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单词 ransom
释义

ransomn.

Brit. /ˈrans(ə)m/, U.S. /ˈrænsəm/
Forms:

α. Middle English ranceun, Middle English rancoun, Middle English rancun, Middle English rancune, Middle English rannson, Middle English ranscon, Middle English ranscun, Middle English ransoun, Middle English ransun, Middle English raunceon, Middle English raunceoun, Middle English raunchoun, Middle English rauncon, Middle English rauncoun, Middle English rauncun, Middle English raunczoun, Middle English raunscun, Middle English raunsone, Middle English raunsown, Middle English raunsowne, Middle English raunsun, Middle English rauunsun, Middle English ravnson, Middle English rawinson, Middle English rawnssone, Middle English rawunsone, Middle English rawunsun, Middle English ronsoun, Middle English–1500s raunson, Middle English–1500s raunsonne, Middle English–1500s raunsoun, Middle English–1500s rawnson, Middle English–1600s ranson, 1600s ransone; Scottish pre-1700 rannsoune, pre-1700 ranson, pre-1700 ransone, pre-1700 ransoun, pre-1700 ransoune, pre-1700 raunsone, pre-1700 raunsoune, pre-1700 ravnson, pre-1700 rawnsone, pre-1700 rawnsoune, pre-1700 rawnsown, pre-1700 rawnsowne.

β. Middle English rannisome, Middle English ranscum, Middle English ransoum, Middle English raunsomme, Middle English raunsoum, Middle English ravnsom, Middle English rawnsom, Middle English 1600s ransum, Middle English–1500s raunsom, Middle English–1500s rawnsome, Middle English–1600s raunsome, Middle English–1600s raunsum, Middle English (in a late copy)–1700s ransome, Middle English– ransom, 1500s raundsom, 1500s raundsomme, 1500s raundsum, 1500s raunsumme, 1500s–1600s randsome, 1500s–1700s randsom; Scottish pre-1700 rainsom, pre-1700 ransome, pre-1700 ransoum, pre-1700 ransowme, pre-1700 raunsome, pre-1700 rawnsome, pre-1700 1700s– ransom; N.E.D. (1903) also records a form Middle English ranscome.

γ. Middle English rampson, Middle English ramsoun, Middle English raumsoun, Middle English raymson (perhaps transmission error), Middle English–1500s ramson, Middle English–1500s raumson.

δ. late Middle English raumsum, late Middle English 1600s ramsom, late Middle English 1600s ramsome, late Middle English–1500s raumsom.

