单词 | rubricate |
释义 | rubricateadj. Now rare. Rubricated, marked in red. Also as past participle. ΘΚΠ society > communication > writing > written text > decoration > [adjective] > rubricated rubric?c1475 rubricate1604 rubricated1604 miniated1640 red-lettered1653 rubrical1655 rubricked1728 the world > matter > colour > named colours > red or redness > making or becoming red > [adjective] > made red > written in red rubric?c1475 rubricate1604 rubricated1604 rubrical1655 rubricked1728 1604 R. Parsons 3rd Pt. Treat. Conuersions in Treat. Three Conuersions Eng. II. iv. 180 The principall [martyrs] are there rubricate, sett forth in redd letters. a1641 H. Spelman Of Law Terms (1684) v. ii. 63 Other Festivals I enquire not after, as of St. Dunstan and the rest that stand rubricate in old Kalendars. 1774 Acct. Soc. Discharge of Persons imprisoned for Small Debts p. xlvii He who has no character to lose, no honour to be injured, nor any conscience to be wounded, stands rubricate to the attacks of mankind. 1826 W. E. Andrews Rev. Fox's Bk. Martyrs III. 409 Fox has made this man a rubricate saint of his church, and both him and Bale honour him with the title of Apostle of England. 1876 Proc. Med. Soc. County of Kings 18 Apr. 69 A single ‘mild’ case may stand like a rubricate initial at the head of a long chapter of woes. 1959 Novum Testamentum 3 145 For each number a rubricate note is given, indicating in which of the ten canons the present number occurs. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022). rubricatev. 1. a. transitive. To mark or colour with red; esp. to write, print, or mark in red letters. Now chiefly historical.In quot. 1570 with punning allusion to sense 1b (cf. quot. 1570 at that sense). ΘΚΠ society > communication > writing > written text > decoration > decorate [verb (transitive)] > rubricate rubricate1570 rubric1599 berubric1655 red-letter1796 the world > matter > colour > named colours > red or redness > making or becoming red > make red [verb (transitive)] > with dye, stain, or pigment > letters rubrish1469 rubricate1570 rubric1599 1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) I. 693/1 The one he doth rubricate, onely with his read letters, the other hee doth rubricate with their owne bloud. 1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 90 Curroone rubricates this in the Kalendar of his greatest dangers and deliverances. 1656 T. Blount Glossographia Rubricate,..to make, or colour red with Oaker. 1849 D. Rock Church our Fathers I. 96 Nine crosses are rubricated..in the prayer ‘Per Quem haec omnia’. 1872 O. Shipley Gloss. Eccl. Terms 69 Those days which are not rubricated in our Calendar. 1892 Athenæum 12 May 624/2 A singularly handsome volume, with all the stage directions and names of characters rubricated. 1933 Bull. Cleveland Mus. Art 20 124 The custom of rubricating capitals was continued with the coming of the printed page. 1999 Mod. Lang. Rev. 94 1073 A simple variation on the common practice of rubricating initial letters of verse lines. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > holiness > saint > canonization > perform canonization [verb (transitive)] canonizec1380 sanctify1390 saint1487 to shrine (a person) for a saint1530 portess1570 rubricate1570 holy1578 calendar1597 beheaven1601 besainta1603 templify1615 beatify1629 beatificate1636 1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) I. 693/2 Dunstanus, who was rubricated with a duplex festum. 1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 33 St. Francis Shyvier the Navarrean Jesuit, who died anno 1552.., and rubricated by Pope Gregory 15. 1675 N. French Dolefull Fall of Andrew Sall ix. 115 Hee alsoe Rubricates him [sc. Luther] in the highest ranck of his Confessors. c. transitive. To provide (a text) with a rubric or rubrics. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ society > communication > book > matter of book > [verb (transitive)] > title or heading entitlec1381 titlea1387 intitule1490 intitulate1575 overwrite1605 rubricate1793 subtitle1830 epigraph1860 1793 Beawes's Civil Hist. Spain & Portugal I. 510 The Visitors are to foliate and rubricate these books in all their Leaves, with a Note at the End expressing their Number. 1796 E. James Catal. of Bks. 3 The book was printed by Mentelin, at Strasburgh, 1466, and..was bought in that year, and rubricated..the following year. 1846 J. C. Hare Mission of Comforter II. 414 A formal dogmatical system, according to which the thoughts of men were to be clast and rubricated for ever after. 1892 S. A. Brooke Hist. Early Eng. Lit. II. xiii. 3 The MS. of the Gospels in the Bodleian..is rubricated. 1918 N. Amer. Rev. Mar. 324 Murder, rapine and sudden death, horror piled upon horror,..while a lamb-like little gentleman..sat like a monk in his cell, unvexed by gross passions, rubricating the golden rule! 2003 Speculum 78 19 Robinson..assesses the nun as a careful copyist also responsible for rubricating and decorating the volume. 2. intransitive. To sign one's name with a decorative flourish. Cf. rubric n. 4. rare. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > personal identification > signature > sign [verb (intransitive)] > sign by mark rubricate1838 1838 Q. Rev. Apr. 383 He could barely write his name, although he could rubricate as well as any other Spaniard in command. 1937 A. F. Tschiffely Don Roberto 106 Able to sign his name and rubricate, which means, drawing a complicated flourish. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < |
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