert he mak þarin Propirtese by preue gyn.
a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) Heref. 33 Many aged folk which in other countries are properties of the chimneyes, or confined to their beds, are here found in the feild as able..to work.
b. A (usually material) thing belonging to a person, group of persons, etc.; a possession; (as a mass noun) that which one owns; possessions collectively; a person's goods, wealth, etc. Also figurative.In quots. a1500, 1526 referring to privately owned possessions, as distinguished from those held in common.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > possessions > [noun]
goodeOE
auchtOE
havingc1350
facultya1382
substancea1382
propertya1393
haviourc1400
suffisantee1436
aversc1440
propriety1442
livinga1450
goodess1523
gear1535
prog1727
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) ii. 2377 (MED) Supplant..Fulofte happneth forto mowe Thing which an other man hath sowe, And makth comun of proprete With sleihte and with soubtilite.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 28389 (MED) Haue i tan bath aght and fe O þam þat had na propur-te.
a1450 (a1401) Chastising of God's Children (Bodl.) (1957) 140 (MED) Bi þis þei seie þat þei bien poore in spirite, bicause þei bien wiþoute wil or desire..and þat þei lyuen wiþout any choys or propirte.
a1500 tr. Thomas à Kempis De Imitatione Christi (Trin. Dublin) (1893) 113 Þat þou mowe be dispoiled of all maner propirte.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection i. sig. Dviiv They..had no property: but all was in common.
1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet ii. ii. 572 A King, Vpon whose property and most deare life, A damn'd defeate was made. View more context for this quotation
1690 J. Locke Two Treat. Govt. ii. ix. §123 He..is willing to join in Society with others..for the mutual Preservation of their Lives, Liberties and Estates, which I call by the general Name, Property.
1758 S. Johnson Idler 15 July 113 Time therefore ought, above all other kinds of property, to be free from invasion.
c1796 T. Twining Trav. Amer. (1894) 33 She was the property, I understood, of Mr. Francis, who had bought her some time before.
1804 ‘E. de Acton’ Tale without Title I. 13 The sole disposal of a property to the amount of a hundred thousand pounds.
1838 A. W. Fonblanque in Life & Labours (1874) 290 In 1838..the personal property of 24 English Bishops who had died within the last 20 years amounted to £1.649.000.
1874 J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People vi. §4. 304 The printing press was making letters the common property of all.
1921 J. Galsworthy To Let 243 Property! Could there be men who looked on women as their property?
1978 S. Biko I write what I Like xiv. 95 The Xhosas were thieves who went to war for stolen property.
1994 Times (Nexis) 22 June A pawn or pledge involved a transfer of the possession of personal property from the pawnor to the pawnbroker by way of security.
c. Originally: a piece of land under one ownership; a landed estate. Now also: any residential or other building (with or without associated land) or separately owned part of such a building (as an apartment, etc.). Also as a mass noun: such lands or buildings collectively.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > possessions > [noun] > real or immovable property > land > a landed property or estate
homeOE
landsc1000
estrec1275
manorc1300
stead1338
room?a1513
soil1575
demesne1584
proprietary1608
land-gooda1626
country estate1692
property1719
quinta1754
estate1772
hacienda1772
concern1787
finca1909
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 363 They..had their Properties set apart for them.
1792 A. Young Trav. France 411 Small properties, much divided, prove the greatest source of misery that can be conceived.
1825 Hobart Town Gaz. 18 Mar. Every Property on which the Proprietor is not actually resident, as well absolute Grants, as Reserves, distant Farms, Stock runs or Grazing Grounds.
1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits iv. 63 They are substantial farmers, whom the rough times have forced to defend their properties.
1885 Truth 28 May 835/1 Lord Eldon..possessed one considerable property in Durham, and another in Dorset.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 694/2 Alleyn acquired this large property for little more than £10,000.
1942 J. Hackston Coast to Coast 84 There were a lot of small properties, places with a good house, orchard planted, land fenced and cleared.
1976 Times 21 May 2/5 Mr. Baines said he later checked similar stonework elsewhere in Hackney and eventually more than 50 properties had to be dealt with.
1999 What Mortgage Nov. 18/3 The general rule of thumb with buying property abroad is that you arrange for the mortgage to be in the currency of your earnings.
d. Originally and chiefly North American. A literary work considered with regard to its commercial production (esp. film) rights.
ΚΠ
1919 N.Y. Times 25 May iv. 2/8 An immensely profitable property which New York has long lost sight of is ‘The Bird of Paradise’, Richard Walton Tully's play.
1925 Washington Post 25 Oct. 41/3 Fox will furnish the capital while the Milton firm will make the productions, which will revert to Fox as a piece of picture property.
1968 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 13 Jan. 24/1 Some time ago, I ran into David Merrick in a Beverly Hills hotel. I told him, ‘Why the hell don't you find me a musical to do?’ Just like that. Several months later, he called me to tell me that he thought he had found the right property.
1992 M. Medved Hollywood vs. Amer. ii. iv. 59 Peter Matthiessen's 1965 novel about crazed and arrogant missionaries in the Amazon rain forest had been considered an intriguing but unfilmable property in Hollywood for more than two decades.
2003 U.S. News & World Rep. 23 June d2/1 First of all, stop calling them ‘books’. They're ‘properties’. And every property that's any property has been optioned for film, probably long before it reached bookstores.
e. (a) hot (also big) property n. colloquial an artist, performer, literary work, etc., regarded as a commercial asset, esp. a person who is very fashionable or who has risen suddenly in popularity; a success, a sensation. Cf. hot adj. 8a, 10b.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > performer > [noun] > regarded as commercial asset
(a) hot (also big) property1945
1945 Lowell (Mass.) 22 Jan. 13/3 The Rand novel is hot property.
1948 Chicago SundayTribune 23 May (Grafic section) 13/4 She goes into her first New York play this fall... It's what we call a hot property.