ε. late Middle English raenson, late Middle English reanson, late Middle English reaunceoune.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French rancun, rançon.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman rancun, rançoun, ransoun, ransun, raunceon, raunceoun, raunçon, raunsone, raunsonne, raunson, raunsoun, rampçon and Old French raançon, raençun, rainson, Anglo-Norman and Middle French ranson, Old French, Middle French reanson, Middle French rançon price exacted for release of a captive, release of a captive, redemption, release from sins (12th cent.), fine, amercement (14th cent. in Anglo-Norman; French rançon ) < classical Latin redemptiōn- , redemptiō redemption n. Compare post-classical Latin ransona (1326 in a British source). Compare Old Occitan rezemson, reemson, etc. buying back, ransom, cost of releasing a captive, release from captivity (12th cent.), Catalan remçó buying out of captivity, redemption of sins (late 13th cent. as reemçó).Compare also the following borrowings from < French: Old Occitan remssó , ransó price paid for release of a prisoner (14th cent.; Occitan rançon ), Spanish ranzón price paid for the release of a prisoner (1476 as rançon ), Italian ranzone price paid for the release of a prisoner (c1500 as †ranzione ), release of a captive by means of this payment (16th cent.), and also Middle Dutch rantzuon , rantsoen , ransoen , rentsoen , etc. (1220–40; Dutch rantsoen , ransoen ), Middle Low German ransūn , ranzūn , German Ranzion (17th cent.; 16th cent. as Ranson ), Swedish ranson (16th cent., perhaps via Middle Low German). With the development of final -on to -om , unparalleled in the French forms, compare random n. and see forms and discussion at that entry.
1.
a. The action or means of freeing oneself from a penalty; a sum of money paid to obtain pardon for an offence or imposed as a penalty, esp. one exacted for a significant offence; a fine. Also figurative. Now historical.Frequently in fine and ransom: cf. fine and ransom at fine n.1 Phrases 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > fine > [noun]
witereden688
witec890
guiltwite964
ransom?c1225
amends1340
forfeiture1399
ush1417
recoverya1422
issue1424
unlaw1424
fine1430
forfeita1475
unlay1497
multure1533
estreatc1550
mulct1584
forfeitment1597
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [noun]
ransom?c1225
again-buyinga1382
finance1418
resgat1582
rescat1588
ransom money1601
counter-price1673
ransom price1735
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 101 An mon þet leiȝe inprisun & achte muche ranceun. þet anane wise ne schulde ut bute forto hongin ear he hefde his ranceun [a1250 Titus rauncun; c1230 Corpus rancun] fulleliche ipaiȝet.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 1970 (MED) Qua þat slas or man or wijf, þar gas [a1400 Gött. bes; a1400 Trin. Cambr. is] na ransun bot liue for lijf.
?c1430 (c1400) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 62 (MED) Prelatis also robben þe pore lige men of þe king bi fals extorisions taken bi colour of holy correccion, &..make men paye a gret raunson.
1491 Act 7 Hen. VII c. 22 §1 To abyde in prisone therfor unto the tyme he have made fyne and raunsom for the same.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection ii. sig. Miiiv Pardons payeth moste properly the raunsom of peyne due in purgatory.
c1592 Faire Em sig. D1 Thy death should paie thy ransome of thy fault.
1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. 94 Then might that penance be reduced to a ransome according to the graine of the offence.
1658 State Trials, Dr. J. Hewet (R.) All the rest of the Judges..were..impeached of high-treason, disjudg'd and put to fines and ransoms.
1668 W. Prynne Aurum Reginæ 11 Aurum Reginæ is due as well from Clergymen as well as Laymen; and out of the Fines of. Jews, and other Clippers, falsifiers of the Kings Moneyes, as of Christians and other Trespassers put to Fines and Ransoms at the Kings pleasure.
1700 R. Brady Contin. Hist. Eng. 425 The same King afterwards, in his Parlement, Impeached the said Lords..and caused many of their Company for fear of Death, to make Fine and Ransom as Traitors.
1769 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. IV. 373 This is the reason why fines in the king's court are frequently denominated ransoms.
1799 H. Neuman tr. F.-A.-F. Larochefoucauld-Liancourt Trav. through U.S. I. 244 The Quakers, Baptists, and Dunkers pay..during a war or insurrection, five pounds sterling, for their exemption from military service. Out of these fines and ransoms the adjutant-general of the militia receives his pay.
1839 H. J. Holthouse New Law Dict. 302/1 Ransom (redemptio), in law this word is frequently used to signify a sum of money paid for the pardoning of some great offence.
1890 Jrnl. Anthropol. Inst. 19 335 In the case of adultery the fine would be paid to the husband as a ransom, for death was a recognised penalty.
1927 Eng. Hist. Rev. 42 590 He [sc. Henry IV] ordered that John Savage, the delinquent, should..pay double damages besides fine and ransom to the king.
1987 Jrnl. Biblical Lit. 106 63 In Num 35:31, 32, a murderer may not pay a ransom for his life.
b. A sum paid as a tax or tribute. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > impost, due, or tax > [noun]
yieldc950
tollc1000
tolne1023
mailOE
lotlOE
ransomc1325
tail1340
pensiona1387
contribution1387
scat gild14..
due1423
responsionc1447
impositionc1460
devoirs1503
excisea1513
toloney1517
impost1569
cast1597
levy1640
responde1645
reprise1818
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 9872 (MED) Hii þat were of ierusalem gret raunson him ȝeue, In þraldom as vnder him þere to bileue.
c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 935 (MED) Mani man wepen sare For ransoun to yrland.
c1330 in T. Wright Polit. Songs Eng. (1839) 337 If the king in his lond maketh a taxacioun, And everi man is i-set to a certain raunczoun.
a1450 (a1400) Siege Jerusalem (BL Add.) (1932) 862 (MED) Shull þei never dwell in toun Withouten truage oþer raunsoun.
2.
a. A sum of money, esp. a large one, such as one might pay as a punitive fine or as a payment for the return of a hostage (cf. sense 4a); a fortune. Cf. king's ransom at sense 4a.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > sum of money > [noun] > large sum
pounda1225
ransom?a1300
fother14..
gob1542
mint1579
king's ransomc1590
abomination1604
coda1680
a pretty (also fine, fair, etc.) penny1710
plunk1767
big money1824
pot1856
big one?1863
a small fortune1874
four figures1893
poultice1902
parcel1903
bundle1905
pretty1909
real money1918
stack1919
packet1922
heavy sugar1926
motza1936
big bucks1941
bomb1958
wedge1977
megadollars1980
squillion1986
bank1995
?a1300 Sayings St. Bernard (Digby) in F. J. Furnivall Minor Poems Vernon MS (1901) ii. 758 Þou most deyen, Ne may no rauncoun [c1300 Laud raunchoun] þe forbeyen.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 35 Of þe ilke zenne ne byeþ naȝt þe heȝe men quit þet..sosteneþ..caorsins..and hy nymeþ þe medes..and oþerhuil þe ronsounes þet byeþ of þe guodes of þe poure.
a1400 (?c1300) Bevis of Hampton (Egerton) l. 2142 Gret raunsom y haue [c1330 Auchinleck Wide whar ichaue iwent And me warisoun ispent].
