| 单词 | rainy | 
| 释义 | rainyadj. 1.  Of weather or climate: characterized by significant or exceptional amounts of rain; in which rain predominates. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wet weather > 			[adjective]		 > wet (of weather, place, or time) > rainy rainyOE rainyOE rainingc1400 droppinga1415 pluvious?1440 rainful1484 weeping1600 droppy1635 slattering1648 dripping1699 drippy1818 softish1855 feechie1975 OE    Wulf & Eadwacer 10  				Þonne hit wæs renig weder ond ic reotugu sæt. a1425    J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. 		(1871)	 II. 235 (MED)  				Ofte tyme in reyny wedir, chirchis don good on halidai. c1449    R. Pecock Repressor 		(1860)	 183 (MED)  				It were aȝens the eese of the peple whiche schulde come therto in reyny and wyndi wedris. a1500    Lessons of Dirige 		(Harl.)	 174 in  C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers 		(1896)	 II. 383 (MED)  				My blood ys nessher thane ys sylke In reyny weder that sone wolle ffade. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Ezra x. 13  				It is a raynye wether, & they cannot stonde here without. 1604    S. Rowlands Looke to It 26  				An Almanacke..To search and finde the rainy weather out. 1630    W. Prynne Anti-Arminianisme 280  				The present tempestuous, rainie, vnseasonable weather threaten and prognosticke to vs for our apostasie. 1705    Boston News-let. 7 May 2/2  				The Pensilvania Post not yet come in, and suppose the three days of bad Rainy Weather last week has hindred him. 1748    B. Robins  & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson  ii. vii. 214  				A rainy climate. 1828    Moore's Pract. Navigator 		(ed. 20)	 128  				When the wind was easterly, the weather was gloomy, dark, and rainy. 1839    C. Darwin in  R. Fitzroy  & C. Darwin Narr. Surv. Voy. H.M.S. Adventure & Beagle III. xiii. 279  				Trees indicate a rainy climate, and hence a clouded state of atmosphere. 1899    T. Roosevelt Rough Riders v. 186  				At least once a night at some irregular hour I tried to visit every part of our line, especially if it was dark and rainy. 1928    D. H. Lawrence Lady Chatterley's Lover viii. 109  				The weather came rainy again. But after a day or two she went out in the rain. 1989    A. Brookner Lewis Percy ii. 19  				A tan was always an asset, much prized in this rainy climate.  2.  Of a period of time: during or within which rain is falling, or usually falls; (also) during which excessive rain falls. See also rainy day n.   and rainy season n. at  Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wet weather > 			[adjective]		 > wet (of weather, place, or time) > rainy rainyOE rainyOE rainingc1400 droppinga1415 pluvious?1440 rainful1484 weeping1600 droppy1635 slattering1648 dripping1699 drippy1818 softish1855 feechie1975 OE    Prognostics 		(Tiber.)	 in  Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen 		(1908)	 120 298  				Kalendas Ianuarius gif he biþ on Sæternesdæg, þonne biþ..blawende lencten, & renig sumor. lOE    Prognostics 		(Hatton)	 in  T. O. Cockayne Leechdoms, Wortcunning, & Starcraft 		(1866)	 III. 162  				Þonne bið..windig lengten & renig sumer. a1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(BL Add.)	 f. 114v  				In rayny ȝeres many been beþ I-bradde. ?a1425    tr.  Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie 		(N.Y. Acad. Med.)	 f. 155  				And þat þe day be quiete and bryȝt, nouȝt turble ne raynee. 1481    W. Caxton tr.  Siege & Conqueste Jerusalem 		(1893)	 cciv. 299  				The moneth of Iuyll, whiche is moche rayny customably in that countrey. 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde  i. vi. f. 28v  				The fyrst day was fayre: but all the other, clowdy and rayny. 1569    T. Stocker tr.  Diodorus Siculus Hist. Successors Alexander  iii. xviii. 135  				Lysimachus..in a foule and raynie night raysed hys Campe. c1600    Hist. & Life James VI 		(1825)	 355  				The somer seasoun was sa raynie, that..the cornes war rottin on the grunde. 