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单词 abominate
释义

abominateadj.n.

Brit. /əˈbɒmᵻnət/, U.S. /əˈbɑmənət/
Forms: 1500s abhominate, 1500s abhomynate, 1600s 1800s– abominate.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin abōminātus, abōminārī.
Etymology: < classical Latin abōminātus, use as adjective of past participle of abōminārī abominate v.On forms in -h- see note at abominable adj.
Chiefly literary.
A. adj.
Held in abomination, detested; beastly, inhuman. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > savagery > [adjective]
grimlyc893
retheeOE
grim971
bitterOE
bremec1175
grillc1175
grimfula1240
cruel1297
sturdy1297
fiercea1300
fellc1300
boistousa1387
felonousc1386
savagea1393
bestiala1398
bremelya1400
felona1400
hetera1400
cursedc1400
wicked14..
vengeablec1430
wolvishc1430
unnatural?1473
inhuman1481
brutisha1513
cruent1524
felonish1530
mannish1530
abominate1531
lionish1549
boarish?1550
truculent?c1550
unhumanc1550
lion-like1556
beastly1558
orped1567
raw?1573
tigerish?1573
unmanlike1579
boisterous1581
savaged1583
tiger-like1587
yond1590
truculental1593
savage wild1595
tigerous1597
inhumane1598
Neronian1598
immane1599
Phalarical1602
ungentle1603
feral1604
savagious1605
fierceful1607
Dionysian1608
wolvy1611
Hunnish1625
lionly1631
tigerly1633
savage-hearted1639
brutal1641
feroce1641
ferocious1646
asperous1650
ferousa1652
wolfish1674
tiger1763
savage-fierce1770
Tartar1809
Tartarly1821
Neroic1851
tigery1859
Neronic1864
unmannish1867
inhumanitarian1947
the mind > emotion > hatred > [adjective] > that is hated
yhated1297
behatec1374
odiousa1382
hateda1400
loatheda1420
abominate1531
abhorred1533
detested1552
odious1560
abominated1620
nauseated1652
1531 tr. E. Fox et al. Determinations Moste Famous Vniuersities f. 10 Such mariage is no mariage: yea that hit is to be abhorred and cursed of euerye christen man, and to be abhomynate as a greuous synne.
1594 R. Wilson Coblers Prophesie sig. E3v He is not so beastlie and abhominate, As he delights to ioy in trecherie.
1850 J. S. Blackie tr. Æschylus Lyrical Dramas I. 194 There hold the horrid feasts, Of gods abominate.
1852 C. Kingsley Andromeda 58 Grieving the eyes of their pride, abominate, doomed to their anger.
B. n.
That which is abominated; loathsomeness. Also occasionally: an abominated person or thing.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > hatred > loathing or detestation > [noun]
wlatingc725
wlatc960
ugginga1325
uglinessc1325
loathingc1340
abominationc1350
wlatsomenessc1380
wlatingness1382
fastidie?a1425
loathsomenessc1425
ugsomenessc1450
horribility1496
detestation1526
abhorring1528
dislikingc1540
fastidiousness1541
abhorfulness1556
fulsomeness1563
execration1570
abhorment1576
detesting1591
loath?1591
abhorrence1592
abhorrency1596
dislike1597
distaste1598
disgust1611
nausea1619
oppositeness1619
nauseousness1622
detest1638
wearisomeness1642
repugnance1643
odium1645
abhorrition1649
abominate1651
nausity1654
disdain1655
repugnancy1681
degoust1716
repulsion1751
self-repugnance1852
kick1893
1651 J. Ellistone tr. J. Böhme Signatura Rerum vi. 42 Mercury doth eagerly travel and perplex it self in the Sulphrous fire more and more, and continually laboureth to drive forth the Abominate.
1691 in E. Taylor tr. J. Behmen Theosophick Philos. To Rdr. sig. b v The first Man..became an abominate to God's Holiness.
1804 Brit. Critic Sept. 323 It abounds in such terms as, the free lubet, the abominate, self-hood, the byss and abyss, &c. &c.
1939 H. Miller Tropic of Capricorn 360 She is the lubet, the abominate and the sublimate—with a dash of hydrochloric acid, nitro-glycerine, laudanum and powdered onyx.
1982 L. S. Roudiez tr. J. Kristeva Powers of Horror iv. 111 The abominate is a response to the sacred, its exhaustion, its ending.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2009; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

abominatev.

