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单词 random
释义

randomn.adv.adj.

Brit. /ˈrandəm/, U.S. /ˈrændəm/
Forms:

α. Middle English randoun, Middle English randoune, Middle English randowne, Middle English randun, Middle English ranndon, Middle English rendoun, Middle English rendouns (perhaps transmission error), Middle English–1500s randone, Middle English–1600s randon, 1500s–1600s randan; Scottish pre-1700 randon, pre-1700 randone, pre-1700 randoun, pre-1700 randound, pre-1700 randoune, pre-1700 randown, pre-1700 randowne, pre-1700 rayndoun, 1900s– randan.

β. Middle English raundone, Middle English raundoun, Middle English rawndoune, Middle English–1500s raundon; Scottish pre-1700 rawndown.

γ. late Middle English–1500s raundom, late Middle English– random, 1500s–1700s randome, 1500s–1700s randum; Scottish pre-1700 randome, pre-1700 1700s– random.

δ. 1500s randall; Scottish pre-1700 randell.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French randoun.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman randoun, raundun, raundoun, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French randon, randun, Middle French rendon speed, haste (12th cent.), impetuousness, violence (a1356), probably < randir to run fast, gallop (12th cent.), further etymology uncertain: perhaps < the same Germanic base as rand n.1 (see further Französisches etymol. Wörterbuch XVI. at rand).With use in phrases (see sense A. 1) compare Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French de randon , etc., at speed (a1170), Old French, Middle French de grant randon very quickly (13th cent.), Middle French de grand randon impetuously, violently (a1356), Anglo-Norman en un randun in rapid succession, one after another (c1230 or earlier), Old French, Middle French en un randon in one go, uninterrupted (12th or 13th cent.), Anglo-Norman a grant randun in great haste (late 12th or early 13th cent. or earlier). The change of final -n to -m appears to be a development within English; compare ransom n., and see further R. Jordan Handbuch der mittelenglischen Grammatik (1934) §254. The extremely rare Old French form random (see F. Godefroy Dict. de l'ancienne langue française (1880–1902 ) at randon) is probably unconnected.
A. n.
1.
a. Impetuosity, great speed, force, or violence (in riding, running, striking, etc.); chiefly in with (also in) great random. Also (with indefinite article): an impetuous rush, a rapid headlong course. Hence: Scottish a straight course, a direct line. Obsolete (archaic in later use).In common use from the 14th cent. to the early part of the 16th cent.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > violent action or operation > [noun] > sudden or rapid
random?c1335
impetuousnessc1425
farda1522
impetuosity1585
the world > movement > rate of motion > swiftness > swift movement in specific manner > [noun] > impetuous
random?c1335
precipitation1628
precipitance1629
precipitancy1797
?c1335 (a1300) Land of Cokaygne 132 in W. Heuser Kildare-Gedichte (1904) 148 (MED) Þe monkes liȝtiþ noȝt adun, Ac furre fleeþ in o randun.
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) 5357 (MED) Gweynes..rod out of þe pauylloun þorw al þat host with gret rendoun, As faste as he may renne.
c1425 (c1400) Laud Troy-bk. 5636 (MED) He smot to Troyle with gret randoun.
1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 57 The ship..hurtlyd again the ground in suche a random and force that hit was all to broken.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) v. 632 He..Raucht him sic rout in randoun richt.
a1500 (?c1450) Merlin 118 (MED) Thei..ronnen a-gein hym with as grete ranndon as their horse myght hem bere.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid i. vi. 149 Behald tuelf swannis in randoun glaid and fair [L. ordine longo].
1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. clvii. 191 The frenchmen..came on them with great randon, their speares in their restes.
1594 2nd Rep. Dr. Faustus xxii. sig. H4 Two great waues..meeting together by long randome.
1600 P. Holland tr. Livy Rom. Hist. vii. xxiv. 265 The barbarous people..fled in this randon beyond their tents.
1611 J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. ix. xx. 733/2 The Kings vantgard..giuing in among them with full randon, slew first such Captaines as resisted.
1889 ‘M. Twain’ Connecticut Yankee xv. 180 Two knights came together with great random.
b. A rush or stream (of words, fire, etc.). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > continuity or uninterruptedness > [noun] > continuous succession > a continuous series or course > a continuous flow of something immaterial
streamc900
random1440
reflow1614
flow1641
white noise1976
Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 423 Randone, or longe renge of wurdys, or other thyngys, haringga, epistola quedam denominata.
a1500 (?c1450) Merlin 219 The dragon..caste oute of his throte so grete raundon of fiere in to the aire..that it semed all reade.
2.
a. Gunnery. The range of a piece of ordnance, esp. the long or full range obtained by elevating the muzzle of the piece. Hence: the degree of elevation given to a gun, spec. that which gives the greatest range (formerly supposed to be 45°). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > management of artillery > [noun] > (angle of) elevation
random?a1560
mounture1628
elevation1692
set1844
?a1560 L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria (1571) sig. Iiv v The vttermost Randon and circuite of the Bullet.
1588 C. Lucar tr. N. Tartaglia 3 Bks. Shooting 4 How a Table of Randons may be made for any peece of ordinance.
1661 S. Partridge Descr. Double Scale Proportion 85 How far will a Cannon carry her Bullet at her best Randon, that carrieth it at point-blank 360 paces.
1731 J. Gray Treat. Gunnery 81 The random and direction of a piece on the plane of the horizon being given..find it's random on an inclined plane.
1792 J. M'Gregor Compl. Treat. Pract. Math. 280 The amplitude is the distance between the object aimed at and the piece, and is sometimes called the random, or range.
1858 D. Olmsted Introd. Nat. Philos. x. 151 Elevation 40°, random 4898: Required the random when the elevation is 29½°?.. Ans[wer] 4263.
b. In figurative use. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > [noun] > sphere or scope of operation
circuity1542
circuit1597
orb1598
range1622
sphere1661
circle1664
random1667
purview1688
domain1764
purvey1813
preserve1829
scope1830
demesne1851
coverage1930
space1976
1667 Second Advice in Second & Third Advice to Painter 9 The Duke himself..was not out of Dangers random set.
1697 J. Sergeant Solid Philos. Ep. Ded. sig. A4v Fancy let loose to fly at its full Random, and driven forward with a quick Wit.