1660    T. Blount Boscobel 40  				The night was very dark and rainy. 1725    E. Haywood Bath-intrigues 7  				The day they chose, happen'd to be the most rainy we have had this year. 1776    E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. x. 268  				The season was rainy, and the lake Apolloniates..rose to an uncommon height. 1815    J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art II. 60  				An unproductive year mostly succeeds a rainy winter. 1897    Dict. National Biogr. LI. 96/1  				The dramatic sketch..which Scott wrote in two rainy mornings at Abbotsford. 1906    R. Kipling Puck of Pook's Hill 231  				A rainy afternoon drove Dan and Una over to play pirates in the Little Mill. 1976    S. Wales Echo 26 Nov. 8/4  				The soil under cloches is drier, so you can successfully grow crops which otherwise have a tendency to rot off during rainy spells, e.g., endive. 2007    Cornish Guardian 		(Nexis)	 17 Jan. 8  				Our visit to Eden on December 29 was memorable, in that it took place on one of the rainiest and windiest evenings of the entire year.  3.   a.  Of a cloud, the sky, etc.: bringing rain; laden with rain or rainwater. Of a constellation: associated with or causing rain. Of another natural object or phenomenon: having a watery appearance or quality. Also in extended use. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > precipitation or atmospheric moisture > rain > 			[adjective]		 > causing, bringing, or connected with rain rainyc1384 plungy?a1425 wetc1425 rainbred1582 showery1594 pluvian1799 rainful1877 rain-making1889 c1384    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Douce 369(2))	 		(1850)	 Joel iii. 18  				A welle shal go out of the hous of the Lord and shal moiste the reyny streme of thornys [a1425 L.V.: the stronde of thornes; L. torrentem spinarum]. a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  i. 692 (MED)  				The colour of the reyni Mone With medicine upon his face He set. a1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(BL Add.)	 f. 118v  				Hyades ben..reyny sterris. a1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(BL Add.)	 f. 133  				Eyre..I-drawe togidre it makeþ clowdis þicke and reyny. ?a1425    tr.  Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie 		(N.Y. Acad. Med.)	 f. 135  				Signez of passionz of þe erez..þai..þat takeþ fantastic sownez reynie, clarionyng, or hissing. c1487    J. Skelton tr.  Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica  v. 376  				Refresshynge with a grete rayny shoure which enslyderyd the ground & made it as slypper as glasse. 1513    G. Douglas in  tr.  Virgil Æneid  vii. Prol. 27  				Rany Orioune wyth his stormy face. 1563    W. Baldwin et al.  Myrrour for Magistrates 		(new ed.)	 Hastings 108  				As beastes forshew the drought or rayny dropps. 1604    King James VI & I Counterblaste to Tobacco sig. B4  				The raynie cloudes are often transformed and euaporated in blustering winds. 1605    W. Camden Remaines  i. 70  				The holie Bishop of Winchester..called the Weeping saint Swithin, for that about his feast Præsepe and Aselli, rainie constellations do arise Cosmically, and commonly cause raine. 1716    J. Gay Trivia  i. 11  				But when the swinging signs your Ears offend With creaking Noise, then rainy Floods impend. 1750    B. Franklin Let. 13 Feb. 		(1987)	 440  				A Storm blew up at N E. and continued violent all Night and all next day, the Sky thick clouded, dark and rainy, so that neither Moon nor Stars could be seen. 1820    P. B. Shelley Prometheus Unbound  i. i. 29  				As rainy wind thro' the abandoned gate. 1876    C. Gibbon Robin Gray iv  				A white rainy mist lowered upon the water. 1916    J. Joyce Portrait of Artist v. 268  				They embraced softly impelled by the grey rainy light, the wet silent trees, the shield like witnessing lake, the swans. 