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 1665 (MED) Besands to þe bischop he bed out of nounbre Reches him of rede gold ransons [a1500 Trin. Dub. raunsons] many.
c1450 J. Capgrave Life St. Katherine (Arun. 396) (1893) ii. 356 (MED) The lond of Capados, If ye had oon swiche [sc. a husband] myght bere vp your loos, Wolde paye a raunsom with ful good entent, So þat ye wolde on-to this thyng consent.
1742 New & Compl. Surv. London I. xii. 363/2 Every Man should pay not what he pleas'd, but what the King would have him, who never was moderate in his Demands, always exorbitant, turning Forfeitures into Fines, Fines into Ransoms.
1834 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Aug. 272 He'll publish the owtobiography o' a' Us Three, first piecemeel in Maga, and then ilka ane by itsell, in three vols. crown octavo, gettin' a ransom for the copy-richts.
1834 S. Coleridge Pretty Lessons 15 Shawls so rich and handsome, Diamonds worth a ransom, From the same far country brought.
1919 J. Buchan Mr. Standfast xv. 285 Fuel, bread, even milk and cheese were hard to get and cost a ransom.
1998 S. Orlean Orchid Thief 94 Species..that resist cloning are still rare and cost a ransom.
b. Scottish and Irish English (northern). An exorbitant price, rent, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > monetary value > price > high price or rate > [noun] > excessively
overprice1620
over-ratea1640
rack rate1655
ransom1816
sea-price1910
1816 W. Scott Antiquary I. iii. 59 Could a copy [of Caxton's ‘Game of Chess’] now occur..Lord only knows what would be its ransom.
1828 D. M. Moir Life Mansie Wauch i. 14 Grannie..sold the milk..at the ransom of a ha'penny the mutchkin.
1875 W. Alexander Sketches Life among Ain Folk viii. 133 Some said Sandy Mutch had taken the farm ‘at a ransom’.
1900 Weekly Free Press & Aberdeen Herald 20 Oct. ‘Did ever ony mortal hear tell o' sic an imposition?’ ‘Deed, it's an awfu' ransom.’
1932 A. J. Cronin Three Loves ii. xviii. 352 But the price of things... It's shameful. Everything a ransom now.
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 271/1 At a ransom, at an exorbitant price.
3. Theology. The action of obtaining or paying for redemption; (hence) deliverance from damnation; redemption. Esp. with reference to the Passion of Christ (see sense 4b).to make ransom for: to redeem (obsolete).
ΚΠ
a1325 (c1280) Southern Passion (Pepys 2344) (1927) 457 Þanne one Mannes sone hi shulleþ seo in hare siȝte..Ȝoure eyen hebbeþ an hey..ffor ȝoure raunsoun is ney.
c1350 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Harl. 874) (1961) 183 (MED) Þat is þe secounde deþ, for þere nys no raunsoum.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 9772 (MED) Angel ne might wit na resun Mak for adam his ranscun [c1460 Laud raunsom; Göt raunsum; a1400 Trin. Cambr. raunsoun].
a1425 (a1400) Prick of Conscience (Galba & Harl.) (1863) 2834 (MED) In inferno nulla est redempcio; in helle..es na raunceon, For na helpe may be in þat dungeon.
c1429 Mirour Mans Saluacioune (1986) l. 2574 Godde..sent hym to dye, mans reaunceoune for to make.
a1456 J. Lydgate Minor Poems (1911) i. 42 (MED) He for man þe Raunsom on him tooke.
1554 Bp. T. Watson Twoo Notable Serm. ii. sig. T.vi It [sc. the Passion of Christ] might be continually celebrate by mistery that ones was offered for our ransome.
1604 T. Bilson Suruey Christs Sufferings 374 Hee might yeeld to God for vs, and as part of our ransome, the lowest degree of submission, and deepest impression of feare and sorrow, that mans nature could feele without doubting or distrusting the fauour and goodnesse of God towards him or his.
1614 W. Alexander Doomes-day sig. Dv For our Ransome offring vp his blood, Huge was the Warre he had to make our Peace!
1662 W. Hemings Jewes Trag. 43 Thy aged Father kneels; And kneels to thee,..And begs with tears, with tears of bitterness, the ransom of thy soul.
1745 J. Wesley & C. Wesley Hymns on Lord's Supper cxxvi. 106 To Thee his Passion we present, Who for our Ransom dyes.
1776 J. Peacock Songs of Praise iii. 167 In unknown Agonies He dy'd, Our Ransom to complete.
1815 W. Wordsworth White Doe of Rylstone iii. 47 ‘Behold,’ said he, ‘The ransom of a sinful world.’
1847 R. Davidson Hist. Presbyterian Church Kentucky viii. 208 Was the Supreme Being so weak..as to be obliged to compound with a poor, damned rebel,..and pay him such a price for the ransom of sinners?
1925 E. Houvet Illustr. Monogr. Chartres Cathedral 10/1 Here he is not the Christ of the Revelation, as on the western door, but the preceptor, the shepherd who gave his life for our ransom.
1994 Theol. Stud. June 242 What is expressed in these seemingly extravagant views of ransom and sacrifice is that this Jesus, who came from God bearing God's presence and power, signifies the radical extent of God's self-gift to human beings.
4.
a. The sum or price paid or demanded for the release of a prisoner or hostage, or for the restoration of captured property. Also in extended use. king's ransom: a large sum of money; cf. sense 2. †person (also man) of ransom: a person able to pay ransom, or for whom ransom will be paid; a person of worth (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > sum of money > [noun] > large sum
pounda1225
ransom?a1300
fother14..
gob1542
mint1579
king's ransomc1590
abomination1604
coda1680
a pretty (also fine, fair, etc.) penny1710
plunk1767
big money1824
pot1856
big one?1863
a small fortune1874
four figures1893
poultice1902
parcel1903
bundle1905
pretty1909
real money1918
stack1919
packet1922
heavy sugar1926
motza1936
big bucks1941
bomb1958
wedge1977
megadollars1980
squillion1986
bank1995
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 6046 (MED) Þis folc bisette kaunterbury & uaste it bi lay, & gret raunson [c1425 Harl. raymson] of hom wiþinne esste, to be out of wo.
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) 1251 (MED) Y am prest as þi prisoun to paye þe my ransum.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vii. 3833 (MED) Agag made gret beheste Of rancoun which he wolde yive.
c1475 (?c1425) Avowing of King Arthur (1984) l. 343 Sir Gauan..wold pay my rawunsone Wythowtyn delees.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) ii. l. 150 His kyn mycht nocht him get..Mycht thai hawe payit the Ransoune of a king.
a1525 Talis Fyve Bestes l. 132, in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1925) II. 131 A kyngis ransoun it was worth & maire.
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 163v Thei had been leat..without any peny of raunsome paiyng to escape.
c1590 C. Marlowe Faustus vi I'll not speak another word for a King's ransom.
1610 R. Tofte Honours Acad. ii. 52 Daine, that he may thee serue, his raunsome so to pay.
a1640 P. Massinger Bashful Lover ii. viii. 1 in 3 New Playes (1655) I know him, he's a man of ransom.
1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World vi. 145 Here we staid till the sixth day, in hopes to get a Ransom for the Town.
1718 Lady M. W. Montagu Let. May (1965) I. 408 Her Brother..sent the sum of £4,000 sterling as a Ransom for his sister.
