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单词 reliction
释义

relictionn.

Brit. /rᵻˈlɪkʃn/, U.S. /rəˈlɪkʃ(ə)n/
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin relictiōn-, relictiō.
Etymology: < classical Latin relictiōn-, relictiō abandonment, desertion, process of leaving behind (a substance) as a residue < relict- , past participial stem of relinquere relinquish v. + -iō -ion suffix1.
The action or fact of leaving or being left, esp. by receding water.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > water > sea or ocean > region of sea or ocean > [noun] > sea level > changes in sea level
reliction1603
retrogression1815
regression1902
glacio-eustatism1935
glacio-eustasy1962
1603 J. Hall Anathomie of Sinne sig. F Thirdly, we may call it religion, of reliction; that is, of leauing of our wickednes and our owne wayes.
a1676 M. Hale De Jure Maris i. vi, in F. Hargrave Coll. Tracts Law Eng. (1787) 36 Acquests by the reliction or recess of the sea.
1798 M. Bacon New Abridgm. Law (ed. 5) V. 500 In every acquest per alluvionem there be a reliction or rather exclusion of the sea.
1823 Times 29 Mar. 2 The King was informed that there was an accretion of a portion of land on the eastern coast of Lincolnshire by the reliction of the sea.
1926 Harvard Law Rev. 40 140 Reliction rendered several thousand acres of the bed of Lake St. Clair fit for summer cottages.
1993 Amer. Jrnl. Legal Hist. 37 77 Not all lands would become state property, only those which were the product of reliction.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1603
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