3. A haphazard or aimless course. Also: that which is random; random state or condition, randomness. Now rare.In early use perhaps directly from sense A. 1, but later influenced by at random (sense Phrases 2).
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [noun] > haphazardness or randomness
catch as catch cana1393
die1548
hazard1548
random1565
haphazard1569
chance-medley1583
lay1584
lottery1593
haphazarding1787
randomness1803
haphazardness1857
happy-go-luckiness1866
chanciness1870
flukiness1888
haphazardry1910
randomicity1936
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > [noun] > moving without fixed course > a random course
random1565
1565 T. Norton & T. Sackville Gorboduc When suche beginning of suche liberties..Shall leaue them to free randon [1561 free to randon] of their will.
c1624 T. Lushington Resurrect. Serm. in Phenix (1708) II. 480 We follow not the random of their roving, but take the sum of their saying.
1670 C. Cotton tr. G. Girard Hist. Life Duke of Espernon i. ii. 58 Making stories, as it is his custom at the random of his own passion, and fancy.
1813 G. Edwards Appropriate Meas. True Policy 86 As if the ant and bee..had..proceeded in chaotic randoms upon points actually unascertained in nature.
a1881 S. Lanier Poems (1908) 51 O heart, Direct the random of the will.
1938 D. C. Peattie Prairie Grove xxx. 213 He had chosen the forks in the road by the random of whim.
1969 Listener 13 Nov. 678/3 ‘There's a lot of random in our songs,’ says Paul [McCartney].
4. Mining. The direction of a vein or rake. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > minerals > mineral deposits > [noun] > vein > direction of
random1653
1653 E. Manlove Liberties & Customes Lead-mines Derby 261 Break-offs, and Buckers, Randum of the Rake.
1747 W. Hooson Miners Dict. sig. Dijb Observe whether such leading keep its course according to the Randome of the Vein already cut.
1866 Durham Mining Lang. We must lower the sump from yon level down to the random of Wiregill lower-level.
1882 J. Lucas Stud. Nidderdale Gloss. We're following t'random now.
5. [Compare sense C. 2b.]
a. Dyeing. Clouded yarn. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > thread or yarn > [noun] > coloured or patterned
random1874
mélange1886
marl1892
knickerbocker yarn1911
knicker yarn1929
1874 W. Crookes Pract. Handbk. Dyeing xii. 102 Scarlet Random [etc.].
b. Building. Masonry consisting of stones of irregular sizes; a piece of this. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > disposition of stones or bricks > [noun] > types of disposition of stones
emplecton1601
isodomon1601
pseudisodomon1601
net-masonry1706
Greek masonry1728
longs and shorts1884
random1886
1886 H. Cunliffe Gloss. Rochdale-with-Rossendale Words & Phrases 71 Random, irregular stone, called also rubble.
6. Printing. A sloping board forming part of a compositor's frame, used for making up pages. Now chiefly historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > composing equipment > [noun] > chase > parts of
long cross1683
short-cross1683
random1888
1888 C. T. Jacobi Printers' Vocab. 110 Random, a special frame used by compositors in making-up.
1898 J. Southward Mod. Printing I. iv. 29 Making-up Frames..consist of an ordinary whole frame, fitted with a ‘random’—that is, a sloping board, corresponding to a case, with ledges running along it transversely.
1910 A. Bennett Clayhanger i. xii. 101 Under the furniture rack was the ‘random’, full of galleys.
1922 W. H. Sclater What Compositor should Know I. 82 Randoms, on which new composition is placed for the purpose of being ‘made up’ into column form or page form.
1960 G. A. Glaister Gloss. Bk. 341/2 Random, the sloping work-top of a composing frame.
7. colloquial (originally U.S. Computing). A person who happens to be in a particular place at a particular time, a person who is there by chance; spec. (depreciative) a person who is not a member of a particular group; an outsider.
ΚΠ
1971 Tech (Mass. Inst. Technol.) 18 May 2 Students, profs, employees, randoms—send in your feedback cards..with comments.
1991 E. S. Raymond New Hacker's Dict. 296 Random, anyone who is not a hacker (or, sometimes, anyone not known to the hacker speaking)..‘The audience was full of randoms asking bogus questions.’
2004 Skateboarding July 62/3 What if there are loads of randoms just standing there watching?
2006 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) Feb. 122/2 Having lived at the Chateau Marmont for months, she is now the staff's very own Eloise, careening in and out of the kitchen..and having amazing conversations with total randoms.
B. adv.
At random, randomly. Now only in compounds forming adjectives: see Compounds 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [adverb] > randomly or haphazardly
into uncertain1382
uncertainlya1387
at adventure (also adventures)c1390
at or on six and sevena1398
auntersa1450
at all adventure (also adventures)1485
by hab or by nab1530
at rovers (rarely rover)c1531
hab or nab1542
hitty-missy1553
rovingly1583
haphazard1600
random1619
unsight, unseena1627
happy-be-lucky1633
cross and pile1648
temerariously1669
happy-go-lucky1672
à tort et à travers1749
randomly1765
chance-medley1822
haphazardly1832
willy-nilly1908
by guess and by God (or Godfrey)1931
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > [adverb] > without fixed course
mislicheOE
around1596
erratically1613
random1619
deviously1742
randomly1765
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > irregularity > [adverb] > randomly
wildlyc1369
random1619
hab nab1664
randomly1765
anyhow1828
1619 E. M. Bolton tr. Florus Rom. Hist. 143 The third lightnings of Annibal flew randome at vs by Trasimenus lake.
a1620 M. Fotherby Atheomastix (1622) ii. xi. §2. 313 Neither doe they runne randon, nor are they rolled, beside their ancient order.
C. adj.
1.
a. Having no definite aim or purpose; not sent or guided in a particular direction; made, done, occurring, etc., without method or conscious choice; haphazard.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [adjective] > random or haphazard
uncertain1303
casualc1460
haphazard1576
roving1577
hazardous1585
chanceful1594
firmless1605
random1655
temerarious1660
aleatory1693
contingent1703
unlawed1789
by the way1846
chancy1860
fluky1880
hitty-missy1885
perchance1891
happenchance1905
happenstance1905
willy-nilly1933
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > [adjective] > moving without fixed course
vaganta1382
scatteringc1450
stragglinga1560
wandering1590
undirecteda1599
wayless1605
planetary1607
rambling?1609
exorbitant1613
exorbitating1632
random1655
unconducteda1677
devious1735
truant1791
wild1810
erratic1841
directionless1860
scrolloping1923
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > irregularity > [adjective] > random
random1655
loose1681
desultory1692
errabund1835
planless1937
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. ix. 203 In vain do stai'd heads make serious comments on light mens random-expressions.
a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) Flint. 38 Another..assigneth the first of May..about 569. I say not out possibly, a randome date may hap to hit the mark.