1748 G. G. Beekman Let. 5 Feb. in Beekman Mercantile Papers (1956) I. 43 You may Give them fifty Pounds Sterling as a ransom for her again for She will not be worth that to them.
1770 H. Brooke Fool of Quality V. 206 She gave me a Look that overvalued the Ransom of a Monarch.
1801 M. Edgeworth Prussian Vase in Moral Tales III. 15 Like all..prisoners of war, she must..pay her ransom in gold.
1829 A. M. Hall Sketches Irish Char. I. 75 I could'nt look upon the babby's face for a king's ransom.
1882 ‘Ouida’ In Maremma I. 11 The stranger had been waiting for a ransom to be sent.
1886 R. Burton Arabian Nights xi I will offer my life as a ransom for thee.
1921 A. E. R. Boak Hist. Rome ii. v. 35 They accepted a ransom of 1000 pounds of gold (about $225,000) for the city and marched off home.
1924 G. B. Shaw St. Joan iv. 41 The Chaplain: You have first to catch her, my lord. The Nobleman: Or buy her. I will offer a king's ransom.
1993 Radio Times 18 Sept. 67/3 The kidnapper demanded a ransom of £175,000 for her safe release.
b. figurative. Theology.
(a) Christ or his blood, as the price paid for mankind's redemption. Cf. sense 3.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > the Trinity > the Son or Christ > [noun] > as sacrifice or victim
blood of Christc1384
ransoma1400
crucifix14..
satisfaction1542
sacrifice-offerera1560
Man of Sorrows1577
host1653
victim1736
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Coll. Phys.) 21731 (MED) Of croice god bochte þair sawil liuis, Þar-on he gaue himselue rancun.
c1400 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) III. 470 (MED) Goddis Son..was rannisome for mannes soules.
a1450 in R. H. Bowers Three Middle Eng. Relig. Poems (1963) 40 (MED) Ther ran out watir & blod ful schene, That was raunsom of our wo.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 290 b/2 O crosse..which only were worthy to bere the raunson of the world.
a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome (1965) II. 43 I haue deit on the croce I haue pait the ransoune for mankind.
a1569 A. Kingsmill Conf. containing Conflict with Satan 37 in Most Excellent & Comfortable Treat. (new ed.) (1578) Looke, Christe is called a ransome, that is, a price of redemption.
1611 Bible (King James) 1 Tim. ii. 6 The man Christ Jesus, Who gaue himselfe a ransome for all.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost x. 61 Sending thee..his Mediator..Both Ransom and Redeemer voluntarie. View more context for this quotation
a1711 T. Ken Christophil in Wks. (1721) I. 511 A Price inestimable paid, The Blood of God our Ransom made.
1732 W. Lauder tr. H. Grotius Poem 3 Christ, the great ransom for the sins of men.
1796 N. Strong Doctr. Eternal Misery iii. 276 Christ is the ransom and he paid the price.
a1854 H. Reed Lect. Eng. Lit. (1878) vii. 236 A soul..not unworthy the awful ransom of the Redeemer's blood.
1863 Evangelist xlviii. 208 The death of Christ was a ransom for all.
1919 Jewish Q. Rev. 10 158 Jesus died so that he might serve as a ransom for the sins of his people.
1958 Kerrville (Texas) Times 23 July 5/3 Sermon subject: ‘Christ Is Your Ransom For Sin.’
2007 Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.) (Nexis) 21 July d7 Jesus was a ransom so that people could be free.
(b) A soul, or humankind collectively, as redeemed by Christ. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 28023 (MED) Fra godd his ranscon ful dere yee stele, Þat es þat ilk saul þat he Cost wit his ded on rode tre.
a1500 (c1410) Dives & Pauper (Hunterian) (1980) ii. 243 (MED) Wher is þe raunsom of myn blood? Wher ben þo soulys þat Y bouȝte so dere?
5. The action, fact, or possibility of obtaining the release of a captive or hostage by paying a certain sum, or of obtaining one's own freedom in this way; (also) the action of holding a person prisoner until such a sum is paid. Cf. to hold to ransom at Phrases.In early use frequently in to put (also †take, let) to ransom.rare between the late 17th cent. and early 19th cent., when the sense appears to have been revived in popular use by Scott.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [noun] > ransoming
redemptiona1325
ransoma1350
again-buyinga1382
ransoming1386
finance makingc1475
a1350 in Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen (1911) 127 44 (MED) Whose þuncheþ him in prisoun, þat is chalenge & raunsoun.
c1405 (c1385) G. Chaucer Knight's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 166 He ful soone hem sente To Atthenes to dwellen in prison Perpetuelly he nolde no raunson.
c1475 (?c1425) Avowing of King Arthur (1984) l. 394 Mi rauunsun is all redy boȝte.
c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 56 Four Consules the quhilkis the jnymyes wald nocht lat to ransoun.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xiii. 72 Slayand thame without ransoune.
1490 Caxton's Blanchardyn & Eglantine (1962) 89 He wolde take to raenson þe knyght that was a straunger.
1548 in A. I. Cameron Sc. Corr. Mary of Lorraine (1927) 268 And hes haldin the saidis master with uder thre plegen for the ransom of the rest.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 295 They slue many a man that could not come to raunsome.
1600 P. Holland tr. Livy Rom. Hist. xxii. 471 The matter was propounded in the Senate concerning the ransome of the captives.
1656 B. Harris tr. J. N. de Parival Hist. Iron Age i. iv. xxxii. 142 Prisoners..put to ransom, by a singular favour of the Prince of Orange.
1799 S. Ireland Henry II i. i. 77 But for that ambitious King of Scots, We hold him pris'ner, until he pay us Ten thousand marks, for ransom of his person.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe II. xiii. 245 An honourable imprisonment..as is due to one who is in treaty for ransom.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. ii. 60 Let us put the Jew to ransom.
1826 J. Browning tr. L. Pignotti Hist. Tuscany I. xiv. 440 She concluded with the Genoese a very unfavourable peace by the ransom of prisoners.
1863 M. L. Booth tr. A. Cochin Results of Slavery vi. ii. 254 He could not hinder the native sultans..from seeking to profit by the ransom of negroes effected by France.
1913 J. F. Kelly Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra iv. 46 The Consejo de Cruzada had advanced her 60 escudos on her undertaking to refund the money within a year if, during the interval, it had not been applied to the ransom of Miguel and Rodrigo.
1920 J. P. Trevelyan Short Hist. Ital. People xii. 195 One after another the chief citizens were seized and put to ransom.
1990 Mod. Asian Stud. 24 747 The anti-warlord programme was conceived and sold as an antidote to banditry,..to kidnap and ransom, and to other unpleasant side-effects of warlord occupation familiar to peasants and townsfolk up and down the province.
6. = ransom bill n. at Compounds 2. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > agreement > promise > [noun] > to pay ransom
ransom1747
ransom bill1752
ransom bond1817
1747 in Colonial Rec. Pennsylvania (1851) V. 75 The St. Christopher arrived, whose Crew..had taken and dismissed on a Ransome for Four thousand Dollars an English Frigate.