1989    F. Forsyth Negotiator xiv. 340  				Quinn raised his glass towards the steel joists that reared into the rainy sky.  b.  figurative. Of the eyes: shedding tears, full of tears. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > 			[adjective]		 weepingc900 wopi?c1225 greetingfula1340 greetyc1350 weeplyc1374 weepfula1382 weepinglyc1440 lachrymablec1450 moistc1450 lachrymous1490 rainy1563 tearfula1586 greeting1588 collachrymate1593 crying1594 onion-eyeda1616 maudlinc1616 rheumatica1627 fluxed1628 lachrymalc1630 crystal-droppinga1650 showery1654 lugent1656 Niobean1665 lachrymary1693 lachrymose1727 moist-eyed1797 larmoyant1824 pluviose1824 ploratory1831 lachrymating1837 screwmatic1847 pipy1861 weepy1863 blarting1898 leaky1905 1563    T. Sackville in  W. Baldwin et al.  Myrrour for Magistrates 		(new ed.)	 Buckingham xcvii  				With rainy eine and sighes cannot be told. 1633    P. Fletcher Piscatorie Eclogs  iv. i. 19 in  Purple Island  				Why drop thy rainie eyes? 1774    J. Adams Diary 5 Mar. 		(1961)	 II. 89  				A pathetic, a Spirited Performance. A vast Croud—rainy Eyes &c. 1871    R. Ellis tr.  Catullus Poems lxiii. 48  				O'er the waste of ocean with a rainy eye he gazed. 1898    T. Hardy Wessex Poems 202  				Then with wild rainy eyes she obeyed. a1942    J. S. Neilson Poems 		(1965)	 212  				The rainy eyes of the children have left them sweet and fair. 2002    Times Herald 		(Port Huron, Mich.)	 		(Nexis)	 22 June (Religion section) 6 c  				He stood beside Laura and looked into those rainy eyes.  4.   a.  Of a place: in which it rains or is raining; where rain is frequent; subject to rain. Of a physical object: wet with rain. ΚΠ a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1865)	 I. 333 (MED)  				Þe lond is nesche, reyny [L. pluviosa], and wyndy. 1578    J. Banister Hist. Man sig. B.ii v  				The people called Phasiani, inhabityng a marish ground and rayny region, are in figure from other men very diuers. 1681    R. Knox Hist. Relation Ceylon  i. iv. 15  				These leaves make their Tents to ly under in the Night. A marvelous Mercy which Almighty God hath bestowed upon this poor and naked People in this Rainy Country! 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  iii, in  tr.  Virgil Wks. 109  				Southward to the Rainy  Regions.       View more context for this quotation 1748    W. Brownrigg Art Making Common Salt  iii. iv. 188  				In the most rainy parts of England,..fourteen inches of water may be supposed to fall during the four months above mentioned. 1766    J. Penrose Let. 31 May in  Lett. from Bath 		(1983)	 152  				We can hardly hope, in your rainy corner of the Island that the Weather is more favourable. 1849    H. Melville Redburn lx. 372  				I find my Italy somewhere, wherever I go. I even found it in rainy Liverpool. 1888    H. F. Reddall School-boy Life Merrie Eng. 215  				In rainy England in the winter [printed writer] and early spring the chances are that rain or fog will add to the trials of a run. 1892    R. L. Stevenson  & L. Osbourne Wrecker Epil. 426  				The tale was half written before I saw Carthew's squad toil in the rainy cutting at South Clifton. 1916    D. H. Lawrence Amores 83  				The quick leaf tore me Back to this rainy swill Of leaves and lamps and traffic. 1931    V. Woolf Waves 161  				Further north, in cloudier and rainier countries, hills smoothed into slabs..had a light in them. 1974    R. Adams Shardik xxii. 168  				Daubed..with rainy mud churned up by the wheels. 2008    W. D. King Collections of Nothing 49  				Artists and divines, ideologues and inquisitors had for a hundred years summered at this rainy resort to pursue Protestant enlightenment.  b.  Of an action or event: carried out or taking place in the rain. ΚΠ a1616    W. Shakespeare Henry V 		(1623)	  iv. iii. 112  				Besmyrcht With raynie Marching in the painefull field. 