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单词 seven year
释义

seven yearadj.

Brit. /ˌsɛvn ˈjɪə/, /ˌsɛvn ˈjəː/, U.S. /ˌsɛvən ˈjɪ(ə)r/
Forms:

α. Middle English sevene yeres, 1500s–1600s seauen yeares, 1500s–1600s seauen yeeres, 1500s–1600s seauen yeres, 1500s–1600s seuen yeares, 1500s–1600s seuen yeres, 1600s seaven yeares, 1600s seaven years, 1600s seuen yeeres, 1600s seven yeares, 1600s seven yeers, 1600s– seven years, 1800s– seven years'.

β. Middle English sefne ȝere, Middle English seuen ȝeer, Middle English vii ȝer, Middle English vii ȝere, 1500s seuen yeare, 1700s– seven year.

Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: seven adj., year n.
Etymology: Partly (i) < seven adj. + the plural of year n. Partly (ii) < seven adj. + year n.In the form seven years' at α. forms with the second element in the genitive plural.
Consisting of, or lasting for, seven years.See also seven years' bad luck n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > period > year > [adjective] > lasting for several years > that lasts a specific number of years
seven yeara1393
quinquenniala1475
triennial1641
septennary1644
biennial1645
septenarian1647
septennial1648
diennial1656
quadrennial1656
trienniated1661
quintennial1687
semi-millenary1728
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) iv. l. 239 Sevene yeres besinesse He leyde, bot for the lachesse Of half a Minut of an houre.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 4597 (MED) Þeese oþere seuen woful neet Bitokeneþ seuen ȝeer hongur greet.
1673 J. Ogilby Asia 241/1 Theile King of Ostlohm obtain'd the Victory; and after a seven years peaceable possession thereof, he was also conquer'd by the Great Mogol.
1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. II. iii. i. 143 In that seven-years' sleep of his, so much has changed.
1900 Jrnl. School Geogr. (U.S.) Apr. 141 The seven-year periods.
1954 J. Symons Narrowing Circle xii. 47 The Barcini brothers, who got a seven-year stretch for dope trafficking.
2010 A. V. Mead in C. Walsh & L. André Dear John, I love Jane 107 I ended our seven-year partnership..and we were divorced by December.

Phrases

this seven years day (also these seven years day): for a long time. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > duration > [adverb] > for a long time > for this long time
this long time (also while)a1413
this seven years day1599
1599 H. Porter Pleasant Hist. Two Angrie Women of Abington sig. D4 Father if you would seeke this seuen yeares day, You could not find a fitter match for her.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) ii. i. 2 I saw not better sport these seuen yeeres day. View more context for this quotation
1648 E. Symmons Vindic. King Charles (new ed.) To Rdr. sig. b3v It hath been mine endeavour this seaven years day, and my usuall Prayer, that I may be able to conclude as M. Bradford the Martyr did.

