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单词 slade
释义

sladen.1

Brit. /sleɪd/, U.S. /sleɪd/
Forms: Old English slead, sled, Old English–Middle English slæd, 1800s dialect slad ( sled); (Old English–Middle English dative Middle English– slade (Middle English sclade), Middle English–1500s Scottish slaid, 1500s slaide.
Etymology: Old English slæd (slead, sled) neuter, = Norwegian dialect slad neuter (also slade masculine), a slope, hollow; compare also Danish dialect slade a piece of level ground (16th cent. in Kalkar), German dialect (Westphalia) slade dell, ravine. The Old English nominative and accusative slæd is represented by the modern dialect form slad, current chiefly in western counties. The usual slade is from inflected forms, especially the dative singular.
A valley, dell, or dingle; an open space between banks or woods; a forest glade; a strip of greensward or of boggy land.The precise application of the word varies in different localities: see the Eng. Dial. Dict.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > marsh, bog, or swamp > [noun]
marsheOE
fenc888
sladec893
moorOE
mossOE
marshlandlOE
lay-fena1225
lay-mirea1225
moor-fenc1275
flosha1300
strother?a1300
marish1327
carrc1330
waterlanda1382
gaseync1400
quaba1425
paludec1425
mersec1440
sumpa1450
palus?1473
wash1483
morass1489
oozea1500
bog?a1513
danka1522
fell1538
soga1552
Camarine1576
gog1583
swale1584
sink1594
haga1600
mere1609
flata1616
swamp1624
pocosin1634
frogland1651
slash1652
poldera1669
savannah1671
pond-land1686
red bog1686
swang1691
slack1719
flowa1740
wetland1743
purgatory1760
curragh1780
squall1784
marais1793
vlei1793
muskeg1806
bog-pit1820
prairie1820
fenhood1834
pakihi1851
terai1852
sponge1856
takyr1864
boglet1869
sinkhole1885
grimpen1902
sphagnum bog1911
blanket bog1939
string bog1959
the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > valley > [noun]
deanc825
dalec893
sladec893
bachea1000
valley1297
vall?1611
droke1772
glen1843
nant1862
draw1864
laagte1868
the world > the earth > land > landscape > fertile land or place > land with vegetation > [noun] > clearing
sladec893
riddingOE
wood lay?c1225
wood lind?c1225
wood rise?c1225
laund1340
cockshoot1353
gladea1535
cock-glade1574
nether vert1598
cock-roada1613
opening1678
opening1743
patana1854
c893 tr. Orosius Hist. ii. iv. 76 Hio..beforan þæm cyninge farende wæs,..oð hio hiene gelædde on an micel slæd.
944 in Earle Land Charters 179 Andlang dic oð ðone weg þe scyt to fealuwes lea on þam slade.
956 in Earle Land Charters 192 Þonne on þæt slæd, þonne of ðan slæde [etc.].
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 14157 Þe niht heom to-delde ȝeond slades & ȝeon dunen.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 4282 He ferde..in-to ane muchele slæde [c1300 Otho slade]. & slahliche his folc hudde.
1390 J. Gower Confessio Amantis II. 93 Hou he clymbeth up the banckes And falleth into Slades depe.
a1400 Guy Warw. 3475 Wiþ strengþe þe helde þai vnder-nome, Wiþ strengþe þai wene þe slade ouer-go.
c1440 Pallad. on Husb. ix. 176 In conditis descende into the slade Hit may, and on that other side arise.
1470–85 T. Malory Morte d'Arthur vi. xiii. 203 Ther by in a slade he sawe four knyghtes houyng vnder an oke.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid xi. xi. 84 In dern sladis and mony scroggy slonk.
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions i. vi. 97 The Ethiopians..gather together into a long slade betwixte two hilles, a great deale of rubbeshe.
1606 J. Reynolds Dolarnys Primerose sig. Bv Thus as the medowes, forests and the feelds, In sumptuous tires, had deckt their daynty slades.
1649 W. Blith Eng. Improver xii. 71 If you consider that all your Common Fields, were never under Tillage neither, A great part Slades and Hade wayes, and a great part Meadow.
1700–1 R. Gough Hist. Myddle (1875) 37 You will finde it more unlevell with banks and deep slades, than any other low grounds in the Lordship.
1811 R. Willan in Archaeologia 17 158 Slade, a breadth of green-sward in plough'd land, or in plantations.
1855 P. J. Bailey Mystic 137 Lovers there she saw, arm-twining, in the wild wood's shadowy slade.
1899 A. Morrison To London Town 5 Over the slade they took their way, where the purple carpet was patterned with round hollows.
in extended use.a1300 Cursor Mundi 1258 Quen we war put o paradis vn-to þis wreched warld slade.1597 M. Drayton Englands Heroicall Epist. f. 3 When as the sunne hales towards the westerne slade.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

