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单词 reird
释义

reirdn.

Brit. /rɪəd/, U.S. /rɪ(ə)rd/, Scottish English /rird/, /rerd/
Forms: Old English–early Middle English ( Ormulum) reord, Old English (rare)–early Middle English (south-west midlands) reorde, Middle English rearde (south-eastern), Middle English rerd, Middle English rerde, Middle English rerid, Middle English reryd, Middle English rewerd (north-west midlands, in a late copy), Middle English rorde, Middle English rourde (north-west midlands), Middle English ruerde (north-west midlands, in a late copy), Middle English rurd (north-west midlands), Middle English rurde (north-west midlands); English regional (Northumberland) 1800s– reard, 1800s– reerd; Scottish pre-1700 rearde, pre-1700 rerd, pre-1700 rerde, pre-1700 1700s reirde, pre-1700 1700s–1800s reird, pre-1700 1700s– raird, pre-1700 1800s reard, 1700s rair'd, 1700s rierd, 1700s 1900s– reerd.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old High German rarta sound, voice, harmony, Gothic razda speech, language, dialect (translating ancient Greek γλῶσσα gloss n.1 and λαλία talk, speech: see -lalia comb. form), and (with assimilation of consonants) Old Icelandic rǫdd , (inflected) radd- voice, music, speech; further etymology unknown. A connection with Sanskrit ras- to roar, yell (originally specifically of donkeys ‘to bray’), to resound, rasita roar, yell, has sometimes been suggested, but is not generally accepted. Compare reer n.The etymologically expected stem vowel is apparently preserved in Middle English (south-eastern) rearde ; compare also the early Middle English prefixed form ȝereard (see quot. OE1 at note below). Old English reord (and later forms apparently developed from it) must be viewed in the context of the following Northumbrian forms: giriorde (prefixed dative singular: compare note below) and riordia reird v., both of which appear to show the reflex of the i-mutation of e . This suggests that Old English reord (unlike the unattested antecedent of Middle English rearde ) is probably to be derived from a by-form with i- or j- suffix (see further below), and so is not directly parallel with its Germanic cognates. For a detailed discussion of the phonological difficulties see A. Campbell Old Eng. Gram. (1959) §124, R. M. Hogg Gram. Old Eng. (1992) I. §§3.21, 5.84. In Old English apparently originally a strong feminine ( -stem) reord ; however, strong neuter by-forms reord (probably an i -stem), and reorde (probably a ja -stem) are also attested. In Old English the prefixed form gereord (usually neuter; also gereorde ; compare y- prefix) is more commonly attested; it survives into early Middle English (in the sense ‘language’) in late copies of material of Old English composition:OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) i. 185 Þa wæs..godes ege on mancynne, æfter þam flode, & wæs an gereord [a1225 Vesp. A. xxii on ȝereard] on him eallum.OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xxii. 361 Sumum menn he [sc. se halga gast] forgifð wisdom.., sumum he forgifð mislice gereord [a1225 Lamb. 487 misliche irord], sumum gerecednysse mislicra spræca.
Scottish and English regional (northern) in later use.
1.
a. Utterance, speech; an instance of this; a voice, a cry. Also in extended use. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > [noun]
reirdOE
voicec1330
stevenc1369
sound1385
laita1400
lively voice1532
pipe1567
live voice1610
vocalities1667
squall1725
vox1869
Hobson's choice1937
OE Cynewulf Crist II 510 Cleopedon of heahþu wordum wrætlicum ofer wera mengu beorhtan reorde.
OE Guthlac A 743 Smolt wæs se sigewong.., fæger fugla reord, folde geblowen; geacas gear budon.
OE Beowulf (2008) 2555 Hordweard oncniow mannes reorde.
OE Paris Psalter (1932) cxxxvii. 5 Ealle þe andettan eorðan kyniningas [read kyningas], forðon þe hi gehyrdon hlude reorde, þines muðes þa mæran word.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 17284 Tu mahht herenn gastess rerd Þær godess þewwess spellenn.
c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) 311 (MED) Þu me..telst þat ich ne can noȝt singe, Ac al mi rorde [v.r. reorde] is woning.
?a1300 Fox & Wolf 114 in G. H. McKnight Middle Eng. Humorous Tales (1913) 30 (MED) He com to þe putte, þene vox I-herde; He him kneu wel bi his rerde.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 211 (MED) Lhord god, yhyer mine bene and mine rearde þet ich grede to þe.
c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) 2337 Wyth a ry[n]kande rurde he to þe renk sayde, ‘Bolde burne, on þis bent be not so gryndel’.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 387 (MED) With a renyst reryd þis reson he said.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1897–1973) 30 (MED) Thou can both byte and whyne with a rerd.
b. A language. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
eOE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Otho) v. xxi. 476 He eac swilce swa Grecisc geleornade mid Lædene, þæt him ða swa cuð wæron swa his agene reorde, þe he in acenned wæs.