1737    J. Byrom Jrnl. 23 Jan. in  Private Jrnl. & Lit. Remains 		(1856)	 II.  i. 87  				A very rainy, snowy, haily, stormy, blustering ride. 1809    J. Grahame Brit. Georgics 170  				In rainy harvests, when the day is dimmed With one continued shower. 1836    C. G. F. Gore Mrs. Armytage III. ii. 21  				Every fifth Doncaster being invariably rainy, and the last four having been fine as Midsummer. 1872    Galaxy July 137/2  				Venerable as the head was over which the victim gladly held an umbrella during their rainy walk. 1911    Times 10 June 9/2  				The Canadian troops on their way to England for the Coronation were having a cold and rainy trip across the Atlantic. 1956    Daily Times-News 		(Burlington, N. Carolina)	 25 Oct.  a3/1  				It was an instructive and pleasant, although rainy, trip to the mountains last weekend. 2007    Mail on Sunday 		(Nexis)	 4 Mar. 9  				This is just another 3am rainy walk home in Edinburgh after a low-cost Wednesday student night out. Compounds C1.   With adjectives, as  rainy-shimmery,  rainy-sounding,  rainy-wet, etc. ΚΠ 1612    J. Davies Muses Sacrifice f. 170v		(title)	  				In rainy-gloomy Weather. 1896    A. E. Housman Shropshire Lad xxvi. 37  				Overhead the aspen heaves Its rainy-sounding silver leaves. 1930    J. Dos Passos 42nd Parallel 27  				Through the rail of the bridge we can look way down into the cold rainy shimmery water. 1952    R. Campbell tr.  C. Baudelaire Poems 70  				There the suns, rainy-wet, Through clouds rise and set.  C2.   ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > rainbow > 			[noun]		 bowa1000 rainbowOE heaven-bowc1390 iris1490 rainy bow1597 archa1616 bow of promise1820 1597    R. Tofte Laura  ii. xxiii. sig. Cviiv  				Such..flowers in diuers coloured show, As makes to blush Dame Iris raynie Bow. a1649    W. Drummond Wks. 		(1711)	 56/2  				The Seas we may not plow, Ropes make of the rainy Bow. 1776    Rainy Bow 1/1  				Through and thro' the rainy bow which shines both red and green. 1822    W. Tennant Thane of Fife  i. 46  				Th' opal-arched bridge, the rainy bow, That knits to earth Valhalla's high abode. 1869    E. R. Bulwer Lytton Poems I.  ii. 79  				And of all flowers a great crowd; Whose rare-colour'd kirtles show More hues than of the rainy bow.   rainy season  n. a season of high rainfall, esp. in a tropical or subtropical country; cf. dry adj. 1c. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wet weather > 			[noun]		 > rainy season (tropical) rains1615 rainy season1655 long rains1670 season1707 monsoon1747 high season1759 plum rains1894 wet1897 bai-u1910 kharif1920 the world > time > period > year > season > 			[noun]		 > with reference to weather conditions > rainy or hot season heat1390 rainy season1655 wet1733 monsoon season1976 1655    E. Terry Voy. E.-India 100  				Their Seed-time in May, and the beginning of June, they taking their time to dispatch all that work long before that long Rainy season comes. 1719    D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 122  				The rainy Season, and the dry Season, began now to appear regular to me. 1780    Philos. Trans. 1779 		(Royal Soc.)	 69 622  				The waters which overflow and incommode low and flat countries almost every winter and rainy season, as is the case in the Dutch and Austrian Netherlands. 1872    R. G. McClellan Golden State xxii. 294  				December..and the succeeding months until May are termed winter, or the ‘rainy season’, in California. 1926    Econ. Geogr. 2 86/2  				The great trouble with the Mediterranean climate for agriculture is that the rainy season and the cool season coincide. 1991    Traveller Spring 10/2  				Afternoon downpours can cause flash floods in the rainy season so an early start is advisable. 2003    E. Gregg  & R. Trillo Rough Guide to Gambia 259  				Other distinctive Gambian trees include the flame tree, stunningly florid in the rainy season. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < | 
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