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单词 siding
释义

sidingn.

Brit. /ˈsʌɪdɪŋ/, U.S. /ˈsaɪdɪŋ/
Forms: late Middle English sidyng, 1600s syding, 1600s–1800s sideing, 1600s– siding.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: side n.1, -ing suffix1; side v.1, -ing suffix1.
Etymology: Partly < side n.1 + -ing suffix1, and partly < side v.1 + -ing suffix1.
I. The action or an act of side v.1
1.
a. Perhaps: the repairing or forming of the sides of a ploughshare. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1432 Bailiff's Acct., Grantchester in Middle Eng. Dict. (at cited word) For sidyng of ij scharys there.
b. Perhaps: the action of providing a plot of land with visible edges. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > farm > farmland > [noun] > enclosed land or field > field systems > laying out fields
siding1610
1610 W. Folkingham Feudigraphia ii. ii. 49 Collaterage Actiue, as siding, furrowing,..impayling, immuring [etc.].
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. iii. 139/1 Collaterage, is Siding, Furrowing, Hedging, Girding, Bordering, Lying, Bounding, Extending between such places.
c. U.S. The action or process of trimming the sides of timber to give it the desired width. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > [noun] > dressing timber
slabbing1703
siding1824
1824 Mechanic's Mag. 15 May 150/1 Many a piece of valuable compass timber is spoiled for particular purposes, by taking off so much in the siding of the piece.
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 2175/1 Siding,..that part of the operation of forming or trimming ship's timbers, etc., which consists in giving them their correct breadths.
1879 Lumberman's Gaz. 5 Nov. The machinery first put in included a mulay and a siding mill.
2.
a. The action of taking sides in a conflict or debate; one's allegiance or loyalty in a dispute; partisanship, factionalism.Common in the 17th cent.
(a) Without construction. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > party or faction > [noun] > partisanship or factionalism
partiality1520
partaking1533
factiona1538
factiousness1572
siding1600
side-taking1626
parting1652
partying1681
party spirit1705
party1726
party feeling1796
partyism1831
partisanship1834
factionism1848
partisanism1850
factionalism1855
partisanry1889
1600 P. Holland tr. Livy Rom. Hist. i. 12 The desire of soveraigntie..perplexed their minds. But as yet, there was no banding nor siding from any one person in particular [L. necdum ad singulos..pervenerat].
1647 J. Trapp Comm. Epist. & Rev. (Heb. x. 25) It was then, it was afterwards, and is still in these siding and separating times.
a1657 G. Daniel Idyllia in Poems (1878) IV. iv. 57 For Sideing is a madnes, where the Hand Acts to a Somewhat we but vnderstand In the Relations.
1661 R. Baxter Last Work of Believer in Wks. (1846) 255 She was seriously religious without any taint of siding or faction.
1716 J. Perry State of Russia 154 They had been removed on account of their siding in the aforemention'd Rebellion.
1823 Christian's Pocket Mag. Nov. 613 The Wesleyan Missionaries have been thrown into prison, on account of their siding in the late rebellions of the slaves, in Demerara.
2007 D. E. Davis Tomorrow is Better 33 He knew their names, addresses, families, companies, and most of all, their siding in the war.
(b) With against or with.
ΚΠ
1600 P. Holland tr. Livy Rom. Hist. xxxiv. 864 Their siding with the Romane enemies [L. quod hostibus se Romanorum iunxissent] should not be laid to their charge.
1623 T. Powell Attourneys Acad. 18 Any other apparant cause of partiality, or siding with eyther party.
1662 J. Davies tr. A. Olearius Voy. & Trav. Ambassadors 421 By reason of his siding with the Muscovian Merchants.
1742 R. North & M. North Life F. North 219 Roe was a close Servant of Monmouth's: Which comes vile near siding against his Master and Benefactor, the Duke of York.
1749 tr. J. B. L. Crevier Rom. Hist. XIV. xlvii. 223 His aversion to Pompey..did not prevent his siding with him, as soon as he saw him at the head of the honester part.