OE Genesis A (1931) 1635 Reord wæs þa gieta eorðbuendum an gemæne.
OE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Corpus Cambr.) iv. xxv. 342 On Englisce reorde [eOE Tanner in Engliscgereorde].
2.
a. A loud cry, roar, or other vocal outburst made by a person or animal; noise or din made by the shouting, roaring, etc., of a person or animal. Also: a rebuking or reproachful way of speaking; a scolding tongue. Now rare. Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) records this sense as still in use in Roxburghshire in 1968.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > roaring or bellowing > [noun]
reirdc1330
bellowing1393
roaringa1398
routinga1425
whurling1495
rummishing?a1500
roara1522
boation1646
intonation1658
fremitus1820
bellow1827
fremescence1837
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > [noun] > roar or bellow
roustc1175
roaringc1225
reirdc1330
roara1393
romyinga1425
routinga1425
belling1582
bellow1818
braming-
c1330 Seven Sages (Auch.) (1933) 34 (MED) He [sc. the boar] criede and makede rewli rerd.
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) 390 (MED) Syþen þe wylde of þe wode on þe water flette..Rwly wyth a loud rurd rored for drede.
a1425 (?c1350) Ywain & Gawain (1964) 2073 Þan kest he up so lathly rerde, Ful mani fok myght he have ferde.
a1500 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Nero) i. l. 804 Þa bestis..oyssis wiþ gret rerde to rare.
a1500 (?c1450) Bone Florence (1976) 1427 (MED) He bete hur wyth hys nakyd swyrde, And sche caste vp many a rewfull rerde.
a1500 R. Henryson tr. Æsop Fables: Trial of Fox l. 954 in Poems (1981) 40 Ryfand his hair, he cryit with ane reird.
?a1591 King James VI & I Poems (1955) I. 140 Such pell-mell dinnes and ringing reards [MS dinnis]..Do from one corps proceed at once.
1721 J. Kelly Compl. Coll. Scotish Prov. 44 A house with a Reek, and a Wife with a Reerd will soon make a Man run to the Door.
1790 A. Tait Poems 147 At nine months' end you'll hear the rairds In our Scotch kirks.
1821 Edinb. Mag. & Literary Misc. Apr. 351 Mony lang rairds o' dandillie tehein' an fliskmahaigo chit-chat.
1935 D. Rorie Lum Hat 58 A reekin' lum's ill, but a wife wi' a raird Is fit to gar ony man bite on his baird.
1971 T. Scott in Agenda Spring 19 Up she brairds at this wi reird and grane.
b. An uproar or clamour made by a number of people shouting, crying, etc.; a loud noise made by a number of animals or birds. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > confused sound > [noun] > uproar or tumult
brack?c1200
ludea1275
ludingc1275
grede13..
to-doc1330
stevenc1385
ruitc1390
shoutingc1405
rumourc1425
dirdumc1440
shout1487
rippit?1507
glamer?a1513
rangat?a1513
reird?a1513
larumc1515
reirdour1535
uproar1544
clamouring1548
racket1565
baldare1582
rack jack1582
rufflery1582
pother1603
rut1607
clamorousnessa1617
hurricane1639
clutter1656
flaw1676
splutter1677
rout1684
hirdum-dirdum1724
fracas1727
collieshangie1737
racketing1760
hullabaloo1762
hurly1806
bobbery1816
trevally1819
pandemonium1827
hurly-burly1830
outroar1845
on-ding1871
tow-row1877
ruckus1885
molrowing1892
rookus1892
rux1918
a1513 W. Dunbar Ballat Abbot of Tungland in Poems (1998) I. 58 Thik was the clud of kayis and crawis,..The rerd of thame rais to the sky.
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) iv. xii. 42 The clamour than and rerd Went to the toppys of the large hallys.
c1540 J. Bellenden tr. H. Boece Hyst. & Cron. Scotl. viii. xiii. f. 102v/2 Na man wist quhat wes to be done, throw reird of men & beistis.
a1578 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) I. 86 [They] brak about him witht sic ane reird and clamour.
