单词 | snowball |
释义 | snowballn. 1. a. A ball of snow, esp. one made of a size convenient for throwing by hand. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > precipitation or atmospheric moisture > snow > [noun] > a ball of snow snowballc1400 the world > movement > impelling or driving > projecting through space or throwing > [noun] > throwing missiles > a projectile > snowball snowballc1400 c1400 Brut cxcviii Meny of þe citee..caste oppon him meny snoweballes, and meny oþer reproues dede him. 1483 Cath. Angl. 346/2 Snayballe, floccus, nivenodium. 1533 J. Heywood Play of Wether sig. Diii All my pleasure is in..makynge of snow ballys and throwyng the same. 1602 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor iii. v. 21 My belly is as cold as if I had swallowed snow-balles. 1657 J. Trapp Comm. Job xxxviii. 22 We see..what paines they take to rake and scrape together snow to make a Snow-ball. 1677 A. Horneck Great Law of Consideration iv. 149 As wise an act, as to hope to be warm by..surrounding thy self with snow-balls. 1768 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued II. i. 20 If I take a snow ball into my hand I shall be satisfied of its coldness by my sensation. 1789 E. Darwin Bot. Garden: Pt. II ii. 25 (note) If a piece of camphor be immersed in a snow-ball. 1816 Ld. Byron Swiss Jrnl. in Wks. 180/2 I made a snowball and pelted Hobhouse with it. 1853 E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. (1856) xxx. 258 By-and-by the sludge which we passed through..became pancakes and snow-balls. 1878 T. H. Huxley Physiography (ed. 2) 158 When a schoolboy makes a snowball, he squeezes a handful or two of light snow into a hard compact lump. b. In allusive use (common in the 17th cent.). a snowball's chance in hell: no chance at all; cf. hell n. and int. Phrases 6i. Also elliptical as a snowball's chance. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > increase in quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > progressive increase > typical example of snowball1612 the mind > mental capacity > expectation > despair, hopelessness > expression of despair [phrase] not a hope (in hell)1923 a snowball's chance in hell1931 a snowball's chance1934 (a) (b)1622 F. Bacon Hist. Raigne Henry VII 33 The Rebels tooke their way towards Yorke... But their Snow-ball did not gather as it went.1645 E. Pagitt Heresiogr. 3 Before this snow-ball grew greater by rolling, Count Mansfield raiseth Forces.1649 J. Milton Εικονοκλαστης xix. 170 Such a Snowball hee might easily gather by rowling through those cold and dark provinces of ignorance and leudness.(c)1931 Amer. Speech 6 435 As much chance as a snowball in hell.1934 Esquire Sept. 27 He wouldn't have a snowball's chance with you.1961 K. Vonnegut Sirens of Titan (1962) v. 129 The Army of Mars didn't have the chance of a snowball in hell.1966 J. Porter Sour Cream vii. 94 One telephone call from Melkin..and Babak wouldn't have a snowball's chance in hell.1977 Amer. Machinist 1 June 27 There is not a snowball's chance in Haiti of making the deadline on an across-the-board basis.1979 A. Hailey Overload (new ed.) i. i. 4 ‘Told 'em there wasn't a snowball's chance,’ a woman assistant dispatcher called over.1612 J. Webster White Divel sig. Hv Your good heart gathers like a snow-ball, Now your affection's cold. 1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage 519 They passed through Fraunce, Germanie, Hungarie, their company (like a snow~ball) encreasing as they went. 1674 Govt. Tongue vi. 75 For reports we know like snow balls gather still the farther they roule. 1740 S. Richardson Pamela II. 181 For they are like a Snow-ball, and intend to gather Company as they go. 1818 Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 33 610 His army, increasing like a snowball. 1845 R. Ford Hand-bk. Travellers in Spain I. i. 43 The caravan, like a snow-ball, increases in bulk as it rolls on. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > discourtesy > be discourteous [verb (intransitive)] > not be affable to make oneself strange1390 to make (it) strangec1405 to make (it) strange1598 to wait one's distance1600 to wait one's distance1642 starch1698 prim1721 to cast snowballs1725 to put on the stranger1809 to show the cold shoulder1816 stiffen1864 to play hard to get1929 1725 A. Ramsay Gentle Shepherd iv. i. 58 I trow sae,—Lasses will come to at last, Tho' for a While they maun their Snaw-baws cast. 1821 W. Liddle Poems 236 The lasses a' their snaw-baws cast, For fear we should betray. d. The pastime of snow-balling. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > children's game > other children's games > [noun] > snowballing snowball1709 snowballing1861 1709 Brit. Apollo 30 Sept.–5 Oct. A Game at Snow-ball. e. transferred. A scheme or project that relies for its growth on a snowball effect (see quots.). ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > planning > [noun] > a plan > that relies for its growth on snowball effect snowball1892 1892 Whitehall Rev. 17 Sept. 7/1 The system of ‘Snowballs’ is multiplication at a very rapid rate, each giver being obliged to bind himself to find a certain number of others who will not only give, but bind themselves each to find an equal number of contributors on the same terms. 