1837 W. Wallace Contin. Mackintosh's Hist. Eng. VII. x. 365 His siding in council with lord Halifax.
1881 W. D. Howells Dr. Breen's Practice iv. 71 You're very kind!..And you'll forgive my siding against you?
1887 Pall Mall Gaz. 15 Jan. 6/1 The clear-headed parish priest, whose siding heart and soul with his people is to my mind proof conclusive that they have right on their side.
1908 Spink & Son's Numismatic Circ. Sept. 10859/1 He issued a medal of Duke John George I. of Saxony on his siding in war against the Emperor.
1972 Internat. Organization 26 iv. 696 Heath can afford himself the luxury of siding with Brandt.
2010 Afr. Today 57 ii. 16 The siding of ECOWAS leaders with one faction or the other unnecessarily escalated the conflict.
b. An instance of taking or forming sides; a side or faction in a conflict or debate.Common in the 17th cent.
(a) Without construction. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > party or faction > [noun] > partisanship or factionalism > instance of
siding1603
1603 P. Holland in tr. Plutarch Morals Ep. Ded. p. i The turbulent tempests and bloudy broiles of factious sidings.
1640 E. Reynolds Treat. Passions xxxviii. 491 Nor indeed is there any thing which had bred more Distempers in the Body of Learning, than Factions and Sidings.
a1643 J. Shute Sarah & Hagar (1649) 67 It..maketh a disorder amongst the Children and Servants, and it may be, a siding.
1698 J. Hancock Great Duty of Thankfulness 19 How happy were it could we at last see all factious Sidings both in Church and State, buried in perpetual Oblivion.
1717 R. Wodrow Corr. (1843) II. 323 What gatherings there have been, and sidings of great men mixing themselves in every case almost.
?1720 E. Moises Let. to Parishioners 32 The holy Apostle..considering the Nature and Tendency of Parties, and Sideings,..gives the Romans a strict Caution.
1854 Gentleman's Mag. Jan. 35/1 A people that..never had a sect or separated party among them, but abhorred all factions and sidings in religion.
(b) With against or with.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > support or encouragement > [noun] > supporting or encouraging > taking someone's part
stickling1589
siding1611
1611 J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. vi. xlviii. 265/2 Sometimes by allurements to assay to corrupt them; sometimes by a subtill siding with one faction of the Church, as he did with the Catholike against the Arrians.
1654 R. Whitlock Ζωοτομία 226 It shadeth the minde from the inconveniences of Quarrells, Disputes, Sidings with Opinions.
1684 R. Baxter Catholick Communion 10 All Christians must earnestly oppose Divisions, and Sects, and sidings with Strife and Envy.
1702 R. L'Estrange tr. Josephus Life in Wks. 994 For my Pressing the same thing over and over again, so often to them, look'd all this while like a Siding with the Enemy.
1743 J. White Let. to Gentleman dissenting from Church of Eng. 63 That a Wife should..endeavour to engage the Children and Servants of the Family in sidings against him.
1806 Belligerent Rights Asserted & Vindicated 57 It is sufficient that to benefit one side and to injure the other, is to take a part in the war, is a siding with one of the parties.
1852 R. Hildreth Hist. U.S.A. VI. xx. 49 Such an embargo..would have been not only a siding with Great Britain, but a gratuitous and unnecessary surrender to her of the whole carrying trade.
1901 E. A. Dix Old Bowen's Legacy xii. 186 In the final analysis it was rather a siding against her husband than a siding with her.
1952 N.Y. Times 6 Oct. 24/7 A vote against the same party is a siding with justice, a meting out of a just reward to the evildoers.
2013 J. Scourfield et al. Muslim Childhood vii. 153 There tended to be a siding with some elements of a Western liberal feminist equal opportunity agenda.
3. The action of moving or turning to the side; an instance of this. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > sideways movement or a sideways movement > [noun]
by-start1542
siding1646
crab1929
sidewinding1930
1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica 62 The variation of the compasse is..a deflexion and siding East and West from the true meridian. View more context for this quotation
1894 Daily News 7 July 6/6 When the bell rings to clear the course, there is again the ‘siding’ of the little boats to watch.
