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单词 silurian
释义

siluriann.2

Etymology: < Silur- (in Silurus n.) + -ian suffix.Previous versions of the OED give the stress as: siˈlurian.
Ichthyology.
A siluroid fish.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Siluriformes (catfish) > [noun] > family Siluridae > member of (cat-fish)
sheath-fish1602
catfish1620
silure1802
roundhead1828
siluridan1835
silurian1842
sheat-fish1851
siluroid1851
nematognath1890
silurid1891
1842 Penny Cycl. XXII. 16 A small Silurian from Cayenne, in which there is no adipose fin.
1842 Penny Cycl. XXII. 17 The head..is flat and broader than in the other Silurians.

Derivatives

siˈlurid n. = siluroid adj. and n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Siluriformes (catfish) > [noun] > family Siluridae > member of (cat-fish)
sheath-fish1602
catfish1620
silure1802
roundhead1828
siluridan1835
silurian1842
sheat-fish1851
siluroid1851
nematognath1890
silurid1891
1891 Cent. Dict. Silurid.
1896 J. W. Kirkaldy & E. C. Pollard tr. J. E. V. Boas Text Bk. Zool. 388 The electric Silurid (Malapterurus electricus).
siˈluridan n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Siluriformes (catfish) > [noun] > family Siluridae > member of (cat-fish)
sheath-fish1602
catfish1620
silure1802
roundhead1828
siluridan1835
silurian1842
sheat-fish1851
siluroid1851
nematognath1890
silurid1891
1835 W. Kirby On Power of God in Creation of Animals I. ii. 121 A species of fish..belonging to a genus of the family of the Siluridans.
1835 W. Kirby On Power of God in Creation of Animals I. ii. 123 The serrated bone, or first ray of the pectoral fin,..is found in other Siluridans.
siˈluride adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Siluriformes (catfish) > [adjective] > belonging to family Siluridae
siluroid1849
siluride1863
silurine1891
1863 H. W. Bates Naturalist on River Amazons II. ii. 90 A good supply of Jandía, a handsome spotted Siluride fish.
siˈlurine adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Siluriformes (catfish) > [adjective] > belonging to family Siluridae
siluroid1849
siluride1863
silurine1891
1891 Cent. Dict. Silurine.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online June 2019).