Phrases

to hold to ransom: (a) to keep (a person) prisoner until a ransom is paid; (b) figurative to exert power over by making a threat or withholding something; to limit or control the actions of by using threats or (unfairly) exploiting an advantage.
ΚΠ
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe II. xii. 223 Do hold the damsel to ransom, seeing he will pay you from his bags as much as may find fifty damsels upon safer terms.
1840 C. F. Hoffman Greyslaer II. iii. iv. 135 This seizing of opposite partisans, and holding them to ransom.
1913 Times 18 Dec. 5/1 The municipal strike may drag on.., but its back has been broken... A community with backbone cannot be held to ransom by its servants.
1973 Guardian 19 Apr. 14/3 To make a plutonium bomb, with which a criminal could hold a city to ransom..one needs just 16·2 kilos of the metal.
1995 Campus Times (Vancouver) 1 Nov. 4/2 It seems strange that one province can hold the ROC [= rest of Canada] to ransom.
2004 D. J. Whittaker Terrorists & Terrorism in Contemp. World iii. 38 Are the hostages left to be butchered or held to ransom?

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive.
ransom demand n.
ΚΠ
1905 Fort Wayne (Indiana) Daily News 5 July 2/1 Raisuli's ransom demand is so exorbitant as to be out of the question.
2007 Scotsman (Nexis) 20 Feb. 19 There has been no ransom demand and the lack of contact has led police to believe the kidnapping may have been part of a vendetta.
ransom gift n.
ΚΠ
1851 T. A. Buckley tr. Homer Iliad vi. 107 My sire will bestow on thee countless ransom-gifts.
1999 Amer. Jrnl. Philol. 120 489 Priam is able to secure his son's body through ransom gifts and is then able to return to Troy.
ransom gold n.
ΚΠ
1777 W. Green tr. Horace Odes x. 22 Safe in thy conduct, Trojan fire, With sums of ransom gold.
1815 W. Scott Lord of Isles v. xxiv. 205 He proffer'd ransom-gold to pay.
1906 C. M. Doughty Dawn in Brit. I. iv. 215 The temple ornaments, of ransom-gold of Rome.
2005 Sunday Times (South Afr.) (Nexis) 2 Jan. (Arts section) 10 One of the baddies even fries inside a live furnace which had been switched on to melt the ransom gold.
ransom money n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [noun]
ransom?c1225
again-buyinga1382
finance1418
resgat1582
rescat1588
ransom money1601
counter-price1673
ransom price1735
1601 A. Munday Downfall Earle of Huntington sig. G4v If you be elected deputie, Doe as you ought, and send the ransome money.
1763 North Briton III. 41 The ransom money was scarcely sufficient to defray the expence of the expedition.
1848 T. A. Buckley tr. Homer Iliad 351 Two men contended for the ransom-money of a slain man.
2001 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 18 Oct. 17/1 The Marxist guerrillas refer to the kidnappings that provide them with ransom money as detenciones.
ransom package n.
ΚΠ
1909 N.Y. Times 1 May 2/1 (headline) Chinese kidnapper caught. Trapped through dummy ransom package and sent to reform school.
2005 Bristol Evening Post (Nexis) 27 July 27 That ransom package also contains a portable hard drive revealing a ransom demand of 1 million with a time-limit of 12 hours.
ransom payment n.
ΚΠ
1859 J. Garner Series Diss. on Doctr. of Bible xxi. 375 When our Lord offered himself as a sacrifice for sin, and died on the cross, the Father accepted the ransom; then, so far as the ransom payment was concerned, Christ redeemed the whole world.
1901 Davenport (Iowa) Daily Republican 10 Oct. 1/2 Questions ransom payment. The News in an editorial..expresses the opinion that the payment of such large ransom is a very questionable proceeding.
2007 Newsweek (Nexis) 24 Sept. 34 The Americans reminded her that U.S. policy forbids ransom payments.
ransom price n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [noun]
ransom?c1225
again-buyinga1382
finance1418
resgat1582
rescat1588
ransom money1601
counter-price1673
ransom price1735
1735 J. Gill Cause God & Truth I. liv. 289 Christ's purchase would be in vain, and the ransom price be paid for nought.
1837 J. Conder Lord's Prayer in Choir & Oratory My ransom-price He paid, upon whom my guilt was laid.
1990 D. Alexander Lion Conc. Bible Handbk. (BNC) 66 Whenever the word translated ‘atonement’ was used it meant paying a price—a ransom price.
ransom purchase n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1866 H. Bushnell Vicarious Sacrifice i. v. 113 To be the ransom purchase of others.
b.
ransom-free adj.
ΚΠ
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xiii. 534 Arayit weill, but ransoune fre.
1781 J. Sterling Hist. Chevalier Bayard ii. 121 At the close of the campaign, he was permitted to depart ransom free.
2003 D. Hoyos Hannibal's Dynasty iii. 37 The Romans in turn released 2,700 remaining Punic prisoners of war ransom-free (the Carthaginians had not the money to ransom them).
C2.
ransom bill n. (a) a document which represents a formal undertaking to pay a ransom for something, esp. a captured ship (now historical); (b) North American a banknote used to pay a ransom, esp. one which is marked or has its serial number recorded, so as to aid in the tracing of the kidnappers.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > agreement > promise > [noun] > to pay ransom
ransom1747
ransom bill1752
ransom bond1817
1752 W. Beawes Lex Mercatoria 227 The wording of Ransom Bills has been various.
?1800 E. Anderson Sailor 22 I was forc'd to sign a ransom bill.
1918 Harvard Law Rev. 31 642 Less important are the relaxations in favor of ransom bills and contracts of necessity, especially by prisoners of war.
1934 Evening Tribune (Albert Lea, Minnesota) 20 Sept. 1/7 A man who was alleged to have paid for some gasoline recently with a $10 bill later found to be one of the ransom bills.
1997 Lloyd's Reinsurance Law Rep. (Lexis) 28 Feb. 523 If a British ship was captured by the enemy, the captors would release the ship against a ‘ransom bill’ issued by the master.
2001 FBI Law Enforcement Bull. (Nexis) 1 Mar. 22 When possible, officials should record the serial numbers of the ransom bills or arrange with the Federal Reserve Banking system to provide marked or recorded bills.
ransom bond n. = ransom bill n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > agreement > promise > [noun] > to pay ransom
ransom1747
ransom bill1752
ransom bond1817
1817 G. Chalmers Life T. Churchyard in T. Churchyard Chips conc. Scotl. 7 Releasing many of his fellow-captives, on his own ransom-bond.
1914 S. Mitchell Compl. Poems 116 Tell the dame what fate her lord should have if three days gone no ransom bond came back to bring release.
1996 W. Marvel Alabama & Kearsarge ix. 109 By midnight Jones was ferried back to his ship, for which he signed a ransom bond greater than the cost of building the Alabama.
ransom note n. a letter sent by a kidnapper or kidnappers demanding a ransom for the return of a hostage, and typically threatening harm to the hostage if the ransom is not paid.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > kidnapping or abduction > kidnap or abduct [phrase] > documents used
ransom note1897
1897 Evening Herald (Syracuse, N.Y.) 20 Aug. 1/4 The messenger boy who started to deliver the ‘ransom’ note but returned it received it from three men.
1935 M. M. Atwater Murder in Midsummer xiv. 135 Maybe it's a kidnapping, but there's no ransom notes.
2002 J. Weyland Answer is Never xii. 180 If you can't draw, steal artwork... Use the ransom-note method of cutting and pasting to create one-of-a-kind designs.
ransom-payer n. a person who pays a ransom; (in early use) spec. Christ as the redeemer of humankind (cf. sense 4b(a)).
ΚΠ
1604 T. Bilson Suruey Christs Sufferings 104 This forsaking or dereliction beseemeth the time, place, person and cause of Christ our ransome payer.
1645 S. Rutherford Tryal & Trivmph of Faith (1845) 186 You shame the glory of the ransom-payer.
1902 Janesville (Wisconsin) Daily Gaz. 10 Apr. 1/4 (headline) Miss Stone..says she has recovered from effects of her captivity. No cruelty to her. All money from her proposed lecture tour will go to ransom-payers.
2000 Financial Times (Nexis) 18 Aug. 18 The Philippine government, itself a frequent ransom-payer, warned the Europeans they would have to do the same in the end.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