sladen.2

Brit. /sleɪd/, U.S. /sleɪd/
Forms: Also 1500s–1600s Scottish slaid.
Etymology: variant of slead n. or sled n.1
Now dialect.
A sledge.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > vehicles according to means of motion > vehicle moving on runners > [noun]
car1488
harrow15..
trail1570
sladea1585
slidec1692
carriole1761
carryall1797
trail-cart1803
jumper1823
toboggan1829
konaki1914
a1585 A. Montgomerie Flyting with Polwart (Tullibardine) 86 Thow cwmelie conductit thy termes on ane slaid.
1661 Reg. Privy Counc. Scotl. 3rd Ser. I. 44 [Indwellers in Restalrig..thrust the complainer's servants off his said land,..and with carts and] slaids [carried away the whole crop].
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 339/1 A Slade..and a Tumbrell..are things used by Carters and Husbandmen, for the carriage of Commodities from place to place.
1787 W. Marshall Provincialisms in Rural Econ. Norfolk II. 388 Slade, sledge.
1799 A. Young Gen. View Agric. County Lincoln 157 They load it on slades, and carry it for grassing to an eaten eddish.
a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) 306.
1882 G. F. Jackson Shropshire Word-bk. (at cited word) A sledge for carrying implements from one field to another.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

sladen.3

Brit. /sleɪd/, U.S. /sleɪd/
Etymology: Of obscure origin: perhaps related to slide v.
The sole of a plough.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > tools and implements > ploughing equipment > [noun] > plough > sole
sole1678
slade1867
sill1877
1867 Catal. Steam Cultivators (J. & F. Howard) 38 The wear of plough slades or soles, by sliding on the roads, is obviated [by the use of a wheeled sledge].
1867 Catal. Steam Cultivators (J. & F. Howard) 39 When a new breast is put on, a new slade should be put on also, or the plough will not stand level.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

Sladen.4

Brit. /sleɪd/, U.S. /sleɪd/
Etymology: < the name of Felix Slade (1788–1868), English art collector.
a. Used attributively to designate the School of Fine Art (founded 1871) at University College London and its members, and scholarships and professorships in fine art endowed by him at Oxford, Cambridge, and London.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > [adjective] > art school
Slade1869
1869 Proc. A.G.M. (U.C.L.) 13 At their Session on May 2nd the Council received notice of the bequest of £45,000 made by the late Mr Felix Slade, for the purpose of founding ‘three or more Professorships for promoting the study of Fine Arts, to be termed the Slade Professorships of Fine Arts..one..in..Oxford, another..in..Cambridge, and one more in the University College of London’.
1872 U.C.L. Cal., 1871–2 44 Slade Scholarships. Under the will of the late Mr Felix Slade, six Scholarships of £50 per annum each..have been founded in the College.
1885 R. Kipling Let. 18 Dec. in C. E. Carrington Rudyard Kipling (1955) iv. 71 Do you ever come to know anything about the Slade Art School and the students there—the female ones.
1925 E. A. T. W. Budge Mummy (ed. 2) p. vii In the year 1892, on the recommendation of J. H. Middleton, Slade Professor of Fine Art in the University of Cambridge, the Syndics..commissioned me to make a Catalogue.
1958 Observer 15 June 15/2 Joan Mitchell's rather beautiful painting..which has a sensitive, tight-lipped, almost Slade School quality.
1964 K. Clark Ruskin Today i. 11 In 1869 he [sc. John Ruskin] was appointed Slade Professor at Oxford.
1978 Ann. Rep. 1977–78 (U.C.L.) 19 The College acknowledges..the co-operation of the Fine Art Society Gallery.., which put on an exhibition of work by Slade artists.
b. absol. with the: the School of Fine Art itself.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > [noun] > art school or class
life class1842
art school1852
figure-training1871
Slade1890
1890 C. M. Yonge More Bywords 249 There are the art classes at the Slade, and the lectures I am down for.
1904 R. Fry Let. 22 June (1972) I. 222 You will..be as much disappointed, almost, as I am about the Slade. It is a very serious blow to my hopes... They have long ago realized that Waldstein was a failure as Slade Professor.
1928 R. Campbell Wayzgoose i. 10 And surely from the stir that this one made He might have been a student at the Slade.
1961 G. Spencer Stanley Spencer v. 102 His entry into the Slade proved to be a most far-reaching and valuable decision.
1980 I. Murdoch Nuns & Soldiers 201 Tim described the Slade and his early experiments in painting.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1986; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

sladev.1

Brit. /sleɪd/, U.S. /sleɪd/
Etymology: apparently related to slide v.
dialect. rare.
1. intransitive. To slide.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > progressive motion > specific manner of progressive motion > move progressively in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > slip or slide
slidderc897
slidea950
slitherc1200
slep?a1400
slithec1450
slivec1450
rutsel1481
slip1530
slipper1585
glibber1598
slur1617
glide1674
slather1809
scoot1838
sluther1854
slade1895
1895 P. H. Emerson Birds, Beasts, & Fishes Norfolk Broadland 186 They don't move their wings much—kind of slade along.
2. With down: (see quot. 1787).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > breaking up land > ploughing > plough (of person) [verb (intransitive)] > draw back mould
slade1787
1787 W. Marshall Provincialisms in Rural Econ. Norfolk II. 388 To Slade down, to draw back part of the mould into the interfurrow, with the plow dragging, or slading upon its side.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

sladev.2

Brit. /sleɪd/, U.S. /sleɪd/
Etymology: < slade n.2
dialect. rare.
transitive. To carry on a sledge.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > transport of goods in a vehicle > transport goods in vehicle [verb (transitive)] > on a sled or sledge
sled1718
sladea1825
sledge1864
a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) (at cited word) Heavy weights are easily sladed on level ground.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1c893n.2a1585n.31867n.41869v.11787v.2a1825
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