1958 J. Blish Case of Conscience xiv. 153 Signor Egtverchi is now a hot property... Suddenly..he is worth a lot of money.
1969 Rolling Stone 28 June 22 The Hagers, potentially hot property, now have Record One.
1987 Speedway '87 Mar. 15/6 Davies and Poole..the two hottest properties around in Australia at the moment..were both injured last season but showed promise.
1995 Church Times 21 Apr. 3/1 Hildegard of Bingen, the 12th-century abbess and composer..is hot property in the United States: Vision, an electronic remix of her songs..has been number one in the crossover charts there for 18 weeks.
f. In plural. Finance. Shares or investments in land, buildings, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > stocks and shares > stocks, shares, or bonds > [noun] > share > shares in specific country or industry
railway share1822
railroad shares1828
railway stock1836
railroads1848
Canada1868
coalers1878
Mets1886
industrial1887
golds1888
Kaffir1889
electrics1892
rails1893
Westralians1894
kangaroo1896
coppers1899
the junglea1901
electricals1901
Rhodesians1901
diamonds1905
Siberians1906
steels1912
utility1930
properties1964
engineer1976
mining1983
1964 Financial Times 3 Mar. 19/5 There was a little more interest in Properties, sentiment being helped by last Friday's Gallup poll.
1977 Evening Post (Nottingham) 24 Jan. 16/9 Properties ran into profit-taking with Haslemere 176p, MEPC 62p, Land Securities 161p, and Stock Conversion 161p on offer.
1981 Times 14 Aug. 18/3 Properties came in for a small shake out with Stock Conversion.
4. The fact of owning something or of being owned (cf. proper adj. 4); (esp. in legal contexts) the (exclusive) right to the possession, use, or disposal of a thing; ownership, proprietorship. Also figurative. Cf. propriety n. 4a. The sense in quot. 1601 is disputed. N.E.D. (1908) notes: ‘? = Either was claimed by the other as ‘Mine’. Ownership was thus dismayed. (But Schmidt takes ‘property’ here as = ‘particularity, individuality’.)’. Other modern commentators have suggested ‘personality’, ‘personal quality’, or ‘appropriateness’ as possible meanings.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > owning > [noun]
auchteOE
owningOE
propertya1393
propriety1486
ownage1576
the mind > possession > owning > [noun] > fact of being owned
propertya1393
propriety1486
owedness1607
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) iii. 2326 Whan that a riche, worthi king..Wol axe and cleyme proprete In thing to which he hath no riht.
c1400 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) III. 479 (MED) And for þis mercy doynge schall come to ȝow propperte of lordeschip and pes and riches in erthe.
a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1869) I. 317 Þe cite of Beedleem was Daviþis bi sum propirte.
1489 M. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 668 Tyll it myth be vndyrstond wedyre þe propyrte ware in þe Kyng or in my lord.
c1525 Rule St. Francis (Faust.) in J. S. Brewer & R. Howlett Monumenta Franciscana (1858) I. 568 (MED) The iiiior masters answere and say that there be certenn thingis that be resceived for proprete and nat for the vse, and this ys forbiddyn to the bretherne, for they may resceive nothing for propertye.
1582 in D. Masson Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1880) 1st Ser. III. 501 Landis..pertening to the said David, Erll of Craufurd,..in propertie and tenandrie.
1601 W. Shakespeare Phoenix & Turtle in R. Chester Loves Martyr 171 Either was the others mine. Propertie was thus appalled, That the selfe was not the same: Single Natures double name, Neither two nor one was called.
1641 Rastell's Termes de la Ley (new ed.) f. 226 Propertie is the highest right that a man hath or can have to any thing, which no way dependeth upon another mans curtesie.
1690 J. Locke Two Treat. Govt. i. iv. §42 God..has given no one of his Children such a Property in his peculiar Portion of the Things of this World.
1713 Treaty of Utrecht in Magens Insurances (1755) II. 501 Sea-letters or Passports, expressing the Name, Property and Bulk of the Ship.
1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. x. 190 The right of possession (though it carries with it a strong presumption) is not always conclusive evidence of the right of property, which may still subsist in another man.
1813 T. Jefferson Let. 13 Aug. in Writings (1984) 1291 It is agreed by those who have seriously considered the subject, that no individual has, of natural right, a separate property in an acre of land, for instance.
1838 T. Drummond Let. to Tipperary Magistrates 18 Apr. in B. O'Brien Life (1889) 284 Property has its duties as well as its rights.
1875 K. E. Digby Introd. Hist. Law Real Prop. x. 327 Rights of property or ownership over land, meaning by property or ownership the enjoyment of those indefinite rights of user over land by virtue of which in ordinary language a person is entitled to speak of land as his property.
1921 J. Galsworthy To Let 75 ‘It's their sense of property,’ he said, ‘which makes people chain things. The last generation thought of nothing but property; and that's why there was the War.’
1991 Statute Law Rev. Autumn 89 Moreover, it provided that the common law, statute law and rights of property could not be affected by Proclamations.
5. Theatre and Film. Any portable object (now usually other than an article of costume) used in a play, film, etc., as required by the action; a prop. Chiefly in plural. Cf. prop n.6
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > a theatre > theatrical equipment or accessories > [noun] > props
propertya1450
prop1841
stage-property1850
theatricals1855
practicable1859
prop1911
a1450 Castle Perseverance (1969) l. 132 Þese parcell [read parcellys] in propyrtes we purpose us to playe Þis day seuenenyt.