1718 A. Ramsay Christ's-kirk on Green iii. 29 Sic a Rierd rang thro' the Rout.
1791 J. Learmont Poems Pastoral 167 Their raird rang rudely owr the lift.
1822 W. Scott Fortunes of Nigel I. ii. 44 Then the reird raise, and..murdered I suld hae been, without remeid.
1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words Reard, Reerd, riot, confusion.
1932 R. L. Cassie Sc. Sangs 21 Noo an' than we hear a flist, A reerd wud deeve Van Winkle.
3.
a. A noise or din of any kind. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > [noun] > loud sound or noise
chirma800
dina1000
utas1202
noise?c1225
nurthc1225
dinninga1400
glama1400
glavera1400
reer?a1400
reirdc1400
dunch1440
steveningc1440
rebound1457
bruit?1473
alarm1489
yell1509
gild?a1513
shout?a1513
reveriea1522
routa1522
thundering1560
rumouringc1563
dinrie?1566
rear1567
fray1568
thunder-crack1595
thunder1600
fanfarea1605
fragor1605
clamour1606
thunder-clap1610
obstrepency1623
tonitruation1658
randana1661
clarion1667
leden1674
bluster1724
salvoa1734
ding1750
row1753
tonance1778
dunder1780
chang1788
blare1807
flare1815
detonation1830
trump1848
trumpeting1850
foghorn1875
yammer1932
c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) 1698 (MED) Hunteres vnhardeled bi a holt syde; Rocheres roungen bi rys for rurde of her hornes.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) viii. l. 208 Gret rerd thar rais all sammyn quhar thai ryd.
a1513 W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 155 He turnd his ers and all bedret him, Quyte our from nek till heill. He lowsit it of with sic a reird, Baith hors and man flawe to the eird, He fart with sic ane feir.
c1540 J. Bellenden tr. H. Boece Hyst. & Cron. Scotl. iii. ii. f. 21v/1 Sa huge nois rais be reird & sowne of bellis.
1584 King James VI & I Ess. Prentise Poesie sig. Aiiiv With threatning thunders, making monstrous reard.
c1617 King James VI & I Poems (1958) II. 80 Drumlie cloudes with rumbling thunders rearde Doe threaten [etc.].
1806 R. Jamieson Pop. Ballads I. 243 Till far and near, wood, rock and cave, The thunderin' reird return.
b. Scottish. An act of breaking wind noisily, a loud fart. Also: an eructation, a belch. Now rare.Cf. quot. ?a1513 at sense 3a. Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) records this sense as still in use in Aberdeenshire in 1968, but marks it as obsolescent.
ΚΠ
a1714 in J. Hogg Jacobite Relics (1819) I. 71 Then she ga'e a snore, And then she ga'e a reirde.
1718 A. Ramsay Christ's-kirk on Green ii. 18 Back-gate..she loot a fearfou Raird.
1817 Lintoun Green in R. Brown Comic Poems 168 Behind his ears, That made them ring, a raird, Exploding downwards.
1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. Raird, the noise made by eructation; as ‘He loot a great raird’; he gave a forcible eructation... Also used for a report of another kind.
1911 A. Warrack Scots Dial. Dict. Raird,..the noise of eructation; the backward breaking of wind.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

reirdv.

Brit. /rɪəd/, U.S. /rɪ(ə)rd/, Scottish English /rird/, /rerd/
Forms: Old English reordian, Old English riordia (Northumbrian), early Middle English reordie (south-west midlands); Scottish pre-1700 rearde, pre-1700 rerd, pre-1700 rerde, pre-1700 1800s reard, pre-1700 1800s– raird, pre-1700 1800s– reird.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: reird n.
Etymology: < reird n.With the Old English (Northumbrian) form riordia compare discussion at reird n. In Old English (Northumbrian) the prefixed form geriorda (compare y- prefix) is also attested.
Scottish in later use.
1. intransitive. To speak, discourse. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > speak [verb (intransitive)]
matheleOE
speakc888
spellc888
yedc888
i-quethec900
reirdOE
meldOE
meleOE
quidOE
i-meleOE
wordOE
to open one's mouth (also lips)OE
mootOE
spellc1175
carpa1240
spilec1275
bespeakc1314
adda1382
mella1400
moutha1400
utter?a1400
lalec1400
nurnc1400
parlec1400
talkc1400
to say forthc1405
rekea1450
to say on1487
nevena1500
quinch1511
quetch1530
queckc1540
walk1550
cant1567
twang1602
articulate1615
tella1616
betalk1622
sermocinate1623
to give tongue1737
jaw1748
to break stillness1768
outspeaka1788
to give mouth1854
larum1877
to make noises1909
verbal1974
OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: John iv. 27 Discipuli eius..mirabantur quia cum muliere loquebantur [read loquebatur] : ðegnas his..geuundradon uel forðon mið ðæm uife riordade uel gspræcc [read gespræce].