4. Chiefly English regional (northern). With away, up. The action of tidying up or clearing away; esp. the action of clearing away dishes, etc., after a meal. Cf. side v.1 11. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > [noun] > putting in order > putting in order or making tidy > an act of
redd1846
siding1848
tidy1909
1848 Liverpool Mercury 9 May 4/1 Mischiefs of ‘Siding Up.’—There are persons who are never easy unless they are putting your books and papers in order.
1853 E. C. Gaskell Ruth I. ii. 39 Whenever things are mislaid, I know it has been Miss Hilton's evening for siding away!
1870 We got Agate of Singing ii. 19 She's no time for ‘siding up’, as you call it.
1912 W. S. Houghton Hindle Wakes ii. 53 Come now, lass, be sharp with your siding away.
II. Concrete uses.
5.
a. The side of something. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > quality of having sides or being a side > [noun] > the side of anything
sideeOE
cheeka1400
coasta1400
wing?1482
flank1624
siding1627
broadside1632
1627 J. Speed Eng. Abridged xlii. §2 The forme thereof is Triangle, and differs not much in the Sidings.
b. Chiefly U.S. The boarding forming the outer sides of a building, weatherboarding; similar material forming the outer part of a boat's hull. Also as a count noun: a piece of this. Cf. side v.1 2.Formerly of timber, now typically of aluminium.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > roof > [noun] > bargeboards, etc.
wind-barge1603
waterbargea1613
barge-course1668
roll1810
valley-board1823
verge-board1827
siding1829
barge-board1833
verge1833
verge-boarding1835
parge-board1840
snowboard1876
hollow roll1904
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > wood in specific form > [noun] > board or plank > for building > weatherboard
weatherboard1539
clove-board1561
clapboard1641
cloe-board1666
siding1829
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > wood in specific form > [noun] > board or plank > for building > weatherboard > collectively
clapholt1477
clapboard1543
clove-board1561
siding1874
1829 J. F. Cooper Wept of Wish-ton-wish I. xvii. 246 [Dwellings] constructed of a firm frame-work, neatly covered with sidings of boards.
1866 Morning Star 31 Dec. The necessities of heat in the tropical department enforce the use of large quantities of wood for flooring, sidings [etc.].
1874 J. W. Long Amer. Wild-fowl Shooting iv. 89 Strips of weather-boarding, or ‘siding’, as it is called out West, may be made to take their place.
1937 Amer. Home Apr. 72/2 The new Cedargrain Asbestos Siding Shingles and Clapboards..can be applied over old shingles or siding.
2002 D. Corley Double Murder New Orleans xviii. 76 She had a round hull constructed of wooden strips of shiplap siding.
2012 Dwell Apr. 42/1 Instead of the clapboard siding or shingles common in the region, the architects devised a rain screen of Atlantic white cedar.
c. Australian and New Zealand. A slope or declivity; = sideling n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > slope > [noun]
hield943
lithOE
pendanta1387
bankc1390
slentc1400
shoring1567
rist1577
inclining1596
slope1626
side-slip1649
slant1655
sideling1802
hang1808
siding1852
counterslope1853
bajada1866
tilt1903
palaeoslope1957
1852 Hobarton Guardian (Austral.) 26 May 4/1 No culverts on the ‘sidings’ of the hills along which the roads passed.
1891 G. Chamier Philosopher Dick i. xiii. 360 He told him to mind the siding by the shoot.
1902 H. Lawson Joe Wilson in Prose Wks. (1946) 350 The dark box-scrub-covered ridges ended in steep ‘sidings’ coming down to the creek-bank.
1931 F. D. Davison Man-shy (1934) xii. 165 The scrubbers were grazing along an ironbark siding.
1975 N.Z. Jrnl. Agric. Sept. 27/2 The animal which grazes mostly on non-treated areas—such as gullies or sidings—..will not be fully protected.