1578 in A. Feuillerat Documents Office of Revels Queen Elizabeth (1908) 303 Furnished in this office with sondrey garmentes & properties.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream i. ii. 98 I will draw a bill of properties, such as our play wants. View more context for this quotation
1629 P. Massinger Roman Actor iv. ii. sig. I This cloake, and hat without Wearing a beard, or other propertie Will fit the person.
1748 Whitehall Evening-post 25–28 June To be Sold very cheap, Cloaths, Scenes, Properties, clean, and in very good Order.
1777 R. B. Sheridan Let. Sept. (1966) I. 115 The Property Man (viz. he who makes the Property) Not to make any Things new but what is ordered by the Board.
1831 B. Disraeli Young Duke II. iii. xix. 268 They were excessively amused with the properties; and Lord Squib proposed they should dress themselves.
1881 W. P. Lennox Plays, Players, & Playhouses II. iii. 47 ‘I used it as a property’. ‘A what?’ interrupted the..magistrate.
1904 G. K. Chesterton Napoleon of Notting Hill iii. i. 132 Armour, music, standards, watch-fires, the noise of drums, all the theatrical properties were thrown before him.
1943 J. Symons Elegy on City in Second Man 31 But this is abstract like a play In which the scenic properties Move and are more than properties, The grass is greener than real green.
1988 I. Konigsberg Compl. Film Dict. 281/1 Prop man, the individual responsible for obtaining, altering, or building properties.
2005 Derby Evening Tel. (Nexis) 11 Jan. 6 Mr Slater loved the challenge of making the stage properties.
6. figurative. A means to an end; a person or thing to be made use of; an instrument or tool. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > instrumentality > [noun] > (a) means > person as > mere
stale1580
creature1587
puppet1592
motion1602
property1611
looma1650
tool1663
cat's-foot1675
cat's paw1785
paw1824
dummy1866
stooge1937
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > duping, making a fool of > [noun] > gullible person, dupe > a puppet, tool
poppet1551
puppet1592
property1611
tool1663
cat's-foot1675
cat's paw1785
1611 J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. ix. xx. 733/2 That he was but a Puppet, or a property in the late tragicall motion.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) iii. iv. 10 'Tis a thing impossible I should loue thee, but as a property . View more context for this quotation
1667 R. Allestree Causes Decay Christian Piety xii. 321 Both religion..and those that fought for it, were only made properties to promote the lusts of those who despised both.
1764 T. Legg Low-life (ed. 3) 54 Hackney Coachmen..praying for rainy Weather, that they may make a Property of the People they carry in the Afternoon.
1846 ‘Lord Chief Baron’ Swell's Night Guide (new ed.) 128/1 Property, an easy fellow, a tool made use of to serve any purpose, a cat's-paw.]

Phrases

property in action n. Law rights or obligations of property that can be enforced by legal process; cf. action n. 2, chose n. 1.
ΚΠ
1756 W. Blackstone Anal. Laws Eng. ii. xvii. 64 Property in Action, is where a Man hath not the actual Occupation of the Thing; but only a Right to it, arising upon some Contract, and recoverable by an Action at Law.
1774 S. Hallifax Anal. Rom. Civil Law xiv. 56 Property in Action may be transferred, in England, by a Contract.
1833 Amer. Jurist & Law Mag. Apr. 446 The court shall have power..to order transfers of stock or other property in action to be made according to the rules of law or equity.
1874 Amer. Law Reg. 22 552 He was made liable for her debts at the period of marriage, because the law gave to him all her personal estate in possession, and the power to recover her personal property in action.
1956 J. W. Hurst Law & Conditions Freedom (1986) i. 25 The main current ran to the protection of property in action.
1996 Polity 28 475 The common law also entitled the husband to his wife's personal property in action (choses in action) existing at the time of the marriage.

Compounds

C1. General attributive, objective, etc. (in senses 3, 4).
property account n.
ΚΠ
1806 J. Lawrence Mod. Land Steward (ed. 2) 120 In the business of property accounts, there are certain general rules.
1984 Times 20 Sept. 21 The principal causes in the property account were the additional costs of the extreme winter weather.
2004 F. Gallinelli What every Real Estate Investor needs to Know Introd. p. xviii If it's your real estate investment that experiences the negative cash flow, then you have to make up the shortfall from funds outside the property account.
property-based adj.
ΚΠ
1957 K. A. Wittfogel Oriental Despotism 2 The modern property-based system of industry.
2003 Virginia Law Rev. 89 1736 Although the parties framed their arguments in the property-based language endorsed by the Olmstead line of cases, the Court declined to decide the case on those grounds.
property class n.
ΚΠ
1834 ‘Helot’ Def. Himself, O'Connell, & Catholic Emancipation 10 The working classes..are too weak of themselves to attack the privileged or ‘property’ classes.
1947 A. M. Henderson et al. Theory of Social & Econ. Organization 429 The type of class which is most closely related to a stratum is the ‘social’ class, while the ‘acquisition’ class is the farthest removed. Property classes often constitute the nucleus of a stratum.
2002 Sunday Times (Nexis) 22 Sept. 2 People who have never been homeowners..would argue that too many tax breaks have already been afforded the property classes.
property developer n.
ΚΠ
1891 Street Railway Rev. 1 574/1 The admirable executive ability of the management seeing its capabilities as a property developer, started immediately to reach the goal of excellence which it attained some years ago.
1907 Med. Press & Circular 9 Jan. 47/2 The Corporation..contains a solid body of property-owners and ‘property-developers’ whose interests are strongly opposed to reforms.