ransomv.

Brit. /ˈrans(ə)m/, U.S. /ˈrænsəm/
Forms:

α. Middle English ranscon, Middle English ranscun, Middle English ransoun, Middle English ransounne, Middle English ranssun, Middle English ransun, Middle English raunceon, Middle English raunceoun, Middle English rauncon, Middle English raunsene, Middle English raunsone, Middle English raunsoun, Middle English ravnson, Middle English rawnnsun, Middle English rawnson, Middle English rawnsone, Middle English rawsonne (transmission error), Middle English–1500s ranson, Middle English–1500s raunson; Scottish pre-1700 rannson, pre-1700 ranson, pre-1700 ransone, pre-1700 ransoun, pre-1700 ransown, pre-1700 ransson, pre-1700 raunsoun, pre-1700 ravnson, pre-1700 rawnsoun, pre-1700 rawnssown.

β. Middle English ransoum, Middle English raunsomme, Middle English raunsum, Middle English raunsumme, Middle English rawnsem, Middle English rawnsum, Middle English (1800s English regional (Yorkshire)) ransum, Middle English–1500s rawnsom, Middle English–1600s ransome, Middle English–1600s raunsom, Middle English–1600s raunsome, 1500s– ransom, 1600s randsome, 1700s randsom; Scottish pre-1700 ransoum, pre-1700 1700s– ransom.

γ. Middle English rampson, Middle English raumson, Middle English raumsoun, 1500s ramsion, 1500s ramson.

δ. late Middle English rampsoum, late Middle English raumsom.