Silurianadj.n.1

Brit. /sʌɪˈl(j)ʊərɪən/, /sᵻˈl(j)ʊərɪən/, /sʌɪˈljɔːrɪən/, /sᵻˈljɔːrɪən/, U.S. /səˈlʊriən/, /saɪˈlʊriən/
Etymology: < Latin Silures, an ancient British tribe which inhabited the south-eastern part of Wales.
1. Of or belonging to the ancient Silures, or to the district inhabited by them.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of Europe > native or inhabitant of ancient or medieval Europe > other inhabitants of ancient Europe > [adjective]
Massilian1614
Silurian1708
West German1849
Massaliot1856
1708 J. Philips Cyder ii. 89 To the utmost Bounds of this Wide Universe, Silurian Cyder borne shall please all Tasts.
1740 W. Somervile Hobbinol iii. 97 Others apart, in the cool Shade retir'd, Silurian Cyder quaff.
1757 J. Dyer Fleece i. 30 If your Sheep are of Silurian breed.
1839 R. I. Murchison Silurian Syst. p. xxxi We have no precise definition of the geographical limits of the Silurian kingdom.
1908 Outlook 14 Nov. 656/1 The hero who is sometimes called a ‘British’, and sometimes a ‘Silurian’ chief.
2.
a. Geology. Originally: the name given to the system or series of Palæozoic rocks lying immediately below the Devonian or Old Red Sandstone; of or belonging to this formation, or to the period when it was deposited. Now: the name is restricted to a system of Lower Palæozoic rocks underlying the Devonian and overlying the Ordovician, so corresponding to the Upper Silurian as originally defined. As originally defined by Murchison the Silurian included what was subsequently called the Ordovician, and this use continued for a time after the introduction of the Ordovician in 1879.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > age or period > [adjective] > primary or Palaeozoic > Silurian
transition1800
Silurian1835
Gotlandian1909
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > age or period > stratigraphic units > [adjective] > primary or Palaeozoic > Silurian
Silurian1835
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > age or period > [noun] > primary or Palaeozoic > Silurian
Silurian1879
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > age or period > stratigraphic units > [noun] > primary or Palaeozoic > Silurian
Silurian1879
1835 Murchison in London & Edinb. Philos. Mag. July 48 I venture to suggest that..the term ‘Silurian System’ should be adopted as expressive of the deposits which lie between the old red sandstone and the slaty rocks of Wales.
1842 H. Miller Old Red Sandstone (ed. 2) xiii. 275 The animal organisms of the newer Silurian strata form essentially different groups from those of the Lower Old Red Sandstone.
1851 G. F. Richardson Geol. (1855) viii. 208 The seas of the silurian and oolitic periods.
1876 Nature 19 Oct. 557/2 The classification of the Silurian, Devonian, and Permo-Triassic (Poikilitic) formations.
1879 C. Lapworth in Geol. Mag. VI. 3 The Lyell-Hicks division of Cambrian and Lower Silurian are as rightly entitled to the rank of separate systems as the true or Upper Silurian itself.
1879 C. Lapworth in Geol. Mag. VI. 9 The general restriction of the title Silurian to the strata that are comprehended between the line marking the base of the Lower Llandovery, and that denoting the commencement of the brackish or fresh-water conditions of the typical Old Red Sandstone, appears..inevitable.
1879 C. Lapworth in Geol. Mag. VI. 15 The ideas of the extreme party which claims all the Lower Palæozoics for the Silurian are fated soon to become wholly extinct.
1902 A. J. Jukes-Browne Student's Handbk. Stratigr. Geol. vii. 64 Murchison supposed that Sedgwick's Cambrian lay entirely below his Silurian, but when the fossils were collected and described, it was found that the Upper Cambrian was equivalent to the Lower Silurian... Group after group of Sedgwick's Cambrian was gradually absorbed into it [sc. the Lower Silurian], till the Lower Silurian came to include the whole of the rocks (below the Upper Silurian) in which any fossils had been found.
1903 A. Geikie Text-bk. Geol. (ed. 4) II. 934 Murchison's ‘Lower Silurian’ has by many writers been replaced by ‘Ordovician’, and his ‘Upper Silurian’ is in a similar manner being ousted by some other term... I shall continue to employ Murchison's terminology.
1912 Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. 68 332 In fixing the boundary between the Ordovician and the Silurian the peculiar characters and mode of weathering of the Lower Birkhill rocks have been found useful.
1931 J. W. Gregory & B. H. Barrett Gen. Stratigr. v. 77 The Silurian is now usually restricted to the strata between the Ordovician and Devonian.
1955 G. G. Woodford tr. M. Gignoux Stratigr. Geol. iii. 99 At the present time, many British geologists prefer not to use the term Gothlandian, which they deem not precise enough. They replace it by that of Silurian, used in a restricted sense.