1970 Harper's Bazaar Oct. 76/1 Property developers..wreaked vandalism upon the cities and countryside of England.
2015 R. Forlee Austral. Resid. Prop. Devel. i. 2 A property developer is a disciplined professional with an entrepreneurial flair who specialises in creating new developments and successfully marketing and selling them.
property holder n.
ΚΠ
1824 Memorial 19 June in Deb. Congr. U.S. (1856) 18th Congress 1 Sess., App. ii. 3129 The memorial of the..property-holders of the city of Baltimore.
1923 Ann. Amer. Acad. Polit. & Social Sci. 105 254/1 Men out of work were gotten together, permission of property holders secured, and in a suitable place about a half mile of the bank was cleared.
2004 Irish News (Nexis) 21 Apr. 5 This is a tragedy for the traders and property holders in the area and I was very sorry indeed to learn of the distress, disappointment and hardship caused by this unfortunate fire.
property-holding adj. and n.
ΚΠ
1839 in W. Claggett Addr. Portsmouth Anti-slavery Soc. Notes 15 Here, then, is a moral and intelligent, industrious and property-holding colored population, having become so in consequence of enjoying freedom.
1845 J. Blanchard in Deb. Slavery (1846) 22 The principle of the Greek slave code was precisely the same with that of American slavery, viz: the property-holding of men.
1906 J. F. Rhodes Hist. U.S. VI. Pref. 5 The educated and property-holding people of several States.
1974 V. Maher Women & Prop. Morocco iii. 40 The discussion of property-holding reveals that the majority of the population owns very little.
1995 Accountancy Nov. 86/3 If a property-holding service company was formed, would its VATable outputs exceed the registration limit?
2004 A. Hudson New Perspectives Prop. Law ii. 39 A number of property writers are doing interesting work..analysing other forms of common or quasi-common forms of property holding.
property interest n.
ΚΠ
1835 J. F. Cooper Monikins I. v. 83 It is quite impossible that any one should become a safe statesman, who does not possess a direct property interest in society.
1882 Cent. Mag. Apr. 943/1 The English and American publishers are now wrangling over the question of how authors can be in part protected, without giving them a simple property-interest in, and entire control of, the product of their work.
1994 D. A. McWhirter Search, Seizure, & Privacy 41 The Fourth Amendment required the Court to balance the needs of law enforcement against the legitimate privacy and property interests of the people.
2005 A. Clarke & P. Kohler Property Law v. 161 It is possible to limit a property interest to last only during a person's life-time.
property lawyer n.
ΚΠ
1822 T. Mitchell tr. Aristophanes Wasps in tr. Aristophanes Comedies II. 227 Isæus, the great property-lawyer of the Athenians, assures us that this was a trick in very common practice at Athens.
1998 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 23 Apr. 54/1 Baldwin..is played as a cocky young property lawyer scrambling for fees..and referred to by the Africans among themselves as ‘the Dung-Scraper’.
2013 I. Samet in J. Penner & H. Smith Philos. Found. Prop. Law vi. 128 Others see it [sc. proprietary estoppel] as an indispensible part of the property lawyer's toolkit.
property-loving adj.
ΚΠ
1846 J. F. Cooper Redskins I. ii. 26 Surely, my dear uncle, you cannot seriously apprehend anything of that nature from our order-loving, law-loving, property-loving Americans!
1931 W. A. Fairburn Russia, Utopia in Chains iii. 220 Russians refuse to believe that in any country on earth—and certainly not in capitalistic and property-loving America—can ripe fruit, nuts and vegetables be left in orchards, gardens and fields unguarded.
2003 Times (Nexis) 6 Nov. 25 Add to that the mushrooming mortgage debt that this property-loving country has assumed, and the average household is carrying a massive burden.
property market n.
ΚΠ
1853 Jrnl. Auctions & Sales in W. Paterson Pract. Statutes (end matter) Property Reporter; comprising the Money Market; Stocks and Funds; state of the Property Market; a complete Share List, [etc.].
1875 Times 10 May 15/2 (advt.) Review of the property market for the past month, containing interesting and valuable information to the Solicitors, and to buyers and sellers of land and houses.
1905 Daily Chron. 20 May 3/5 Indications that the property market is returning to the condition of healthy activity.
2004 Daily Tel. (Sydney) (Nexis) 17 Mar. 33 The Government welcomed a plateauing in the fast-growing property market.
property owner n.
ΚΠ
1834 Full Rep. S. Decow, & J. Hendrickson, v. T. L. Shotwell, New Jersey Court of Appeals 713 The latter were the majority of the church worshippers, or..were the old, experienced, weighty members; for as property owners, at least all Friends, are on an equality.
1902 Westm. Gaz. 2 June 2/1 Many..district councils are under the complete domination of cottage property owners.
2004 Nation 11 Oct. 18/2 Ranchers, hunters and property owners, people who tend to be politically conservative yet find themselves making alliances with strange bedfellows..in a common effort to protect their livelihoods and land.
property-owning adj.
ΚΠ
1836 N.Y. Daily Times 5 Apr. 4/2 It will be profitable for our property-owning readers..to consider the circumstances of another Eighth-avenue transaction.
1923 Spectator 19 May 837/2 It remains to state as clearly as may be what means lie ready to develop a property-owning democracy.
2005 Charlotte (N. Carolina) Observer (Nexis) 26 Nov. a15 As our nation came into being, we based our colonial political systems on our British heritage, limiting voting rights to property-owning men.
property right n.
ΚΠ
1837 Woolmer's Exeter & Plymouth Gaz. Suppl. 13 May I venture to express an opinion, that Church Rates, as well as Tithes, were ‘given’ or ‘bequeathed’ at first, and that, consequently, this property-right did originate in a ‘bequest’.