1728 A. Pope Dunciad i. 219 She shows..How random thoughts now meaning chance to find.
1764 R. Burn Hist. Poor Laws 190 Leaving the poor to be supported by random charity.
1824 T. Hood O Lady, leave thy Silken Thread (song) in London Lit. Gaz. 9 Oct. 89 Stoop where thou wilt, thy careless hand Some random bud will meet.
1827 O. W. Roberts Narr. Voy. Central Amer. 172 The random and ill-directed fire of the Spaniards.
1877 E. R. Conder Basis of Faith iii. 102 The random working of our..intellect.
1900 Times 11 June 3/3 His random aims, his profusion of the national resources.
1932 W. Faulkner Light in August vii. 149 Against the..dark bands of trees fireflies drifted and faded, erratic and random.
1969 G. M. Edington & H. M. Gilles Pathol. in Tropics ii. 13 The former [methods] determine parasite rates in random blood samples and spleen indices.
1989 A. Davies Getting Hurt iv. 42 Random violence shocks and depresses me.
2007 Miami Herald (Nexis) 31 Jan. d1 Their route across the country is a vague line stenciled by chance and random kindness.
b. Statistics. Governed by or involving equal chances for each of the actual or hypothetical members of a population; (also) produced or obtained by a such a process, and therefore unpredictable in detail.random distribution, error, noise, number, etc.: see Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > probability or statistics > [adjective] > random or pseudorandom
random1884
pseudorandom1949
stochastic1957
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [adjective] > random or haphazard > produced by a random process
random1884
1884 Mind 9 229 Applying the Calculus of Probabilities..to the question of whether the distribution of the fixed stars can be regarded as the result of a random sprinkling.
1900 London, Edinb., & Dublin Philos. Mag. 5th Ser. 50 164 The question we wish to determine is whether the sample may be reasonably considered to represent a random system of deviations from the theoretical frequency distribution of the general population.
1927 Tracts for Computers xv. p. iii These numbers, if truly random, could be used in a very great variety of ways for artificial sampling.
1936 Jrnl. Ecol. 24 232 The simplest assumption, and the one most frequently made, concerning the distribution of the individuals of a plant species, is that it is random, i.e. that the chance that an individual shall occur in a given spot is the same for all spots.
1963 B. Fozard Instrumentation Nucl. Reactors vii. 71 Radioactive disintegrations are truly random, i.e. the probability of a disintegration is independent of the occurrence of other events.
1997 Eng. World-Wide 18 35 The surveys differ in their..sample construction (purposive vs. random).
c. Psychology and Zoology. Of activity, a movement, response, etc.: seeming to be without purpose or direct relationship to a stimulus.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > experimental psychology > stimulus-response > response > [adjective] > unrelated to stimulus
random1896
1896 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 7 556 Beginning with random association the experiment was conditioned, both subjectively and objectively, until complicated judgments were called for.
1911 E. L. Thorndike Animal Intell. vi. 242 If the movements are really random, they occur by virtue of some force that works at random.
1935 K. Koffka Princ. Gestalt Psychol. xiii. 629 Trial and error may then mean that he gets a ‘hunch’ from the data... This would no longer be random activity, but activity determined by the nature of the task.
1965 J. D. Carthy Behaviour of Arthropods iii. 35 The search may be a random one, as the movements of coccinellids appear to be.
1994 Appl. Linguistics 15 77 Felix interprets these as random responses produced in the context of rule teaching and drilling of complex structures for which learners are not ready developmentally.
2.
a. Of masonry: consisting of stones of irregular sizes and shapes. Cf. random-jointed adj. at Compounds 1b.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > disposition of stones or bricks > [adjective] > specific dispositions
herringbone1700
random1703
brick-on-edge1750
Cyclopean1822
uncoursed1825
long and short1835
inbond1842
throughband1844
isodomous1850
coursed1851
brick veneer1881
out-bond1882
joint-bedded1883
snecked1883
rat-trap bond1932
coigned-
1703 R. Neve City & Countrey Purchaser at Paving Random-Pavement, (says Mr. Wing) at the Quarry, is worth 2 d. half-penny..per foot.
1776 Builder's Price-bk. 86 Paving in random Courses, per Foot, superficial..9½ d.
1868 J. Blenkarn Pract. Specif. Wks. 251 The wall to be built in random course.
1886 R. Holland Gloss. Words County of Chester (at cited word) A random wall.
1913 Times 19 Sept. 9/6 Lady Wolesley's old English garden will be characterized by random stone paths.
1978 Morecambe Guardian 14 Mar. 27/3 (advt.) Large quantity of church stone and random stone.
b. Of yarn: containing different colours in sequence, giving a randomly coloured effect when made up; = clouded adj. 2a. Also applied to the colour or dye producing this effect.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > thread or yarn > [adjective] > coloured or patterned
random1874
spun-dyed1955
the world > matter > colour > variegation > patch of colour > [adjective] > having cloudy markings
cloudy1676
clouded1682
nebulous1805
nebulose1826
random1874
1874 W. Crookes Pract. Handbk. Dyeing xii. 102 On the large scale the random yarns are coloured in machines.
1928 Lincoln (Nebraska) State Jrnl. 19 Sept. 7 a (advt.) Random dye—Yarns dyed without uniformity of tone, used in irregular weaves.
1976 Woman's Weekly 6 Nov. 43/2 Work main part as for gnomes but use black and red random dye wool instead of green.
3. Of tooling: done in parallel lines with a broad chisel. Cf. drove v.3
ΚΠ
1812 A. Rees Cycl. (1819) XXII. at Masonry Droving is the same as that called random tooling in England, or boasting in London.
