| 释义 | quadrivialadj.n.Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin quadriviālis.Etymology:  <  classical Latin quadriviālis of or belonging to a crossroads, in post-classical Latin also relating to the quadrivium (13th cent.; 1344, c1450 in British sources)  <  quadrivium  quadrivium n.   + -ālis  -al suffix1. With use as noun compare post-classical Latin quadrivialia, neuter plural (1215; from a1279 in British sources), the quadrivium. Compare Middle French quadrivial, kadrivial relating to the quadrivium (c1494–8).With the β.  forms   compare discussion at quadri- comb. form. A. adj.society > education > learning > study > subject or object of study > 			[adjective]		 > trivium or quadrivium  in  tr.  Palladius  		(Duke Humfrey)	 		(1896)	 Prol. 76 (MED)  				Also thus prompt to profre Vche art quadriuial. 1481    tr.  Cicero  		(Caxton)	 sig. e6v  				Light sciences callid trynals, as be gramer logyk and rethorik in comparison of the quadryiuall sciences. 1496     		(Pynson)	 sig. aiii  				Frendely him fostered quatriuial aliaunce. 1792    J. Gutch tr.  A. à Wood   i. 150  				An enemy to Trivial and Quadrivial Sciences, our Author wrote much against him in his Metalogicus. 1886    S. S. Lawrie  61  				Practically under the name of dialectic, logic was a quadrivial study. 1912     V. 172/2  				The ‘trivial’ arts were Grammar, Rhetoric, and Dialectics... The ‘quadrivial’ arts were Geometry, Arithmetic, Astronomy, and Music. 1949     Winter 40/2  				A quadrivial passion for theology and literature, horses and international peace. 1994     25 235  				It is relevant in this context that quadrivial studies seem to have been pursued energetically in twelfth-century Hereford.society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > junction of roads, paths, or tracks > 			[adjective]		 society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > junction of roads, paths, or tracks > 			[adjective]		 > having four ways meeting1480    W. Worcester in  J. Nasmith  		(1778)	 177  				Wythynne the yate iiii quadryvyalle weyes. 1631    B. Jonson Inigo Jones 11 in   II  				He [may] draw a Forum, wth quadriuiall Streets. 1862    H. D. Thoreau  		(1863)	 171  				A trivial or quadrivial place. 1890    O. Crawfurd  303  				Passing one day through the quadrivial square that lies beneath the clerigos tower. 1912     21 Mar. 10/4  				[Slogan] Dunkirk—the Quadrivial Port.the world > space > shape > angularity > specific angular shape > 			[adjective]		 > quadrilateral the world > relative properties > number > geometry > shape or figure > 			[adjective]		 > two-dimensional > quadrilateral1540    A. Borde  B iij  				Deuyde the lodgynges by the cyrcuyte of the quadryuyall courte.  B. n.the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > four > 			[noun]		 > group of four?a1475						 (?a1425)						    tr.  R. Higden  		(Harl. 2261)	 		(1865)	 I. 5 (MED)  				The triuialle of the vertues theologicalle and quadriuialle [a1387 J. Trevisa tr. þe metynge of foure weies; L. quadrivium] of the cardinalle vertues.society > education > learning > study > subject or object of study > 			[noun]		 > a department of study > arts > quadrivium1522    J. Skelton  511  				A poore maister of arte..had lytell parte Of the quatriuials Nor yet of triuials. 1577    W. Harrison Hist. Descr. Islande Brit.  ii. vi. f. 79/2, in  R. Holinshed  I  				The Quadriuials..(I meane Arithmetike, Musicke, Geometrie, and Astronomie). a1656    J. Hales  		(1673)	 i. 282  				Trivials and Quadrivials, as old Clerks were wont to name them. 1716    M. Davies  II. 92  				Edward Seymour..was educated in Trivials, and partly in Quadrivials in Oxon. 1886    G. C. Brodrick  64  				These seven sciences were no other than the old Trivials and Quadrivials. 1987     59 8  				It [sc. music] first entered the curriculum as one of the ‘quadrivials’, along with arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).<  adj.n.?1440 |