1853 Times 15 Feb. 8/4 Although professing friendship and sympathy we cannot consent that England shall mix herself up with our concerns... We desire no intrusion of advice as to our individual property rights, at home or abroad.
1942 W. Temple Christianity & Social Order ii. 27 Men are sinful, so property-rights are needed, not so much for the satisfaction of the rich as for the protection of the poor.
2003 High Country News 28 Apr. 10/3 Some tribes see it as a property right, some have a hybrid approach, and some hold their views about water particularly close to the vest.
property speculator n.
ΚΠ
1824 Microscope (Albany, N.Y.) 21 Feb. 183/3 Our wholesale property-speculators and their gentry in livery, called runners.
1912 Indianapolis Star 16 Feb. 6/6 (advt.) It is a most unusual thing for the president of a railroad to thus go on record, to caution people not to be misled by advertisement of property speculators.
2002 Daily Tel. 29 Oct. 25/3 Fashionable gardeners and eco-business entrepreneurs have moved in. Property speculators have long since Hoovered up the prime sites.
property value n.
ΚΠ
1816 T. Attwood Remedy 16 The levying of monied taxes upon property naturally raises the monied value of property, and depresses the property value of money.
1851 Southern Literary Messenger 17 137/2 The right to tax is a species of exception, because some property value is essential to the support of the government.
1914 Proc. 6th Nat. Conf. City Planning (U.S.) 102 Suddenly he finds his property values injured..because someone has chosen to construct a small retail store.
2003 Independent 18 Oct. i. 1/5 The end is finally in sight for ‘skyscraper’ leylandii hedges which block light, cause subsidence and dramatically reduce property values.
C2. Theatre and Film (cf. sense 5).
a. General attributive and objective. See also property box n. 2.
property maker n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > the staging of a theatrical production > people concerned with theatrical productions > [noun] > property-man
property maker1559
property man1633
property master1854
props1877
prop man1923
1559 in A. Feuillerat Documents Office of Revels Queen Elizabeth (1908) 110 Wages of taylours, karvars, propertie makers, wemen & other.
1818 R. B. Peake Amateurs & Actors i. ii. 14 Call that having much to do!—now if you had half my employments—an't I a manager, principal performer, prompter, painter, and property-maker!
1999 R. B. Graves Lighting Shakespearean Stage 152 At the same time, a property maker was paid for ‘hanging the Throne and Chaire in the Cockpit, [etc.]’.
property monger n.
ΚΠ
1719 Computation Increase of London 18 The Attendance of his Vassals, so far of Property-mongers, and Trafickers of Liberty.
1819 L. T. Berguer Warning Let. His Royal Highness Prince Regent 52 They may cry aloud to the property-mongers, the Mammon worshippers of the land, and the town and country gentry.
1897 Q. Rev. Oct. 349 Rant and frippery that befit a third-rate actor or a second-hand property-monger.
1910 N. A. Richardson Industr. Probl. i. vii. 76 They are now dominated by a relatively few members of our order of property-mongers.
1966 R. Church London iv. 155 Parliament and property-mongers haggle indifferently about the economics of future development.
property truck n.
ΚΠ
1947 Billboard 12 July 50/3 The property truck chalked up our first serious accident of the season.
1961 W. P. Bowman & R. H. Ball Theatre Lang. 280 Property truck, a wagon offstage on which properties can be placed until needed.
1963 Movie May 19/3 He sat in the back of the property truck writing the ending.
2004 G. Stevens in M. A. Moss Giant ii. 58 That gave us time to write the first scene of the picture, in the property truck, with a stenographer.
property wagon n. now historical
ΚΠ
1860 Bentley's Q. Rev. Jan. 411 It was difficult to hold this faith when the bear garden rivalled in attractions the theatre, and the players trudged behind the property wagon, uncertain whether the worshipful mayor would grant or deny them the use of an inn yard.
1895 McClure's Mag. 5 55/1 The baggage-wagons and the property-wagons have stopped near the dressing-rooms.
2014 S. Ward Beneath Big Top v. 77 He, showing a keen and brash presence of mind, armed his company with the swords, pikes and muskets held in the company's property wagon and awaited the rioters.
property workshop n.
ΚΠ
1829 H. Foote Compan. to Theatres 38 Beneath it is the printing-office; and over it are property workshops.
1985 Chicago Tribune (Nexis) 29 Oct. c28 The post-modern edifice..will have two theaters, two rehearsal halls.., the latest video equipment and costume, scenery and properties workshops.
2002 Guardian (Nexis) 7 Oct. 12 We have the best property workshop in the world, the best costume workshop in the world and the best voice training.
b. Applied appositively to any article (esp. an imitation) used as a prop or stage accessory.
property broadsword n.
ΚΠ
1880 Athens (Ohio) Messenger 17 June 6/4 Obedient to instructions, Mr. George Jones knelt down, while the mysterious potentate..smote him on the back with the flat edge of a property broadsword, and told him to ‘Rise up Count Johannes’.
1956 Post Standard (Syracuse, N.Y.) 18 Sept. 10/1 A politico-theatrical museum cluttered with a property broadsword once used by Mary Pickford and plug hats worn by W. C. Fields.
property cittern n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1908 N.E.D. at Property Property cittern.
property doll n.
ΚΠ
1901 C. Morris Life on Stage xl. 365 Suddenly he rose—tossed that extraordinary hat of his off, picked me up in his arms and carried me like a big property doll to the curtain's side.
1908 N.E.D. at Property Property doll.
1979 Man 14 39 All Chinese opera companies are said to treat their property dolls (used to represent babies) with ritual care.
2002 R. Shaughnessy Shakespeare Effect 74 As Cranmer launched into his eulogy to Elizabeth, the baby was revealed to the audience as a property doll.
property fowl n.