Also past tense Middle English raunsede (transmission error), Middle English raunseued (transmission error), late Middle English raunsounnde.
Origin: Probably of multiple origins. Probably partly formed within English, by conversion. Probably partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: ransom n.; French rançonner.
Etymology: Probably partly < ransom n. and partly < Anglo-Norman raunceoner, raunçonner, raunsoner, raunsonner, raunsouner, Anglo-Norman and Middle French rançonner to free from imprisonment in return for a payment (1262 in Old French), to pay a ransom for (first half of the 14th cent. in Anglo-Norman), to extort a sum of money from (1377–80; French rançonner ) < rançon ransom n. Compare post-classical Latin ransonare, raunsonare, rauncionare (from 1377 in British sources), Old Occitan rezemsonar to hold to ransom. Compare also Italian ranzonare (second half of the 17th cent.; < French), and also Dutch rantsoenen (16th cent.), Middle Low German ranzūnen, German †ranzionen (16th cent.), ranzionieren (17th cent.; now rare).In Middle English prefixed and unprefixed forms of the past participle are attested (see y- prefix).
1.
a. transitive. Theology. To deliver (a person, humankind, a soul, etc.) from sin, damnation, etc.; to redeem. Esp. with reference to the Passion of Christ.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > salvation, redemption > save, redeem [verb (transitive)]
aleseOE
abyeOE
buyc1175
washc1175
winc1220
salvea1225
savec1225
forbuyc1315
ransomc1350
signc1350
again-buya1382
forechoosea1400
gain-buy1435
redeemc1438
pre-elect1561
sa'1604
electa1617
unsina1631
c1350 Psalter (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) xxv. 11 (MED) Raunceoun me [L. redime me], Lord, and haue mercy on me.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 9784 If godd had wroght anoþer man For to ransun wit adam.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 14437 (MED) He sent his sun..To ranscun [a1400 Gött. ranson; a1400 Trin. Cambr. raumsoun; a1400 Fairf. ransoum] all þat yode to hell.
?a1450 in C. von Nolcken Middle Eng. Transl. Rosarium Theol. (1979) 94 (MED) Criste had þe drede ynoȝ þat boȝt [or] ravnsoned þe wiþ þe prise of his ovne blode.
a1500 (?c1414) Paraphr. Seven Penitential Psalms 28 (MED) Cryist..deyid up on the rood To raunsoun synfull creature.
1557 Bible (Whittingham) Epistle **j He was solde to ransom vs.
1593 A. Willet Tetrastylon Papisticum ii. 58 He then that reconcileth, ransometh or redeemeth vs, what is he else but an agent efficient, & working cause of our redemption & reconciliation?
1638 R. Brathwait Psalmes of David ii. 92 God shall ransome and receive My soule from hand of Hell.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iii. 297 His Brethren, ransomd with his own dear life. View more context for this quotation
1710 A. Rigge Constancy in Truth Commended 136 For what end did he lay down his life? Was it to ransom Man from Sin, or no?
1785 W. Cowper Tirocinium in Task 128 We..learn with wonder how this world began, Who made, who marr'd, and who has ransom'd man. View more context for this quotation
1800 T. Carbry tr. A. Valsecchi Found. Relig. II. xvii. 554 Let us turn our eyes to Christ..and the abundant redemption, which ransomed human nature.
1879 F. R. Havergal Under his Shadow in Poet. Wks. (1884) II. 360 O Saviour, hast Thou ransomed us from death's unknown abyss?
1936 Mod. Lang. Rev. 31 169 The appeal to Christ on the cross is very fine, but Ixion and Tantalus, Charon and Cerberus, come in strangely as symbols of the death from which He has ransomed us.
1994 Homiletic & Pastoral Rev. Feb. 36 The total self-giving of the Word made flesh to ransom us from sin and death.
b. transitive. To obtain the release or return of (a person) or the restoration of (a thing) by paying a certain sum; to redeem from captivity or punishment. Also in extended use.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [verb (transitive)]
acquit?c1225
raim?c1225
to buy out1297
borrowa1300
ransoma1382
to put (a person) to (his or her) finance1418
raquite1454
loose1473
redeem?a1475
overbuya1525
redempa1525
remerce1559
reescate1645
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Deut. xiii. 5 Þe lord..haþ raunsomed [L. redemit] ȝow fro þe hous of seruage.
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1876) VI. 211 (MED) Withbrandes..raunsoned [v.r. raunsede] þe relikes of seint Austyn.
?c1450 (?a1400) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 365 (MED) Þo þingis þat wer offrid to god in þe temple..weren kept fro þe use of þat kynrede to þe comon profete of alle þe peple, as to þe repaire of þe temple, and to rawnson þe kynge and þe rewme at nede.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) viii. l. 452 Quha ȝeildis him sall neuir ransownd be.
1513 Galway Arch. in 10th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1885) App. v. 395 That no dweller of this towne become suertie for no gent of the countrey, ne ramson none of them.
1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. K2 v Saue her, kil me, & Ile ransome her with a thousand duckets.
1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia vi. 215 Their Canowes..they ransomed for Beuer skinnes.
1667 T. Sprat Hist. Royal-Soc. 434 To randsome the minds of all mankind from Slavery.
1693 H. Higden Wary Widdow iv. 39 I have been in a storm when to lighten the Ship we have threw Gold and Silver overboard by whole-Sale, as much as would have ransom'd the King.
1720 D. Defoe Life Capt. Singleton 211 If he would ransom the Ship, we would take a Sum of Money, and let them go.
1759 S. Johnson Prince of Abissinia II. xxxvi. 71 The princess was in extasies when she heard that her favourite was alive, and might so cheaply be ransomed.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. ii. 53 Speak, Jew—have I not ransomed thee from Sathanas?
1868 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest II. viii. 276 His wife..ransomed him at a heavy price.
1919 W. S. Davis Hist. France xxiv. 524 The first great task was to pay off the Germans. There were grave doubts as to the ability of France to discharge the debt and to ransom her soil.
1992 N.Y. Times Mag. 28 June 44/4 He has a hearty appetite for covert operations, as Oliver North understood when he got Perot to front money to ransom hostages held in Beirut.
c. transitive. Chiefly poetic. To atone or pay for, to expiate; to bring into a state or condition by these means. Also: to procure respite of (time). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > virtue > righteousness or rectitude > reform, amendment, or correction > atonement > atone for [verb (transitive)]
beetc897
i-bye10..
abyelOE
answer?a1300
buya1300
amendc1300
mendc1330
forbuy1340
redressa1387
answera1400
byea1400
filla1400
peasea1400
ransoma1400
to pay for——c1400
recompense?a1439
abidea1450
satisfyc1460
redeema1464
repaira1513
syth1513
reconcile1535
acquit1567
dispense1590
assoil1596
propitiate1610
expiatea1626
atone1661
retrievea1679
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 14427 (MED) He suld flexs take o þair kin For to ranscun [a1400 Trin. Cambr. raumson] wit adam sin.
c1480 (a1400) St. George 77 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 178 To ransone þe tyme & to sauf þame fra his venyme.
1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets xxxiv. sig. C4 Those teares..are ritch, and ransome all ill deeds. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) iii. iv. 116 Neither seruice past, nor present sorrowes,..Can ransome me, into his loue againe.
1637 T. Nabbes Hannibal & Scipio i. i. sig. B2 Were I an Hanniball..One Capua should ransome all.
1787 A. Hawkins tr. V. Mignot Hist. Turkish Empire I. 322 In Turkey there is no crime but may be ransomed for money.
1796 T. Jefferson Writings (1859) IV. 152 Its moments of extasy would be ransomed by years of torment and hatred.
1854 J. Howe Passion-flowers 77 On, brethren, draw the sword, Loose the bold tongue and pen, unfearing, The weakness of our human flesh Is ransomed by your persevering?