1887 Dict. Archit. (Archit. Publ. Soc.) Random tooling, called ‘droving’ in Scotland.
1970 E. A. Fisher Saxon Churches of Sussex 214 The inner part of the west jamb seems to be original, ie of the eleventh century: it has no chamfer and shows random tooling.
1993 J. S. Curl Encycl. Archit. Terms 30/2 Random tooling, or irregular texturing using a broad implement without care or regularity.
4. Of a person: living in an irregular or unrestrained way; careless, ‘flighty’. Cf. sense Phrases 2c. regional in later use.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > [adjective]
golec888
canga1225
light?c1225
wooinga1382
nicea1387
riota1400
wantonc1400
wrenec1400
lachesc1450
loose?a1500
licentious1555
libertine1560
prostitute1569
riggish1569
wide1574
slipper1581
slippery1586
sportive1595
gay1597
Cyprian1598
suburb1598
waggish1600
smicker1606
suburbian1606
loose-living1607
wantona1627
free-living1632
libertinous1632
loose-lived1641
Corinthian1642
akolastic1656
slight1685
fast1699
freea1731
brisk1740
shy1787
slang1818
randomc1825
fastish1832
loosish1846
slummya1860
velocious1872
fly1880
slack1951
c1825 Houlston Tracts II. No. 60. 6 ‘In my time, Sir’, said he, ‘I've been random and free, But I now prefer order and quiet’.
1873 H. Spencer Study Sociol. xv. 371 Continually we remark that men who were random grow steady when they have children to provide for.
1879 J. Hunter-Duvar Enamorado ii. v. 115 How comes it that thou so random a wench hast become so steady a lad?
1905 Eng. Dial. Dict. V. 32/1 He's a random sort of chap.
5. colloquial (originally U.S. Computing). Peculiar, strange; nonsensical, unpredictable, or inexplicable; unexpected.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > expectation > foresight, foreknowledge > prediction, foretelling > [adjective] > capable of being predicted > not
improvidentiala1684
unpredictable1840
random1971
1971 Tech (Mass. Inst. Technol.) 3 Feb. 2/2 274 random nurdulent tools in an 18.02 lecture.
1983 G. L. Steele Hacker's Dict. 108 Random, assorted; various; undistinguished; uninteresting..frivolous..incoherent or inelegant.
1988 N.Y. Times 11 Dec. (Mag. section) 24/3 ‘This really random guy’ would not be a flattering way of describing a new acquaintance.
1994 A. Heckerling Clueless (film script, first shooting draft) (O.E.D. Archive) Green Revised Pages 61 Cher. Hey Summer. Summer. Pretty random fiesta. Cher. Big time.
2007 Bristol Evening Post (Nexis) 10 Feb. 20 A main course of cottage pie was a bit random.

Phrases

P1. at (the) random.
a. With great speed or violence. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1475 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Douce) (1960) A. i. 93 (MED) At randoun [c1400 Trin. Cambr. Kinges & kniȝtes shulde..riden & rappe doun in reaumes aboute].
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. vi. 264 Wee found twelve..Turkes, ready to receiue vs,..who foorthwith opened at randon the two great Brazen halfes of the Doore.
b. Falconry. Apparently: while flying at speed; on the wing. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1486 Bk. St. Albans sig. div If the fowle spryng not bot flee a long after the Reuer and the hawke nym it then ye shall say she slew it at the Raundon.
1602 W. Watson Decacordon Ten Quodlibeticall Questions 145 They [sc. Jesuits] haue, like great fawcons or hawkes of the Tower, firmely seazed vpon the pray, kild, at randon, wing, or souce.
1674 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation 91 The Goshawk with her Male the Tiercel, and the Sparrow-hawk, kill their Game by strength and force of Wing at random, and do instantly plume and tire upon their Prey.
c. With reference to a method of encounter in jousting in which the combatants are not separated by a tilt or barrier (contrasted with at the tilt: see tilt n.2 3). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > jousting or tilting > [adverb] > manner of encounter
at (the) random1538
1538 T. Elyot Dict. Decursio, Iustes, as at the tylte or randon.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII sig. HHhviiiv Al commers beynge gentlemen of name and of armes, Fyrste to ronne .v. courses at the Tylt with peces of auantage, and also .v. courses at Randon with sharpe speres.
1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. 833/2 At the randon and turneie the duke of Suffolke hurt a gentleman.
a1648 Ld. Herbert Life Henry VIII (1649) 52 The Laws on Horsebacke were, that with sharpe Speares they should runne five courses at Tilt, and five more at Randon.
P2. at random. Without direction or purpose, haphazardly.Originally with suggestion of great speed or lack of consideration, care, or control (from Phrases 1); later without implication of speed or violence.
a. Haphazardly, without aim, purpose, or fixed principle; heedlessly, carelessly; (also) erratically, indiscriminately, unsystematically. Cf. sense C. 1a.In early use with verbs of action, as moving, striking, throwing, talking, etc., esp. in to run at random (very common before c1650); later also with verbs of occurrence.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > chance [phrase] > by chance
by perchance1495
at a venture1517
per accidens1528
at hazard (also hazards)a1533
at random1543
by occasion1562
at range1568
by the way1572
by (also at) (a) peradventurea1586
hit or miss1609
at the by1611
hob-nob1660
hit and miss1897
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > changing direction of movement [phrase] > with no fixed course
at random1543
all over the shop1866
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > irregularity > irregular [phrase] > at random
at random1543
any old how1933
1543 T. Chaloner tr. G. Cousin Office of Seruauntes sig. C iiiv A certaine licenciousnes, or leude libertie..to ronne at randon hither, and thyther, through the wyde worlde perteygninge to no body.
1565 J. Jewel Replie Hardinges Answeare viii. 391 Leaste he happen..to renne at randon.
1593 W. Shakespeare Venus & Adonis sig. Fiijv Hatefully at randon doest thou hit. View more context for this quotation
1599 H. Porter Pleasant Hist. Two Angrie Women of Abington sig. K Least striking vp and downe at randall, the roge might hurt me.
?1614 W. Drummond Song: It was the time in Poems Psyches Louer hurles his Darts at randon.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 1 (1623) v. v. 41 He talkes at randon: sure the man is mad. View more context for this quotation
1662 B. Gerbier Brief Disc. Princ. Building 16 Not to Build at Randome, as the Custome of too many ill Builders is.
1726 Bp. J. Butler 15 Serm. iii. 47 Mankind cannot be considered as a Creature left by his Maker to act at random.
1796 H. Hunter tr. J.-H. B. de Saint-Pierre Stud. Nature (1799) I. Pref. 9 A few passages, not selected, but picked up at random.