ΚΠ
1856 National Rev. Apr. 422 The theatre is the especial home of tradition on all subjects, from the stuffing of a property-fowl to the stage-business of a scene of Shakespeare.
1895 Pall Mall Gaz. 2 Dec. 1/2 The man who can't eat a property fowl is no actor.
1925 T. W. F. Gann Mystery Cities iv. 74 The chicken, which under Muddy's régime had been like a leather property fowl, was quite decent.
1963 O. Sitwell Pound Wise 221 These cruel feasts where bread turns inevitably to a stone and every..chicken to a property fowl.
C3.
property bond n. (a) Finance a bond or share in property; (b) U.S. a bail bond in the form of property.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > stocks and shares > stocks, shares, or bonds > [noun] > bond > types of bond
government securities1707
Sword-blade bond1707
long bond1720
government paper1774
indent1788
premium bond1820
active1835
preference bond1848
investment bond1853
mortgage bond1853
revenue bond1853
municipal bond1858
treasury-bond1858
sices1867
property bond1869
government1870
priority bond1884
municipal1888
income bonds1889
yearling1889
war baby1901
Liberty Bond1917
Liberty Loan1917
victory bond1917
corporate1922
performance bond1938
convertible1957
Eurobond1966
Euroconvertible1968
managed bond1972
muni1973
granny bond1976
bulldog bond1980
Euro1981
granny1981
strip1982
zero1982
1869 Edinb. Evening Courant 25 Oct. 8/5 According to the same journal, a fresh issue of ecclesiastical property bonds is contemplated.
1913 Reno (Nevada) Evening Gaz. 15 Jan. 1/4 District Attorney Miller declared that the property bonds for Ryan..did not aggregate more than $37,500, while $200,000 should have been scheduled.
1970 Daily Tel. 17 Jan. 22/3 The considerable expansion of property values since the war..is the great selling point for property bonds, compared with other investment plans.
2003 J. H. Scott Witness to Truth xi. 135 They made the parents put up cash to get their children out of jail, told them they couldn't accept property bonds like they usually did.
property boy n. a boy who appears in a scene, play, etc., but takes no part in it; (also) a boy who helps manage the stage props.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > actor > [noun] > actor playing specific type of part > with little or nothing to say
property boy1685
supernumerary1755
walking gentleman1769
walking lady1769
figurant1775
statist1807
showgirl?1836
super1838
walker-on1876
property child1885
supe1885
walk-on1923
spear-carrier1960
1685 J. Dryden Albion & Albanius iii. sig. G2 The Saints advance, To fill the Dance, And the Property Boys come in.
1796 Precious Relics ii. i. 28 Confound the property boy, he has forgot to leave the ink on the table.
1888 Perry (Iowa) Chief 27 Jan. He gave instructions to a property boy in a country theater to roll the thunder at a certain cue.
1950 Hollywood Q. 4 323 In the infancy of the motion picture industry, the property boy, the costumer, the art department, and everyone else concerned with the making of a picture, relied on his own imagination.
2004 Sun (Nexis) 1 Mar. Benny's money ran out but he found a job as a property boy at the East Ham Palace theatre.
property child n. Obsolete rare a child who appears in a scene, play, etc., but takes no part in the action.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > actor > [noun] > actor playing specific type of part > with little or nothing to say
property boy1685
supernumerary1755
walking gentleman1769
walking lady1769
figurant1775
statist1807
showgirl?1836
super1838
walker-on1876
property child1885
supe1885
walk-on1923
spear-carrier1960
1885 Frank Leslie's Pop. Monthly Mar. 258/1 The ‘property child’—that generally figures in the basket—was well known to all the company.
1890 J. Jefferson Autobiogr. i. 3 I had seen many rehearsals..having been taken on ‘in arms’ as a property child.
property clerk n. humorous Obsolete rare a useless clerk; cf. property child n.
ΚΠ
1863 W. S. Gilbert in Cornhill Mag. Dec. 725 We also shared..a ‘property’ clerk, who did nothing at all.
property income certificate n. Stock Market (now historical) an investment unit entitling the holder to a share in the rental income of a property development; abbreviated PINC.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > stocks and shares > stocks, shares, or bonds > [noun] > certificates
trust certificate1720
scrip?1734
script1768
savings certificate1842
stock certificate1863
PINC1986
property income certificate1986
1986 Estates Gaz. 3 May 278/2 The unit to be held by investors and traded in the new market will be known as a Property Income Certificate.
1997 Irish Times (Nexis) 1 Oct. 29 Pincs—property income certificates—were a two-part security traded as one on the London Stock Exchange. One element was debt-like, entitling the holder to a portion of the rental stream from a property pool. The other element was equity, reflecting the properties' capital value.
property ladder n. chiefly British a series of stages by which homeowners are perceived to progress as they are able to afford increasingly expensive properties, the initial stage consisting of buying their first home; cf. housing ladder n. at housing n.1 Compounds 2.Chiefly as part of an extended metaphor.
ΚΠ
1941 F. Lafitte in Eugenics Rev. 33 71/1 Prestige goes primarily with the ownership of property... Social security, too, depends on climbing the income and property ladder.
1983 Times 18 May 2/2 First-time buyers..need an income of almost £10,000 a year to be able to get their foot on the property ladder.
2013 Liverpool Echo (Nexis) 12 Oct. 29 The scheme has already enabled thousands of people across the country to get on to or move up the property ladder.
property man n. = property master n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > the staging of a theatrical production > people concerned with theatrical productions > [noun] > property-man
property maker1559
property man1633
property master1854
props1877
prop man1923
1633 J. Shirley Triumph of Peace 19 There rush in A Carpenter. A Paynter... A Feather-makers Wife. A Property-Mans Wife.
1749 W. R. Chetwood Gen. Hist. Stage 251 Property-man is the person that receives a bill from the prompter for what is necessary in every play; as purses, wine, suppers, poison, [etc.].