d. transitive. To purchase (life, liberty, etc.) with a ransom.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [verb (transitive)] > purchase life or liberty by a ransom
ransom1567
1567 W. Painter Palace of Pleasure II. xxx. f. 356 Ah yt my life might raunsome thine.
1596 R. Johnson Famous Hist. Seauen Champions xiv. 137 Most mighie & inuincible Champion of Christendome (quoth he) let my life be ransomed, and thou shalt yearely receaue ten tunnes of tried gold.
1630 T. Dekker Second Pt. Honest Whore v. ii. 126 If my poore life May ransome thine, I yeeld it to the Law.
1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World iv. 75 The men..made them send ashore for Cattle to ransom their Liberties.
1720 C. Nary New Hist. World viii. iii. 423 The Gauls..forc'd them [sc. the Romans] to Capitulate for their Lives, and ransom the same at the Price of a vast Weight of Gold.
1783 A. Ferguson Hist. Progress & Termination Rom. Republic III. iv. 171 Many persons were threatened, to induce them to ransom their lives with money.
1801 Lusignan III. 82 The design she had long meditated..of endeavouring to ransom his liberty.
1856 M. J. Raphall Post-biblical Hist. Jews I. 282 He ransomed his life and liberty by releasing a great number of the Jewish inhabitants of Galilee whom he had made captive.
1907 Trans. Royal Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 1 82 Thus for the second time had Caesar ransomed his life for money.
1996 I. Earls Baroque Art 269 The monastic order that would have ransomed his freedom.
e. transitive. To pay a ransom to. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1722 Capt. Ogle in London Gaz. No. 6091/2 An English Ship, for refusing to ransom the Pyrates had been burnt.
2.
a. transitive. To demand a ransom for (a captive); to permit the release or return of (a person or thing) on payment of a sum of money; to set free on receipt of a ransom. Also: †to set (a person's) ransom at a certain sum (obsolete).Also occasionally intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [verb (transitive)] > put to ransom
raimc1300
ransom1398
financea1513
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > [verb (transitive)] > put to ransom > demand payment for
ransom1398
1398 in J. Slater Early Scots Texts (Ph.D. thesis, Univ. of Edinb.) (1952) No. 38 Qwha sa beis fondin culpable..sal be deliuerit to the partie that has sustenit the schath to sla or ravnson at thair likyng.
1413–19 in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. (1931) 226 (MED) Sir Richard and his Officers claymed and toke oon Julian Lampit..and helde hire in prisoune tille he had raunsommed her to an c s.
1441 in H. Nicolas Proc. & Ordinances Privy Council (1835) V. 319 Your ennemy..put him in grete duresse..and rampsoumed him at c. marc.
1489 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (Adv.) ii. 469 Off other that war takyn than Sum thai ransownyt sum thai slew.
a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) II. f. xxxiiv That he were streyght put in pryson, and not to be raunsomyd nor delyuered tyll the Kyngys pleasure were forther knowen.
a1578 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) I. 228 Stewin Bull ranssonat the skiparis, and held money of the marienaris presonaris.
1599 N. Breton Wil of Wit iii. i, in Wks. (1879) 37/2 The souldiours entred, slewe a number, some they raunsommed.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Faire war, wherein souldiers are taken prisoners and ransomed at a certaine rate.
a1640 J. Fletcher & P. Massinger Custome of Countrey (1647) i. i. 1 When a maid is contracted And ready for the tye o'th Church, the Governour, He that commands in chiefe, must have her maiden-head Or ransome it for mony at his pleasure.
1693 E. Bohun Char. Queen Elizabeth 194 The Heer Van Dolhain..in that year took, and spoiled, and ransomed many Ships.
1720 J. Dennis Invader of his Country i. i. 5 Condemning some to Death, and some to Exile; Ransoming some, some pitying, threatning others.
1790 R. Beatson Naval & Mil. Mem. III. 111 The Richmond of thirty-two guns, commanded by Captain Elphinstone..received intelligence, on the 23rd of January, of a French frigate, that had the day before taken an English vessel, and ransomed her.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe II. v. 81 Who is it that rifle, and ransom, and make prisoners, in these forests?
1869 W. E. H. Lecky Hist. European Morals II. i. 83 Epaminondas was accustomed to ransom captives.
1907 Jrnl. Afr. Soc. 6 243 Ingesha, another leader, was captured and afterwards ransomed for 400 head of cattle.
1951 Proc. Amer. Acad. Jewish Res. 20 223 For the rule where a statuliber was captured and ransomed, and had to pay 10,000 sesterces for his liberty, cf. [etc.].
1987 Internat. Combat Arms Sept. 41/3 Salvadoran terrorists abducted and later ransomed five foreign businessmen for reported ransoms of at least $18 million.
b. transitive. In early use: to exact or extort payment or ransom from (cf. ransom n. 2a); (hence) †to oppress by exacting money (obsolete). Now chiefly: to exert power over by making a threat or withholding something; ‘to hold to ransom’ (cf. ransom n. Phrases (b)). Also intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > extortion > practise extortion on [verb (transitive)]
ransom?a1425
to poll and pill1528
exact1534
bloodsuck?1541
extort1561
rack1576
flay1584
shave1606
wire-draw1616
punisha1626
sponge1631
squeeze1639
screwa1643
to screw up1655
bleed1680
torture1687
to screw down1725
to shake down1872
to squeeze (someone) until the pips squeak1918
to bleed white1935
rent1956
?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 31 (MED) Sumtyme by extorcyoun, by lordschip, sumtyme þoru fraude and bigilynge or wiþ disceyt, þei raunsome hem and take of her good.
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 100 Thow has redyn and raymede and raunsound þe pople.
1525 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles II. 3 All suche landes as he had rule of, he raunsomed them..greuously, and wolde taxe the men two or three tymes in a yere.
1590 J. Smythe Certain Disc. Weapons 7 b By fleecing and ransoming of their soldiers being men of wealth.
1622 M. Drayton 2nd Pt. Poly-olbion xxii. 39 Then [Cade] goodly London tooke, There ransoming some rich.
1657 W. Prynne Pendennis & All Other Standing Forts Dismantled 17 They are more frequently visited, Plundred, spoiled, captivated, fined, ransomed by the Enemy upon all advantages and occasions.
1749 J. Cleland Mem. Woman of Pleasure II. 214 Besides that, she never ransomed her customers..she was a severe enemy to the seduction of innocence.
1865 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia VI. xxi. ii. 362 Noble and Peasant had been pillaged, ransomed, foraged, eaten out by so many different Armies.
1999 Coventry Evening Tel. (Nexis) 2 July 1 We've made offers to these landowners and tenants which are all in excess of the commercial value. They have chosen not to accept them on the grounds that presumably they think they can ransom us to try to obtain higher values than the sites are actually worth.
3. intransitive. To pay ransom; to obtain the release of a captive or of captured property by making a payment.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > ransom > pay ransom [verb (intransitive)]
finec1595
financec1616
ransom1722
1722 Capt. Ogle in London Gaz. No. 6091/2 They had all ransomed at the Rate of eight Pounds Weight of Gold each.
1758 G. G. Beekman Let. 17 Feb. in Beekman Mercantile Papers (1956) I. 323 We have given Captain Gillis Orders to Ransom, Provided he Can git both Vessel and Cargo for One thousand pounds Sterling.
a1845 J. Haskins Poet. Wks. (1848) 43 A mighty conqueror was on his way, To ransom—to redeem.
1991 W. K. Pritchett Greek State at War V. 253 Plutarch says that the senate refused to ransom.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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