Brit. /əˈbɒmᵻneɪt/, U.S. /əˈbɑməˌneɪt/
Forms: 1500s– abominate, 1600s abhominate.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin abōmināt-, abōminārī.
Etymology: < classical Latin abōmināt-, past participial stem (see -ate suffix3) of abōminārī to avert (an omen), to loathe, abhor, detest < ab- ab- prefix + ōmen omen n.; compare the exclamation ‘absīt ōmen! absit omen phr. Compare earlier abomine v.On the form with -h- see note at abominable adj.
1. transitive. To feel extreme disgust and hatred towards; to regard with intense aversion; to abhor, loathe.
ΚΠ
1597 Bp. J. King Lect. Ionas xix. 251 God shalbe iust still, and yet both nature and the workers of such thinges abhorred, and abominated before him to the bottome of hell.
1633 W. Prynne Histrio-mastix i. i. 16 Let this..now at last perswade all Christians, all Pagans,..forr to abominate them [sc. stage plays], as the very product of Satan, and the broode of Hell.
1644 J. Bulwer Chirologia 53 Who refuse, abhor, detest or abominate some execrable thing.
1649 J. Milton Εικονοκλαστης i. 3 A Scotch Warr, condemn'd and abominated by the whole Kingdom.
1663 Case Mary Carleton 46 I had deserved to be severely punished and abhominated by all Geetlemen [sic].
1706 D. Defoe Jure Divino Pref. p. iii Those who Swore to him when he was King..are all Perjur'd Rebels; abominable, and to be abominated by all good Men.
a1727 I. Newton Short. Chron. 1st Memory in Chronol. Anc. Kingdoms Amended (1728) 9 The Egyptians..lived only on the fruits of the earth, and abominated flesh-eaters.
1796 R. Southey Joan of Arc viii. 179 A weapon for its sure destructiveness Abominated once.
1824 W. S. Landor Imaginary Conversat. I. v. 64 I abominate and detest hangmanship.
1855 J. L. Motley Rise Dutch Republic II. iii. v. 300 Influential persons in Madrid had openly abominated the cruel form of amnesty which had been decreed.
1908 Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 18 372 The persecutors believe that God not only abominates the act of the misbeliever, but will hold the persecutors guilty if they do not persecute the misbeliever.
1995 Independent on Sunday 19 Feb. (Review Suppl.) 30/4 It begs the question why the Church ever sanctioned—even sacramentalised—something it now abominates?
2. transitive. In weakened sense: to dislike strongly; to regard with great distaste.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > hatred > dislike > [verb (transitive)]
mislikea1225
to like illa1350
to have no fancy with1465
mislovec1485
abominec1500
not to look ata1529
to have no will of, (also in)1548
misaffect1586
to have or take a stitch againsta1591
dislike1593
to take (a) toy to (also at)1598
disfavour1599
disgust1601
disaffect1609
mistaste1613
disrelisha1616
dispalate1630
abominate1652
disfancy1657
to have it in for1825
to have a down on1835
to sour on1862
to go off ——1877
derry1896
1652 W. Blith Eng. Improver Improved xvi. 110 I never advise to Plow thy Land so long to bring it to this, I abominate such Husbandry.
1694 M. Astell Serious Proposal to Ladies 98 Censure will refine into Friendly Admonition, all Scoffing and offensive Railleries will be abominated.
1703 tr. G. Della Casa Galateo of Manners 111 Their own snarling splenetick Dispositions..make them justly abominated by all that know them.
1753 H. Walpole Lett. (1840) II. 464 Were I to print anything with my name it should be plain Horace Walpole: Mr. is one of the Gothicisms I abominate.
1844 Knickerbocker Nov. 470 Of all articles tolerated..I most abominate boiled salt fish.
1880 ‘V. Lee’ Stud. 18th Cent. Italy iv. iii. 170 Steele..had no musical sense, and abominated operas.
1881 A. Trollope Ayala's Angel III. xlvi. 37 I do abominate a perverse young woman.
1927 Amer. Mercury Feb. 220/1 Most New Yorkers or Chicagoans abominate the country.
1961 N. Coward Diary 12 Mar. (2000) 466 I despise and abominate theatre parties.
1990 A. S. Byatt Possession vi. 96 He abominated tea. He was a black coffee drinker.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2009; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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adj.n.1531v.1597
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