1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits xiii. 229 The religion of the day is a theatrical Sinai, where the thunders are supplied by the property-man.
1982 H. Rosenthal My Mad World of Opera xxi. 209 The week-end..coincided with a strike by the stage-hands and property men.
2012 E. Harris Britain's Forgotten Film Factory ii. 29 Ready..to help out as required, carrying furniture, removing a heavy lamp or assisting the property man.
property manager n. (a) a person responsible for theatrical props; (b) a person who manages a property, or a property portfolio, on behalf of the owner.
ΚΠ
1863 M. C. Houstoun Hazel Combe I. x. 89 The old drawing-room..bore very much the appearance of a decorating-room at a country theatre, with the ‘property’ manager superintending the arrangements for the ‘representation’ of the night.
1888 Connersville (Indiana) Examiner 29 Feb. Charlie Drennan has accepted a lucrative position as property manager for a large stone quar[r]y company in Colorado.
1896 Times 14 Aug. 3/4 Edwin Phillips, property manager at the Novelty Theatre, said the dagger used on Monday did not belong to the theatre, but Mr. Franks told him he preferred his own, as it looked better.
1903 Financial Times 29 May 8/3 To take over the business of..printer,..estate and property manager, rent collector, &c.
1946 W. A. Leach (title) Urban estate management: a handbook for the property manager, owner and student.
1993 D. Shay & J. Duncan Making of Jurassic Park 191 Film Credits... Production staff..Loader..Property Manager, [etc.].
1998 Occupational Outlook Handbk. (U.S. Dept. of Labor Bull. 2500) 70/2 Property managers perform an important function in increasing and maintaining the value of real estate investments.
2013 National Trust Mag. Autumn 47/2 I started out as a woodsman, trained to be a forester and then became Property Manager at Brockhampton.
2014 W. Poundstone Rock breaks Scissors i. 28 Zenith sent along two radios to each production, one for the property manager to take home as swag and the other to appear on-screen.
property mark n. a mark indicating ownership.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > marking > marking to identify > mark of identification > [noun] > mark of ownership
signc1390
brand1665
property mark1860
ear tag1876
1860 Harper's Mag. Oct. 592/2 We left him on the open prairie, cutting a heap of green grass for his bed and board, clipping his ear for a property-mark, and praying that the wolves might spare him. Good old mule!
1988 T. Woodcock & J. M. Robinson Oxf. Guide to Heraldry ii. 29 The heraldry of Poland is unique in Europe because of the pre-heraldic runic signs, thought to be ancient clan property marks.
property master n. a man in charge of props for a theatre, film set, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > the staging of a theatrical production > people concerned with theatrical productions > [noun] > property-man
property maker1559
property man1633
property master1854
props1877
prop man1923
1854 Times 14 June 12/4 Yesterday Mr. William Payne, the coroner for London and Southwark, held an inquest..on the body of Mr. George Percy, aged 45, the property-master and modeller at the Surrey Theatre.
1982 T. Barr Acting for Camera iv. xxvi. 191 The Prop department. This department consists of property master and assistants.
2005 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) Feb. 117 (caption) Property master Ty Teiger, props/model-shop supervisor Peter Wyborn, and team members John Paul ‘Lon’ Lucini and Trevor Smith enjoy some downtime with a battle droid.
property mistress n. a woman in charge of props for a theatre, film set, etc.
ΚΠ
1916 Lima (Ohio) Times-Democrat 15 May 6/3 For Mrs. Melville, who is the property mistress, the following card will mark her place: ‘Dear Mistress of the property, Your name we all do bless, For your artistic setting Helped us gain success’.
1988 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 23 Sept. vi. 2/1 Where do they get those disposable props? Simple. The directors just ask Barbara Krepps, the property mistress.
2005 Scunthorpe Evening Tel. (Nexis) 27 Oct. 6 As well as being an active committee member, she is also the programme designer, properties mistress and generally a Jill of all trades.
property player n. British (a) an actor-manager available for hire by local organizations (chiefly churches) to stage plays on their premises (now historical); (b) a person or organization that invests (successfully) in the property market; cf. player n.1 3d.
ΚΠ
1517 in J. Nichols Illustr. Manners & Expences Antient Times (1797) 156 Paied to Damyon, the property player, for caryinge of his propertes home.
1977 Theatre Notebk. 31 5 (title) That enterprising property player: semi-professional drama in sixteenth century England.
1986 Sunday Times 16 Nov. 64/7 The big City property players are only now arriving in force.
2005 Belfast News Let. (Nexis) 16 Nov. (Business section) 25 One of Northern Ireland's biggest property players has bought two major commercial properties in Great Britain.
property plot n. a list of the props required for a play.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > the staging of a theatrical production > [noun] > operation of lights > plan of lighting or props
plot1851
property plot1874
lighting plot1896
1874 Harper's Mag. Apr. 639 The property-man is provided with a property-plot of each play—a property-plot being a list of the various articles required in each act.
1998 Music & Lett. 79 626 These materials, however, are available in the 1915 Samuel French edition of the play, which includes a detailed property plot, electrical plot (complete with illustrated lighting plot)..and publicity notes.
property qualification n. a qualification for office (e.g. as a member of parliament), or for the exercise of a right (e.g. that of voting), based on the possession of a certain amount of property.
ΚΠ
1794 Soc. United Irishmen of Dublin 125 That no Property Qualification should be necessary to intitle any Man to be a Representative.