2013 Waikato Times (Hamilton, N.Z.) (Nexis) 14 Sept. 5 There were some paddocks which had steep sidings or hill faces where the tractor couldn't go.
6. Shipbuilding and Boatbuilding. The width of a timber or other structural member, contrasted with its depth (see moulding n.1 4b) or length. Cf. siding dimension n. at Compounds, sided adj. 4.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > [noun] > planking > a plank > dimensions contrary to direction of moulding
siding1766
siding dimension1830
1766 W. Sutherland Ship-builder's Assistant (new ed.) v. 70 Articles respecting the Sheer-Plane...The Depth of the Keel, and its Siding, or Breadth at Midships.
1797 Encycl. Brit. XVII. 399/2 Set off in the half-breadth plan the siding of the middle and after fashion-piece, which may be 13 inches each.
1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding iv. 72 The body post, while retaining a very large siding, has a comparatively small moulding.
1874 S. J. P. Thearle Naval Archit. (new ed.) I. 10 The logs should be about 14 or 16 inches siding.
1987 P. G. Goodwin Constr. & Fitting Eng. Man of War i. 25/1 The hawse pieces were made from oak, sawn to the required siding and moulding.
2001 S. McGrail Boats of World iv. 150/1 Mortises averaged 43 mm broad (siding) and 80 mm deep.
7.
a. A short length of railway track connected to an adjacent through line (often at one end only), used for storing and shunting rolling stock and for enabling trains on the same line to pass each other; a similar line on a tramway.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > railway system or organization > [noun] > track > siding
siding1825
sideling1828
sidetrack1828
sideline1831
passing place1841
shunt line1904
lay-by1906
1825 N. Wood Pract. Treat. Railroads 299 BB1 is a siding or passing for the carriages going in opposite directions.
1849 F. B. Head Stokers & Pokers (1851) iv. 50 The carriages, after being unhooked,..are rapidly carried off into the sidings.
1850 Mechanics' Mag. Nov. 370 Beckers' self-acting siding-stop.
1893 Hampshire Advertiser (Southampton) 24 June 5/7 Whether the tramway siding situated in Commerical-road, opposite the Church, is intended for cars to stop on, or is it placed there for ornament.
1929 Financial Times 17 Dec. 4/7 South Lynn is to have additional sidings and goods shed accommodation.
1974 U. K. Le Guin Dispossessed (1975) viii.212 The train sat hour after hour on the siding between a scarred and dusty quarry and a shut-down mill.
1989 V. S. Pritchett Chekhov v.55 Another train, and from the siding he sees the boundless steppe.
2007 A. McDermott Hunt for Atlantis vi. 101 He saw the fleeing driver running towards a signal cabin near the end of the sidings.
b. An area at the side of a canal which allows vessels to pass each other or stop.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > water > body of water > channel of water > [noun] > navigable waterway > canal > passing-place
siding1852
turn-out1898
1852 Mechanics' Mag. July 4 Passing-places or sidings, to enable trains of boats going in opposite direction to meet and pass each other.
1883 L. L. Dillwyn Speech Parl. 19 July To increase the carrying capacity of the Canal..in deepening the channel, or by adding sidings.
1903 E. Childers Riddle of Sands xxvi. 289 A paved slipway led to the water here, and the canal broadened to a siding or back-water in which lay seven or eight more barges in tiers.
2005 Farmers Weekly (Nexis) 7 Jan. 1 Doing all sorts of jobs from farm work to snow ploughing for the Council, cutting canal sidings and repairing machinery.
c. Esp. in southern Africa: a scheduled stop on a railway line, typically unmanned and in open country, for farming produce to be loaded, passengers taken on board, etc. Frequently in the names of such stops.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > a journey > [noun] > break in a journey > stopping-place on a journey
gist?c1225
mansiona1382
baiting1477
station1578
mansion place1584
manzil1619
night stop1787
gite1798
outspan1821
halting-place1826
stopping-place1827
stepping-stone1849
waypoint1860
landing-place1861
stop-off1869
stop-over1881
siding1896
half-way1897
sit-down1898
pull-up1899
1896 Central Afr. Planter 16 Mar. (News Suppl.) 132/2 Besides the two termini, sidings can be put up wherever needed with a small shelter from the weather, and hand signals so that intending passengers may signal their presence.