Compounds

C1. In the names of plants.
seven-year apple n. (also seven years apple) a small evergreen tree of Florida and the Caribbean, Casasia clusiifolia (family Rubiaceae), bearing star-shaped flowers and large green berries that ripen over a period of several months, becoming black and wrinkled.Originally reported by M. Catesby as a local name in the Bahamas.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tropical or exotic fruit-tree or -plant > other tropical or exotic fruit-trees or -plants
tamarind1614
star apple1693
seven-year apple1731
wild mangosteen1753
peach1760
ackee1792
Java plum1829
abiu1834
jambu1834
jakkalsbessie1854
calabash-nutmeg1866
jambolan1866
Chinese gooseberry1925
1731 Philos. Trans. 1729–30 (Royal Soc.) 36 434 The Seven Years Apple. He [sc. Catesby] knows not the Reason of the Name, because the Fruit ripens in seven or eight Months Time.
1893 Youth's Compan. 9 Mar. 126/3 Seven-year apples with star-like white blossoms having a delicious fragrance.
2014 Targeted News Service (Florida) (Nexis) 25 July A new national champion tree, a seven-year-apple (Casasia clusiifolia), was crowned in Biscayne National Park.
seven-year bean n. (also †seven-years bean) any of various cultivated leguminous plants from which beans can be harvested in several successive years without resowing: spec. (a) Caribbean the pigeon pea, Cajanus cajan (obsolete) (cf. seven-year pea n.); (b) (chiefly Australian) the scarlet runner bean, Phaseolus coccineus.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > pulse > [noun] > bean > other beans
bean1548
black bean1569
calavance1620
red bean1658
seven-year bean1666
lablab1670
Cajan1693
dal1698
adzuki1727
tick-bean1744
tick1765
toker1786
mash1801
Congo pea1812
stick bean1823
moog1840
moth1840
Lima1856
feijão1857
asparagus pea1859
mung1866
wall1884
Rangoon bean1903
1666 J. Davies tr. C. de Rochefort Hist. Caribby-Islands 64 Those called the Seven-years Beans, because the same stalk bears seven years one after another.
1881 Australasian (Melbourne) 3 Sept. 312/2 Couch grass, melons, seven-year bean and plantain have been tried, and all grow splendidly.
1950 Mail Sunday Mag. (Adelaide) 18 Feb. 17/4 The seven-year bean seeds are generally planted in late spring.
2012 Weekly Times (Australia) (Nexis) 24 Oct. 74 Scarlet runner or seven year beans are great in colder climates. They die down over the cooler months to an underground tuber, then shoot up once the weather warms up in spring.
seven-year pea n. (also †seven-years pea) chiefly Caribbean the pigeon pea, Cajanus cajan (cf. seven-year bean n.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > pulses or plants producing pulses > [noun] > pea > other types of pea or pea-plant
rouncival1570
garden pea1573
field pease1597
vale-grey1615
rose pea1629
hotspur1663
seven-year pea1672
rathe-ripe1677
huff-codc1680
pigeon pea1683
hog-pease1686
shrub pea1691
field pea1707
pea1707
crown pea1726
maple rouncival1731
marrowfat1731
moratto1731
pig pea1731
sickle-pea1731
hog pea1732
maple pea1732
marrow pea1733
black eye?1740
egg-pea1744
magotty bay bean1789
Prussian1804
maple grey1805
partridge pea1812
Prussian blue1822
scimitar1834
marrow1855
fill-basket1881
string-pea1891
mattar1908
vining pea1959
1672 W. Hughes Amer. Physitian 21 It is called by the English which there inhabits, Seven years Pease, or seven years Vetches; I suppose, because it continueth seven years with once planting.
1814 J. Lunan Hortus Jamaicensis II. 64 It is a perennial plant, bearing when about a year old, and lasts from five to seven years in good soil, whence it has derived the name of seven-year-pea.
2008 B. W. Higman Jamaican Food vi. 255 Although it has literally scores of names, the best known in Jamaica are gungo or gungu pea, Congo pea, Angola pea, pigeon pea, no-eye pea, seven-year pea or (confusingly and apparently exclusive to Jamaica) red pea.
seven-year vine n. Obsolete a yellow-flowered morning-glory, Distimake tuberosus, native to tropical America and widely naturalized elsewhere; also called Spanish arborvine, wood rose.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > climbing or creeping plants > non-British climbing or creeping plants > [noun] > American or West Indian
water withy1559
West Indian China-root1577
savannah flower1696
water withe1696
Spanish woodbine1731
potato vine1750
Indian grass1753
seven-year vine1756
tropaeolum1759
woodbine1760
water vine1774
canariensis1835
Philodendron1840
Monstera1858
twig-climber1900
money bush1924
potato creeper1925
sweetheart plant1963
1756 P. Browne Civil & Nat. Hist. Jamaica ii. ii. 156 (heading) The seven-year vine, or Spanish arbor-vine.
1918 South-eastern Naturalist 23 10 It is known in Jamaica as the ‘Seven Year Vine’. The tubers are not edible.
C2.
Seven Years War n. (with the) a war (1756–63) in which Britain, Prussia, and Hanover contended against Austria, France, Russia, Saxony, Sweden, and Spain.The main issues of the war were the struggle between Britain and France for supremacy overseas, and that between Prussia and Austria for the domination of Germany. The British made substantial gains over France abroad, capturing French Canada and undermining French influence in India. The war was ended by the Treaties of Paris and Hubertusburg in 1763, leaving Britain the supreme European naval and colonial power and Prussia in an appreciably stronger position than before in central Europe. [Compare German siebenjähriger Krieg (1768 or earlier).]
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > war > types of war > [noun] > other specific war
Punic War1556
Vandal war1613
American Civil War1775
Seven Years War1775
Revolutionary Wara1784
Peninsular war1811
Great War1815
Mormon war1833
opium war1841
the Thirty Years' War1841
the Thirty Years' War1842
Mexican War1846
Napoleonic War1850
Crimean War1854
Hundred Years War1874
Balkan war1881
Boer War1883
Winter War1939
Six Day War1967
Yom Kippur War1973
Gulf War1981
Falklands conflict1982
1775 Politician's Dict. I. 275 (heading) Extraordinary expence in France on account of the seven years war.
1788 J. Towers Mem. Frederick III of Prussia II. 325 Thus ended, what is called in Germany, The Seven Years War.
2010 G. Corrigan Second World War (2013) 3 It would be perfectly sound..to nominate the Seven Years War as the First World War, the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars as the Second, and the Kaiser's War the Third.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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