1807 Deb. Congr. U.S. 16 Nov. (1852) 916 The Constitution of the United States requires no property qualification in the elected.
1851 C. Merivale Hist. Romans under Empire III. xxxii. 505 He raised the property qualification to twelve hundred thousand sesterces.
1870 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (ed. 2) I. App. 590 The strange notion..that a property qualification was needed for a seat in the Witenagemót.
1960 C. Williamson Amer. Suffrage ix. 174 The Pennsylvania constitution was anathema, not only because it did not require a property qualification for voting but also because foreigners were permitted to vote after only two years' residence.
2002 Virginia Law Rev. 88 979 Even though education and property qualifications for voting have in the past been defended, is there any doubt that these restrictions would be subject to, and would fail, heightened scrutiny?
property room n. a room in which theatrical props are kept.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > a theatre > other parts of theatre > [noun] > property room
property room1758
props room1934
1758 P. Shea Full Vindic. Thomas Sheridan 15 These horses..are always ready caparisoned in the Property Room, and can never hurt the Limbs, or endanger the Lives, of the Riders.
1885 J. K. Jerome On Stage 66 The dressing-rooms (two rows of wooden sheds) were situate over the property room, and were reached by means of a flight of steps.
1999 J. L. Styan Perspectives on Shakespeare in Performance 71 I pass over the traditional stuffed stag that resides in the property room at Stratford, and William's single flower that once constituted a bouquet for Audrey.
property tax n. a tax levied directly on property.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > impost, due, or tax > tax > types of tax > [noun] > property tax
property tax1798
1796 Morning Chron. 5 Mar. The Order of the Day being read on the Collateral Property Tax Bill.]
1798 St. James's Chron. 4 Dec. Mr. Pitt brought up the Property Tax Bill, and moved that it be read a first time.
1852 T. Gisborne Thought on Income Tax 50 We have now proposed to subject to a Property Tax, all fixed property, all moveable property, all the productive power of man, and the national debt.
1978 N.Y. Times 30 Mar. b6/3 The legislative leaders and Governor Carey agreed today to..offer low-income taxpayers, particularly the elderly, a property-tax protection program.
2004 Sci. Amer. (U.K. ed.) July 15/1 Property taxes, the dominant source of local income, have traditionally financed schools, a custom that results in inadequate funding in lower-income districts.
property taxation n. the action of taxing property or the fact of being taxed based on property ownership.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > impost, due, or tax > tax > taxation > [noun] > types or schemes of taxation
property taxation1844
post-war credit1918
1844 R. Cobden Let. 7 Dec. in Tregaskis' Catal. 16 Sept. (1901) 25/2 As a leaguer we must not take up the question of direct property-taxation, but individually I go with you entirely.
1991 M. Ridge & S. Smith Local Taxation 46 The analysis of property taxation has to take into account that over time buildings can be removed, relocated, or property owners' capital invested in other assets.
property-woman n. now rare = property mistress n.
ΚΠ
1795 G. Coleman New Hay at Old Market ii. 23 Carpenter Why, it's a new chair for the Prompter. Prompter Oh! that alters the case. Well, let it be handsome; do you mind? Stud it with brass nails, and cover it with best Morocco—and tell the Property-woman to put a good soft velvet cushion in it, dye hear?
1808 Monthly Pantheon 1 692/2 His wife was (in the technical language of the theatre) a dresser and property-woman.
1925 Woman Citizen Sept. 11/3 Two winters ago Miss André started with the Cherry Lane Players as property woman.
2001 R. J. Maturi & M. B. Maturi Beverly Bayne i. i. 23 A discussion she had with the studio property woman while waiting for Miss Bayne.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

propertyv.

Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: property n.
Etymology: < property n.
Obsolete.
1. transitive. To use for one's own ends; to exploit. Also with away. Cf. property n. 6.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > instrumentality > render instrumental [verb (transitive)] > use as mere instrument
propertya1616
model1665
a1616 W. Shakespeare King John (1623) v. ii. 79 I am too high-borne to be propertied [printed proportied; corrected in 1632] To be a..seruing-man, and Instrument To any Soueraigne State throughout the world. View more context for this quotation
1758 Herald I. Ded. 5 There must..be a vast fund of stupidity amongst mankind, to make them..be continually property'd away for the interests of a few crafty leaders.
2. transitive. To make one's own property; to appropriate; to take or hold possession of.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > taking possession > take possession of [verb (transitive)] > appropriate
ownOE
rimec1275
takec1300
appropre1366
to keep, take to or for one's own storec1385
to get awayc1480
proper1496
apprehenda1522
impropry1526
impropriate1567
carve1578
forestall1581
appropriate1583
propriate1587
pocket1597
impatronize1611
propertya1616
asself1632
appropriatea1634
swallow1637
to swallow up1654
sink1699
poucha1774
spheterize1779
sack1807
fob1818
to look back to1822
mop1861
annex1865
a1616 W. Shakespeare Timon of Athens (1623) i. i. 58 His large Fortune..Subdues and properties to his loue and tendance All sorts of hearts. View more context for this quotation
1749 Seventh Let. from Farmer 10 Whatever is propertied, whatever is possessed, whatever Industry can earn, or Opulence can purchase, is granted, fenced, guarded, and affirmed by Liberty.
1833 T. Hook Parson's Daughter I. x. 203 A being like Emma—whose sentiments, whose character are propertied by the one, one engrossing passion.
3. transitive. To imbue with a property or quality. Cf. propertied adj. 1.
ΚΠ
1897 F. Thompson New Poems 113 Thou hast enwoofèd her An empress of the air, And all her births are propertied by thee.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2007; most recently modified version published online September 2018).
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