1902 J. H. M. Abbott Tommy Cornstalk xv. 144 You will run past America and Jordaan Sidings—empty voids, where nothing but a station signboard notifies the fact that they have been stopping-places for trains in some other age.
1919 R. Y. Stormberg With Love from Gwenno 75 To-morrow I shall stand shivering at that old siding down the valley, waiting for the train to bear me away from this dear wretched old place.
1960 J. Cope Tame Ox 67 Voices were singing outside as she awoke, a gang of labourers loading bales of hides into a truck at the siding.
1996 Sunday Times of Zambia 16 June 1/3 Recently 23 people died after two trains collided at Mukwela siding.

Compounds

siding dimension n. Shipbuilding and Boatbuilding = sense 6.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > [noun] > planking > a plank > dimensions contrary to direction of moulding
siding1766
siding dimension1830
1830 P. Hedderwick Treat. Marine Archit. ii. i. 157 The hanging under the rabbet is equal to the siding; it should therefore be in depth equal to its siding dimension.
2013 W. L. Crothers Amer.-built Packets & Freighters 1850s xv. 199/1 In all beams the siding dimension was constant throughout the length of the beam.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

sidingadj.

Brit. /ˈsʌɪdɪŋ/, U.S. /ˈsaɪdɪŋ/
Forms: 1600s sideing, 1600s syding, 1600s 1800s– siding.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: side v.1, -ing suffix2, side n.1
Etymology: < side v.1 + -ing suffix2. In sense 1 perhaps directly < side n.1 + -ing suffix2.
1. Of a blow: directed towards or from the side; sidelong. rare.
ΚΠ
1602 A. Munday tr. 3rd Pt. Palmerin of Eng. lxi. f. 201 Nor did he deliuer any downe-right or siding blowes, but onely foynes and thrusts.
1876 Belfast News-Let. 6 Apr. 3/8 He put the helm hard aport, so that she might not give a direct, but a siding blow.
1932 Adams County (Corning, Iowa) Free Press 21 July 7/1 The bat slipped out of the batter's hands and struck young Williams a siding glance on the forehead.
2.
a. Characterized by faction, dissent, or the taking of sides; factious, partisan. Obsolete. rare.In early use with modifying word, as close-siding.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > party or faction > [adjective]
factious?1527
partakingc1547
sided1603
factionarya1616
sidingc1625
factional1629
partified1715
partisaning1788
partisan1805
c1625 J. Smith Hist. Bermudaes (1882) 246 It was againe discouered that much secret plottinges and close sideinge practices had bin contriued against him vnderhand.
1680 R. Baxter Moral Prognostication i. xciv. 22 An Opinionative, Modal, and Siding Religiousness, hath ever more Followers..than true Holiness.
b. That takes the side or part of a person or cause. Obsolete.In early use with modifying word, as strong-siding.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > support or encouragement > [adjective] > taking someone's part
siding1637
1637 J. Milton Comus 8 The vertuous mind, that ever walks attended By a strong siding champion Conscience.
1645 J. Milton Tetrachordon 68 There is yet to this our exposition, a stronger siding freind, then any can be an adversary.
1683 R. Baxter Dying Thoughts 256 I dare not call all that my sin which siding men of differing judgments on each side passionately call so.
1850 E. B. Browning tr. Æschylus Prometheus Bound (rev. ed.) in Poems (new ed.) I. 150 The antique Chronos and his siding hosts.
3. poetic. That forms an edge or border; bordering. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > edge, border, or margin > [adjective] > forming an edge or border
borderinga1676
skirtingc1735
siding1850
fringing1888
1850 E. B. Browning tr. Æschylus Prometheus Bound (rev. ed.) in Poems (new ed.) I. 165 Along the sands of the siding deep..he follows me.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1432adj.1602
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