1964 Rep. Internat. Geol. Congr. XXI Sess., 1960 XXVIII. 254 The Commission transmits to the Congress the following proposals on the terminology of the Silurian and Ordovician... 1) Two systems are to be recognized between the Cambrian and Devonian systems. 2) The name of the lower shall be Ordovician. 3) The name of the upper shall be Silurian.
1971 Jrnl. Geol. Soc. 127 106 When the standard classification of the correlation charts is considered in relationship to local successions the Silurian of the British Isles is found to be something of a monument to stratigraphical chaos.
b. As n. in plural. Silurian strata.
ΚΠ
1842 Penny Cycl. XXII. 13/2 Upper Silurians,..Lower Silurians.
1855 J. Phillips Man. Geol. 89 It [sc. gneiss] may be regarded as older than the silurians of that region.
1862 Chambers's Encycl. III. 541/1 The clay-slates of the Lower Silurians.
c. transferred, loosely designating a primitive age or period in the remote past.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > the past > historical period > [adjective] > of prehistoric periods
prolepticala1646
ante-historical1724
ante-historic1828
lacustrine1830
palaeotherian1831
prehistoric1832
Siwalik1836
megalithic1839
subarctic1846
meta-historical1854
prehistorical1854
lithic1862
protolithic1863
Archaeolithic1865
lacustrian1865
Palaeolithic1865
Mesolithic1866
Hallstatt1869
microlithic1872
palaeocosmic1875
Silurian1875
Miolithic1877
archilithic1879
eneolithic1886
palaeolithical1887
Solutrian1888
eolithic1890
Hallstattian1893
Chellean1894
pre-Palaeolithic1894
palaeolithoid1896
protolithic1896
Siculian1896
Siculic1896
Azilian1899
Acheulean1901
Villanova1901
chalcolithic1902
sub-Neolithic1903
Mesvinian1905
protoneolithic1906
Sicanian1909
Siculan1909
Aurignacian1914
Getulian1914
Châtelperron1915
epipalaeolithic1921
Creswellian1926
Capsian1928
Villanovan1928
Chelleo-Acheulean1930
Abbevillian1934
Swiderian1936
dryas1946
Shamvaian1947
Mazovian1965
Devensian1968
talayotic1974
1875 ‘M. Twain’ in Atlantic Monthly Aug. 193/2 In the Old Oölitic Silurian Period, just a million years ago next November.
1962 E. Snow Other Side of River (1963) xvi. 116 When I last saw Mao..China was weak, disunited and bankrupt. Since then China's Silurian age had ended. ‘China has stood up,’ as Mao proclaimed.
3. Also with lower-case initial.
a. Of, pertaining to, or designating a paper showing two or more contrasting colours on its surface; usually applied to stationery of a blue-grey appearance. Also, of the colour itself.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > blue or blueness > [adjective] > greyish blue
perse-blue1414
plunket1415
persec1425
grey-blue1741
iron blue?1758
smoke-blue1807
gunpowder1817
slaty-blue1854
Silurian1892
powder-blue-grey1952
society > communication > writing > writing materials > material to write on > paper > [adjective] > other types of paper
sinking1575
whitey-brown1786
metallic1799
gilt-edge1807
legal1815
tindery1886
squared1887
Silurian1892
stamped1907
1892 Wholesale Catal. Stationery & Stationers' Sundries (J. Heywood Co.) 22 Scotch Tinted Writings... Silurian—5 8.
1930 W. de la Mare On the Edge 28 The drawer beneath contained only envelopes and letter paper—Montrésor, in large pale-blue letters on a ‘Silurian’ background.
1937 E. J. Labarre Dict. Paper 153/1 Granite paper, also termed French grey, Ingres, Silurian grey, Mottled, Ingrain, is paper which clearly shows two or more contrasting colours of pulp on its surface.
1964 M. Clive Day of Reckoning viii. 73 Their correspondents wrote on double sheets of grey ‘silurian’ paper which looked hairy but was slippery.
b. As n., paper or stationery of this type.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > writing > writing materials > material to write on > paper > [noun] > other types of paper
writing paper1610
gilt paper1645
chancery-double1712
stamp paper1765
satin paper1776
cardstock1840
tablet paper1876
quadrille1884
P.O.P.1895
copy-paper1902
Silurian1942
sticky note1978
1942 H. A. Maddox Dict. Stationery (ed. 2) 100 Silurian, a tinted writing paper formerly much in favour for note and envelopes. Characterised by a blue-grey mottled colour which gave rise to the occasional term, French Granite.
1954 Paper Terminol. (Spalding & Hodge) 54 Silurian, coloured paper, usually a writing or cover, produced by introducing into the coloured pulp, fibres dyed a deeper shade.
1960 D. Holman-Hunt My Grandmothers & I i. 24 I..sucked the pen and began to scratch at the grey silurian.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1910; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.21835adj.n.11708
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