1833 J. Holland Treat. Manuf. Metal II. 33 This composition is then dropped upon the surface..at random, leaving the effect to chance.
1862 B. Brodie Psychol. Inq. II. vi. 193 Eclipses..formerly were supposed to occur at random.
1921 Biometrika 13 309 An event happens at random once in a period m, therefore its chance of occurring in an interval of time or space δt is δt/m.
1951 Jrnl. Ecol. 39 172 The principle of contagion..is that the groups are distributed at random and that the number of individuals in each group is also random.
2005 Independent 13 Apr. 12/2 We asked 12 celebrities to hit their iPod shuffle button, which selects songs at random, to reveal their real musical tastes.
b. In a neglected or untended condition. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1582 N. Lichefield tr. F. L. de Castanheda 1st Bk. Hist. Discouerie E. Indias 162 b The Caruell,..being thus left at randon,..fell vpon certaine Rockes.
1612 T. Studley in Narr. Early Virginia (1907) 129 Wingfield and Kendall living in disgrace, (seeing all things at randome in the absence of Smith).
1642 D. Rogers Naaman 537 Leaving thy flock and charge at random.
1761 F. Sheridan Mem. Miss Sidney Bidulph II. 323 The necessity of his affairs here, which he had left at random, required his presence.
1848 J. Keble Serm. Pref. 12 How can there be any comparison of safe or unsafe, if all be left at random?
c. At liberty, free from restraint or control. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > lack of subjection > freedom or liberty > freedom of action or from restraint > without restraint [phrase]
without restraint1443
at range1568
out of checka1575
at random1590
at (a or the) loose1593
on (or upon) the loose1935
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene iii. x. sig. Mm5v The gentle Lady loose at randon lefte, The greene-wood long did walke.
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. ix. 388 There was not a Bandit left at randon in all Sicilia.
1692 R. L'Estrange Fables cciv. 175 In the Days of Old, the Birds liv'd at Random in a Lawless State of Anarchy.
1727 W. Somervile Occas. Poems 186 In a wild State of Nature, long The Frogs at Random liv'd.
1897 H. Belloc Verse (1954) 255 Huge Wild Boars Live savagely, at random, out of doors.
d. With nouns in sense similar to Phrases 2a (with verb implied): (done, existing, etc.) haphazardly, or with no fixed aim or purpose. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1630 T. Taylor Progresse of Saints 86 Christianity is no ranging course, or a running at randome, but a life led by rule.
1655 W. Gouge & T. Gouge Learned Comm. Hebrewes (xiii. 20) iv. 138 To shew that Christ is a Shepherd not at random for any sheep; but that he hath a peculiar flock belonging unto him.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 930 Thy words at random, as before, Argue thy inexperience. View more context for this quotation
1785 W. Cowper Task ii. 522 Their answers, vague And all at random, fabulous and dark.
1799 C. B. Brown Ormond xxix. 335 My stroke was desperate and at random.
a1870 A. L. Gordon Poet. Wks. (1913) 102 I enclose what you ask in a letter, A short rhyme at random, no more and no less.
P3. Gunnery. at random: at any range other than point-blank. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > [adverb] > at specific range
at random?a1560
point-blank1579
?a1560 L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria (1571) Pref. sig. A iij v Science in great Ordinance especially to shoote exactly at Randons.
1588 C. Lucar Appendix 62 in tr. N. Tartaglia 3 Bks. Shooting To know how he shoote in the said peece at randon.
1612 J. Smith Map of Virginia 24 Forty yards will they shoot level or very neare the mark, and 120 is their best at Random.
1669 S. Sturmy Mariners Mag. v. 67 How to make a good Shot either of Point-blank, or at Random.
1779 R. Tickell Epist. Charles Fox 8 Up the full covey springs; Richard at random fires, and only wings.

Compounds

C1. Compounds of the adverb.
a. With past participles forming adjectives, as random-blown, random-fashioned, random-sown, etc.
ΚΠ
1741 W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman May v. 41 In the Vale among their random sown Horse-beans, the Sheep destroy the wild Oats.
1790 R. Merry Laurel of Liberty 7 Random-cast, beside some stream,..Thou ponder'st.
1862 Internat. Exhib.: Illustr. Catal. Industr. Dept. II. x. §2253 Castellated circular turret, random rubbed; white quartz.
1871 Ld. Tennyson in Contemp. Rev. 19 12 Tristram..sank Down on a drift of foliage random-blown.
1906 T. Hardy Dynasts: Pt. 2nd v. viii. 244 Ephemeral at the best all honours be,..So random-fashioned, swift, perturbable!
1956 Amer.-Statesman 15 Jan. 2/2 The front entrance porch..is 33 feet long and paved with random laid flags.
2004 Boston Globe (Nexis) 18 Aug. a13 The electoral council has agreed to hand count paper ballots against electronic results in 150 random-chosen voting stations.
b.
random-jointed adj. (esp. of stonework) laid in irregular courses or lines.
ΚΠ
1833 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Cottage Archit. §185 Rubble stone, or random jointed ashlar work (free stone, rough as it comes from the quarry, laid in irregular courses).
1848 J. C. Wharton Quarrendon Church 7 The external walls are built with random-jointed squared ashlar.
1889 Newark (Ohio) Daily Advocate 26 Aug. The Kibbe sandstone trimmings, together with the rock-face, random jointed ashlar of granite, will form an effective combination.
2006 Custom Home (Nexis) 1 Apr. Constructed by Danish-American craftsmen in traditional tongue-and-groove joinery, the wood worktops come in three staved variations: continuous, random jointed with a single continuous front stave, and random-jointed staves throughout.
C2. Compounds of the adjective.
random access n. (a) Computing the process or capability of directly accessing all the parts of a memory or file without having to read it sequentially, esp. such that the access time for any item is effectively independent of both the location and the access time of the item last accessed; frequently attributive; (b) Sound Recording the capability of immediately accessing any part of a recording without having to start at the beginning.