OE Beowulf (2008) 3025 Sceall..se wonna hrefn..fela reordian, earne secgan, hu him æt æte speow.
OE Genesis A (1931) 1253 Þa reordade rodora waldend wrað moncynne and þa worde cwæð.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) 11065 He reordien gan and þas word sæide.
2. intransitive. Scottish. Of a thing: to make a noise; to resound. Of a person or animal: to shout, roar, bellow; (later also) to scold or be abusive to someone in a loud voice; to boast or brag loudly. Now rare. Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) records this sense as still in use in Kirkcudbrightshire and Roxburghshire in 1968.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > make a loud sound or noise [verb (intransitive)]
flitec900
beme?c1225
thunderc1374
full-sounda1382
claryc1440
reird1508
shout1513
to make the welkin ring1590
rally1728
din1798
alarm1839
trombone1866
clarion1885
blast1931
blare1955
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > resonance or sonority > resound [verb (intransitive)]
singc897
shillc1000
warblea1400
resoundc1425
dun1440
reird1508
rolla1522
rerea1525
peal1593
diapason1608
choir1838
alarm1839
to raise (also lift) the roof1845
whang1854
1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. ciiii The rochis reirdit vith the rasch quhen thai samyne rane.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid viii. v. 68 The wod resoundis schill,..The hillis reirdis.
a1530 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Royal) v. l. 604 The tad begouth to wax, And wyth-in hym rerde [a1500 Nero rede] and rax.
1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) III. 233 With buglis blast quhill rairdit all the ryce.
c1600 A. Montgomerie Poems (2000) I. 106 Can thunder reird the higher for a horne?
1824 J. Mactaggart Sc. Gallovidian Encycl. 403 Ice is said to be rairding, when it is cracking.
1827 W. Tennant Papistry Storm'd 134 The town-crier wi' his clap Gan throu' the streets to reird and rap.
1876 W. Brockie Confessional 186 She laup, an' rampaugd, an' rairdit, an' flate.
1923 G. Watson Roxburghshire Word-bk. at Raird He was rairdin' away.
2007 G. McKay tr. W. Auld Bairnlie Race (Electronic text) xxv. 54 We are ower whippert, yit dinna reird ava An lik a hirsel, rin tae whaur the sheep-dugs caa.

Derivatives

ˈreirding n. Scottish (a) loud noise, din; crying, roaring (obsolete); (b) a scolding.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > resonance or sonority > [noun]
resonancea1460
reirding1535
resonancy1611
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > [noun] > loud sound or noise > making
noise-making1487
reirding1535
tromboning1864
1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) II. 462 Quhill all the rochis with thair reirding rang.
a1586 J. Rowll Cursing l. 261 in W. A. Craigie Maitland Folio MS (1919) I. 168 Than..bellie basie with his baggis At hellis ȝettis sall mak sic rerding.
a1600 (?c1535) tr. H. Boece Hist. Scotl. (Mar Lodge) (1946) 216 All the nycht was nocht ellis bot reirding of regrete and murnyng.
1923 G. Watson Roxburghshire Word-bk. 251 Reirdin', a severe scolding.
ˈreirding adj. Scottish (a) resounding, crashing (obsolete); (b) scolding, abusive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > [adjective] > noisy
fervent1465
brawlinga1568
baw-waw1570
rouncing?1576
ruff-raff1582
reirding1591
wrangling1608
perstreperous1629
ran-tan1630
streperous1637
clamant1639
chiding1648
loudmouth1668
noisy1675
noise-making1678
strepitous1681
dinsome1724
strepent1750
dinny1768
loud-mouthing1788
dinning1813
blatant1816
noisome1825
strepitant1855
polyphloisboisterousa1875
noisesome1925
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > roaring or bellowing > [adjective]
crying1398
roaringc1425
whurling1495
reirding1591
routinga1609
bellowing1619
bombardical1645
rummishing1653
polyphloisboian1824
polyphloisboiotic1843
polyphloisboiic1863
polyphloisbic1915
1591 King James VI & I Poet. Exercises sig. P2 The rearding thunders, and the blustering winds.
a1612 W. Fowler Tarantula of Love in Wks. (1914) I. 172 The rearding thoundars highest triees abate.
1876 W. Brockie Leaderside Leg. 25 Jenny was a Jezebel, a reardin, flytin jade.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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