ΘΚΠ
society > computing and information technology > hardware > [noun] > primary storage or main memory > random access
random access1950
random-access memory1953
RAM1957
dynamic RAM1975
DRAM1981
society > computing and information technology > data > [noun] > file > accessing files
random access1950
access1957
hypertext link1987
1950 Math. Tables & Other Aids Computation 4 32 One practical way to satisfy the need for quick random access is to scan the entire mass of stored data continuously at a rapid repetition rate.
1953 Proc. IRE 41 1264/2 The random-access property also makes it easier to operate input, output, and external storage devices out of synchronism with the central computer.
1971 Publishers' Weekly 9 Aug. 24/3 The advantage of random access disc storage is that all required files for a specific application will be on-line to the computer when that application is being processed.
1991 What Hi-Fi? Oct. 79/1 Various functions like track access, fast music search,..and random access programming are performed in the same way as an average CD player.
2002 CGI Nov. 51/1 VHS is a strictly linear medium, whereas DVD is designed for random access and interactivity.
random-access memory n. Computing memory that permits random access, esp. in the form of removable integrated circuits that can be read and written to at high speed; abbreviated RAM.
ΘΚΠ
society > computing and information technology > hardware > [noun] > primary storage or main memory > random access
random access1950
random-access memory1953
RAM1957
dynamic RAM1975
DRAM1981
1953 Proc. IRE 41 1407/1 The principles and techniques evolved..demonstrate the practicability of an extremely reliable fast random access memory.
1987 B. Leatham-Jones Elements Industr. Robotics iv. 107 It is practice to feed such peripheral devices from a block of random access memory called a buffer.
1998 Sci. Amer. Oct. 73/2 When a program running on a computer fails, it sometimes causes the machine to dump, or flush, the contents of a part of its random-access memory.
random copolymer n. Chemistry a copolymer in which the different kinds of monomer residue are statistically distributed in the polymer molecules.
ΚΠ
1939 Jrnl. Amer. Chem. Soc. 61 1519/2 (heading) Intramolecular reactions in ‘random’ polymers.]
1942 Jrnl. Amer. Chem. Soc. 64 273/1 Turning now to the random copolymer, it is seen from a previously derived formula that [etc.].
1980 J. D. Ferry Viscoelastic Properties of Polymers (ed. 3) xii. 352 In uniform random copolymers, all the molecules have the same statistical composition.
2001 R. W. Cahn Coming of Materials Sci. viii. 310 Copolymers, in turn, can be statistically mixed (random copolymers) or else made up of blocks of the two kinds of monomers.
random distribution n. a distribution that is random or haphazard; (Statistics) a probability distribution, esp. the Poisson distribution.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > probability or statistics > [noun] > distribution
distribution1854
random distribution1882
frequency distribution1895
probability distribution1895
Poisson distribution1898
binomial distribution1911
Student's t-distribution1925
sampling distribution1928
probability density1931
Poisson1940
beta distribution1941
Cauchy distribution1948
geometric distribution1950
1882 Amer. Jrnl. Philol. 3 2 The compositions do not end, as one might suppose, at different points of the page according to random distribution, but they show a preference for ending at particular points.
1936 Jrnl. Ecol. 24 240 Fig. 5 illustrates the divergence from random distribution.
1967 Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 113 195/2 The use of a completely random distribution lessened the risk that the ‘blind’ nature of the trial might be compromised.
1995 N. Hudson Soil Conservation (ed. 3) viii. 180 Sometimes a random distribution of rainfall onto the test plot is achieved by a mechanism to oscillate the drop-former or to rotate it.
random error n. error caused by factors which vary unpredictably or randomly; an instance of this.
ΚΠ
1883 Analyst 10 140 S2) is the sum of the squares of the random errors belonging to the n points.
1936 Jrnl. Royal Aeronaut. Soc. 40 77 The distribution of the components of the velocity fluctuation at any given point appears to follow the ‘random error law’.
1958 H. Goodglass & J. Hunt in Word 14 202 The subjects' tendency to make random errors due to confusability or to a fluctuating level of comprehension.
1999 New Yorker 7 June 71/2 Parts of a cell's genetic structure which had undergone an accumulation of subtle changes..through random error during cell division.
2002 New Scientist 13 Apr. 28/2 At the evolutionary level scale-free networks may have succeeded not only because they are robust in the face of random errors, but also because they allow variation to take place.
random noise n. Electronics and Telecommunications unwanted electrical signals caused by randomly occurring transient disturbances, sometimes affecting sound or video output; spec. a signal component whose instantaneous amplitudes follow a statistically random or Gaussian distribution.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > science of sound > [noun] > random noise
white1917
random noise1937
pink noise1961
red noise1961
1937 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) A. 236 202 The [oscillograph] system permitted a valuable discrimination against random noise.
1973 P. Lord & E. R. Robinson tr. H. Kuttruff Room Acoustics viii. 211 The room under investigation..is excited by stationary random noise..with a large frequency bandwidth.
1995 P. Terry in C. Hollin Contemp. Psychol. viii. 156 Although the EEG record is typically the product of millions of neurons firing at many different frequencies, computer analyses can allow various contributing patterns to be differentiated from what..may appear to be random noise.
random number n. Statistics a number selected from a given set of numbers in such a way that all the numbers in the set have the same chance of selection; (also) a pseudorandom number.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > probability or statistics > [noun] > involving random generation
random number1926
stochastic process1934
Markov chain1938
Markov process1938
Markov property1944
Monte Carlo method1949
Monte Carlo1951
stochasticity1972
1926 Biometrika 18 324 I wish..to thank Mr Tippett for the loan of his set of random numbers, for it is undoubtedly a boon when sampling from an infinite population.
1949 Seminar on Sci. Computation, Nov. (Internat. Business Machines) 104/2 A random number c lying between 0 and 1 is selected from a store.
1954 Jrnl. Assoc. Computing Machinery 1 88 Modern-day usage of high-speed electronic digital computing machines frequently involves the consumption of a very large quantity of random numbers.
1997 New Scientist 8 Nov. 10/1 Obtaining a truly random number is difficult. People are lousy at coming up with them and computers are worse, although programs are available that generate pseudo-random numbers.
random number generator n. Computing a device or process designed to produce a random (or pseudorandom) sequence of numbers or symbols.
ΚΠ
1950 A. M. Turing in Mind 59 453 Suppose the digital computer contains a random number generator.
1985 Personal Computer World Feb. 178/1 Perhaps the best known random number generator is the now defunct ERNIE,..used to generate winning numbers for Premium Bonds.
2001 C. Taylor & D. Dennett in R. Kane Oxf. Handbk. Free Will xi. 267 Computers are marvels of determinism. Even their so-called random number generators only execute pseudo-random functions, which produce exactly the same sequence of ‘random’ digits each time the computer reboots.
random play n. a facility on a digital music player for playing tracks in an arbitrary order.
ΚΠ
1984 Daily Intelligencer (Doylestown, Pa.) 9 Jan. b12 (advt.) JVC remote controlled 7-disc CD changer with..smart random play.
1993 What Hi-Fi? Oct. 29/4 The random play facility shuffles all the tracks.
2006 Sunday Mail (Brisbane) (Nexis) 20 Aug. h23 You can..queue up favourites for the evening or rediscover your collection via random play.
random process n. a process that is random or haphazard; (Statistics) a sequence of random variables; a process characterized by such a sequence.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [noun] > haphazardness or randomness > random process
random process1888
1888 Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 51 614 Say eighty chapters are selected..by a perfectly random process.
1909 W. S. Tower Story of Oil v. 66 Many of the most valuable oil deposits..have been revealed by the more or less random process of ‘wild-catting’.
1911 Biometrika 8 211 Such means being selected out of this primitive population by a purely random process.
1937 H. Cramér Random Variables & Probability Distributions viii. 90 The set of variables Zτ will be said to define a homogeneous random process.
1953 J. B. Carroll Study of Lang. vii. 204 Communication theory is forced to regard messages as random processes.
1992 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 19 Nov. 50/1 Genetic drift refers to a random process of increase or decrease in the frequencies of genes in populations.
random sample n. Statistics a sample drawn from a population by a random process, each member of it having an equal chance of inclusion (sometimes contrasted with quota sample n. at quota n. Compounds 2).
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > endeavour > trial or experiment > trial, test, or testing > [noun] > specific tests or testing > by sampling > at random > sample
random sample1900
1900 Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 63 450 The sequence of second differences in the new table suggests that the data may represent a random sample from a normal distribution.
1948 Tracts for Computers xxv. p. iii They may be regarded as fair random samples from a normal universe having a zero mean and a unit standard deviation.
1993 E. N. K. Clarkson Invertebr. Palaeontol. & Evol. (ed. 3) ii. 36/1 If a population is very small it will contain only a limited and random sample of the total genetic variability within the whole species.
2004 New Yorker 18 Oct. 89/1 The new breed of pollsters such as Gallup, Archibald Crossley, and Elmo Roper canvassed random samples of a few thousand in person rather than non-random millions through the mail.
random sampling n. Statistics the process of obtaining random samples.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > endeavour > trial or experiment > trial, test, or testing > [noun] > specific tests or testing > by sampling > at random
random sampling1883
random selection1884
randomization1926
1883 Science 8 June 516/1 Continuous random sampling of a given natural class must lead us towards discovering the true proportion of cases of the presence of a predesignated character in individuals of the class.
1962 C. Smith in Galaxy Oct. 12/2 The telepathic monitors, both robotic and human, kept every thought-band under surveillance by random sampling.
1992 Amer. Speech 67 3 Sociolinguists have since implicitly abandoned the goal of random sampling, finding the procedures for such sampling either too complex, too time-consuming, or too expensive.
random selection n. Statistics a random sample; random sampling; (gen.) a selection taken at random.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > endeavour > trial or experiment > trial, test, or testing > [noun] > specific tests or testing > by sampling > at random
random sampling1883
random selection1884
randomization1926
1884 Mind 9 232 I believe the numerical value is justified..whether we knew that the urn before us was the result of a random selection, or..had once known, but completely forgotten, which was the preponderating colour.
1925 F. C. Mills Statist. Methods xvi. 552 Great care is generally needed in securing a purely random selection.
1967 C. Berners-Lee in G. Wills & R. Yearsley Handbk. Managem. Technol. 5 In an agricultural experiment..the classical approach would be to compare unfertilized plots with suitably chosen random selections of plots fertilized with N.
1995 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Nov. (recto rear cover) (advt.) Our world of miniature trees. All are easy to grow... You can of course pop in and see them Monday–Friday! Here is a random selection.
random shot n. (a) a shot fired at any range other than point-blank (see sense A. 2); (as a mass noun) this range (obsolete); (b) a shot fired without aim (also figurative).
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > [noun] > a shot > type of shot
hail-shot1569
random shot1598
long shot1767
snapshot1808
point-blanker1824
pot-shot1843
snap1851
hip shot1874
pop shot1880
sighter1897
pot1914
over1915
short1922
snipe1969
1598 R. Carew Herrings Tayle sig. D Some..random shot which wall would pearce, but cannot crase.
1693 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) III. 9 One of their random shotts killed lieutenant coll. Jackson.
1708 London Gaz. No. 4422/7 The nine Sail stood in fair with us near random Shot.
1786 R. Burns Poems 71 The star that rules my luckless lot..Has blest me with a random-shot O' countra wit.
1788 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall (1869) III. lxviii. 716 The first random shots were productive of more sound than effect.
1806 A. Duncan Life Nelson 109 The..ship..had approached within random shot of the Leander.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. ix. 457 A random shot or the dagger of an assassin might in a moment leave the expedition without a head.
1870 L. Bishop Teuchsa Grongie 345 He falls by random shot from Ta-to-kee.
1901 Times 20 Sept. 9/1 What were the chances that a random shot or ray directed into space would hit a star?
2006 Africa News (Nexis) 9 Sept. The Joint Military Task Force..were alerted by the random shots on their way past the area.
random variable n. Statistics a variable whose values are distributed in accordance with a probability distribution; a variate.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > probability or statistics > [noun] > variable
variable1816
variate1909
random variable1914
random variate1914
explanatory variable1939
predictor1943
regressor1953
slack variable1953
1914 Biometrika 10 180 nDx and nDy are now random variables independent of time.
1937 H. Cramér (title) Random variables and probability distributions.
1973 F. E. Fischer Fund. Statist. Concepts vii. 139 We can think of most discrete random variables as counts (how many heads, children, spades, or accidents?) and most continuous random variables as measures (how tall, long, heavy, or intelligent?).
2004 Dr. K. Hackers' Tales ii. 56 These car mechanic guys get high-performance cars and get the eprom out of the engine management system and an eprom emulator and then they poke random variables into the eprom emulator.
random variate n. Statistics = random variable n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > probability or statistics > [noun] > variable
variable1816
variate1909
random variable1914
random variate1914
explanatory variable1939
predictor1943
regressor1953
slack variable1953
1914 Biometrika 10 342 Now such relations will undoubtedly be very approximately true, if the X's are random variates uncorrelated to each other.
2002 D. Dayananda et al. Capital Budgeting ix. 177 Simulation models are often stochastic in nature, i.e. they include random variates, the values of which are obtained through some random variate generator.
random walk n. Statistics the movement of something in successive steps, the nature of each step being governed by chance independently of preceding steps.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > progressive motion > specific manner of progressive motion > [noun] > in successive, independent steps
random walk1905
1905 K. Pearson in Nature 27 July 294/2 (heading) The problem of the random walk.
1949 Math. Tables & Other Aids Computation 3 546 This method of solution of problems in mathematical physics by sampling techniques based on random walk models constitutes what is known as the ‘Monte Carlo’ method.
1990 Protein Engin. 4 177/1 The method makes use of a random walk through six rotational and translational degrees of freedom.
2004 C. Lynn Leg Spread x. 209 Traders..pored over their charts and tested new systems and prophesied about ways to assign meaning to what others believed may not be much more than a random walk.

Derivatives

ˈrandomish adj. somewhat random, with little method or direction.
ΚΠ
1824 in Spirit of Public Jrnls. (1825) 136 My son Jonathan is but a randomish sort of a chap.
1844 United Service Mag. July 384 They were rather a skylarking, randomish, set of blades.
1991 Independent (Nexis) 29 July 17 In this book, he is not even trying... [It] is just a jumbled collection of random-ish events.
ˈrandom-wise adv. now rare in a random or haphazard manner.
ΚΠ
1840 G. Darley in Wks. of Beaumont & Fletcher I. Introd. p. xxx Most imaginative authors, perhaps, commence random-wise, and..save themselves the trouble of a total invention at first.
1897 Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 60 689 The digits here operated with were all obtained random-wise.
1976 Daily Freeman (Kingston, N.Y.) 31 Dec. 8/6 Rape..is presently being committed random-wise by vultures with no responsible, appropriate, or respectable court action.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

randomv.

Brit. /ˈrandəm/, U.S. /ˈrændəm/
Forms: 1600s randome, 1600s randon, 1800s– random; also Scottish pre-1700 randon.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: random n.
Etymology: < random n.With sense 1 perhaps compare Anglo-Norman and Middle French randoner , randuner , etc., to move swiftly (a1174 in Old French; French randonner , now apparently only in senses ‘(of an animal in hunting) to make a circuit around the area where it has been released’ (1875), ‘to go for a hike’ (1896); < randon random n.). Compare Old Occitan randonar to dash forward.
rare.
1. intransitive. Perhaps: to flow swiftly. Obsolete.Perhaps transitive ‘to set in line’, with reference to the walls.
ΚΠ
1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. avv Apone yat riche river randonit full evin The side wallis war set sad to ye see.
2.
a. intransitive. To stray, wander aimlessly; (also) to charge unheedingly, to rush headlong. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > progressive motion > specific manner of progressive motion > move progressively in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > idly or aimlessly
wantonc1550
random1561
sponge1825
slosh1854
to scull around1921
society > travel > aspects of travel > travel in specific course or direction > direct one's course [verb (intransitive)] > stray or go astray
dwelec900
miswendOE
to fare astray (misliche, amiss)c1175
to step astray, awry, beside1297
weyec1315
outrayc1330
strayc1330
waivea1375
forvay1390
outwandera1400
stragglea1425
waverc1485
wander?1507
swerve1543
wift?a1560
random1561
estray1572
egar1584
to go a-strayinga1586
to step aside1787
err1819
moider1839
maverick1910
1561 T. Norton & T. Sackville Gorboduc i. ii. 127 When such beginning of such liberties..Shall leaue them free to randon [1565 to free randon] of their will.
1840 A. Bartholomew Specif. Pract. Archit. i. lxvi. §612 It [sc. architecture] has started up into the athletic vigour of wild profligacy, and from straightened insipiency, it has randomed into the ocean of corruption.
1889 ‘M. Twain’ Connecticut Yankee xv. 180 They come together with great random, and a spear is brast,..and then the next candidate comes randoming in, and brast his spear.
1889 ‘M. Twain’ Connecticut Yankee xxvii. 349 A thought came randoming overthwart this majestic dream.
2007 Synchronicity in alt.psychology.synchronicity (Usenet newsgroup) 26 Apr. They were on the way to a coffee shop, and I was just randoming around.
b. intransitive. To fly at random. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > change direction of movement [verb (intransitive)] > move without fixed course
stragglea1425
ambulate1598
random?1602
stray1647
stimmer1808
knocka1825
moil1889
?1602 Narcissus (MS Bodl. Rawl. poet. 212) (1893) 735 Lett not your iudgments randome.
1614 W. Camden Remaines (rev. ed.) 242 That it [sc. the bullet of a sling] pierceth helmet and shield, that it reacheth farther, that it randoneth lesse.
c. intransitive. colloquial. To do something at random.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > chance [verb (intransitive)] > come about by chance
alimpOE
fallc1175
fortunec1369
chance1393
hapa1398
to fall profitc1475
adventurec1540
to fall out1556
befall1591
befortunea1616
happen1833
random1921
1921 R. Frost Let. 15 Apr. in Lett. to L. Untermeyer (1964) 127 She wasn't experimenting, poor thing. She was randoming, as Alisande hath it.
1958 A. Ginsberg Let. 2 Mar. in A. Ginsberg & L. Ginsberg Family Business (2001) 89 I can't fit all the pieces together in one letter,..the enormous virtues of individuality in America, I'm just randoming now.
3. intransitive. English regional (Yorkshire). To run parallel or in a straight line. Cf. random n. 1. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1824 W. Carr Horæ Momenta Cravenæ Gloss. Random, to be in a straight line or direction, ‘Let ya fence random wi' tother.’
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.adv.adj.?c1335v.1508
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