1923 H. C. Bailey Mr. Fortune's Pract. v. 141 It's just like a snowball... When you want subscriptions and have a snowball where every one has to get some one else to subscribe. 1927 E. F. Benson Lucia in London iii. 70 Will she just pick up acquaintances, and pick up more from them, like one of those charity snowballs? f. In bingo, etc.: a cash prize which accumulates through successive games until it is won. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > bingo or lotto > [noun] > type of prize snowball1949 1949 S. P. Llewellyn Troopships 5 Last house... May I remind you, gentlemen, that the snowball is now worth over fourteen pounds? 1960 Guardian 2 Dec. 23/5 The British Legion..club..was more or less built on Bingo... The crowds, drawn by a ‘snowball’ on a lucky number which had reached £16, had been growing..too large. 1971 A. Ross Huddersfield Job 129 The snowball—a sort of continuing competition in which the cash prizes, if not won, are carried forward to swell next week's total. 1976 Evening Post (Nottingham) 15 Dec. 13/2 Tote Baseball Nos. 20 & 13 & 6 Three winners. Snowball not won. 2. a. Cookery. One or other of various dishes or confections intended to resemble a ball of snow in appearance. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > confections or sweetmeats > [noun] > other confections or sweet dishes pionade1302 spinee1381 pokerouncea1450 strawberry cream1523 pannag1540 alkermes1547 sugar-bread1587 snow1597 flammick1600 Norfolk fool1623 fool1653 chocolate cream1702 meringue1706 steeple cream1747 trifle1755 snowball1769 sweet bread1777 marrangle1809 meteor1820 mimpins1820 Nesselrode1835 meringué1845 Swiss cream1845 turban1846 coconut cream1847 panforte1865 yokan1875 bombe1892 Eton mess1896 meringue Chantilly1901 streusel1909 rocky road1920 ringocandy1922 stem ginger1922 dulce de leche1923 kissel1924 some-more1925 cream-crowdie1929 Pavlova cake1929 s'more1934 cranachan1946 sugar-on-snow1947 calavera1948 suji halwa1955 vacherin1960 zuppa inglese1961 brûlée1966 pav1966 delice1967 banoffi1974 macaroon1985 Nanaimo1991 macaron1993 1769 E. Raffald Experienced Eng. House-keeper x. 241 To make Snow Balls. Pare five large baking Apples, make a little good hot Paste, and roll your Apples in it,..make iceing for them..and ice them all over with it about a quarter of an Inch thick. 1854 ‘M. Harland’ Alone xxx A dozen loaves of cake, and ever so many snow-balls. 1877 Cassell's Dict. Cookery 887 Fry the snowballs till they are lightly set. 1941 J. Smiley Hash House Lingo 51 Snowball, dip of vanilla ice cream. b. U.S., Caribbean, and Bermudian English. Shaved or chipped ice flavoured with (brightly-coloured) syrup; (as count noun) a portion of this.ⓘ ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > confections or sweetmeats > ices > [noun] > water-ice water-ice1789 snowball1894 shave ice1953 snow-cone1969 1894 San Antonio (Texas) Daily Light 17 Aug. A dozen children..each ponderously sucking a snowball. 1904 Penny Cuts (Trinidad) 25 June in L. Winer Dict. Eng./Creole Trinidad & Tobago 831/2 Fry salt fish and snow ball. 1952 Sunday Royal Gaz. (Bermuda) 15 June 12/3 In those days the snowballs cost only a penny—big ones were 3d. 1953 H. P. Morrison in Caribbean Anthol. Short Stories 137 Customers of every age milled round to buy ‘snow-ball’—cool crushed ice in cheap glass tumblers with red, yellow or even green syrup oozing slowly through the crystalline mass. 1997 Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 8 Sept. a11/1 The community gathered to buy snowball from the cartman. 2006 Atlanta Jrnl.-Constit. (Nexis) 26 July 1 b From this window, the 26-year-old Katrina evacuee dispenses genuine New Orleans snowballs: snowflake-thin ice saturated in candy-flavored syrup and topped with condensed milk. c. One of various cocktails (see quots.). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > distilled drink > cocktail > [noun] > other cocktails balderdash1611 twist1699 Coke-upon-Littleton1740 julep1787 camphor julep1788 switchel1790 sling1792 mint sling1804 mint julep1809 swizzle1813 smash1850 rattlesnake1862 sour1862 Collins1865 John Collins1865 split1882 rickey1893 Picon punch1900 stinger1901 Bronx1906 Jack Rose1912 Pimm's1912 orange blossom1919 Americano1928 Merry Widow1930 snowball1930 atomic cocktail1941 Sazarac cocktail1941 grasshopper1949 Bellini1955 saketini1959 wallbanger1970 caipirinha1973 Long Island ice tea1978 Alabama slammer1980 Long Island iced tea1981 1930 Savoy Cocktail Bk. 150 Snowball Cocktail. 1/ 6 Crème de Violette. 1/ 6 White Crème de Menthe. 1/ 6 Anisette. 1/ 6 Sweet Cream. 1/ 3 Dry Gin. 1963 D. A. Embury Fine Art of Mixing Drinks (ed. 2) 289 Snow Ball. A Silver Fizz with whisky in place of the gin and ginger ale in place of the charged water. 1966 J. Doxat Booth's Handbk. Cocktails & Mixed Drinks xiv. 145 Snowball. Ice cube in tall glass. Generous measure of Advocaat; top with Fizzy Lemonade; decorate with slice of Lemon. 1972 A. Draper Death Penalty ii. 16 Ben ordered the drinks—a snowball for Jeannie and whisky mac for himself. 1979 R. Barnard Posthumous Papers xvii. 158 She ordered a snowball... ‘I'm not used to coming into a pub on my own.’ 3. slang or jocular. (See quots.) ΘΚΠ the world > people > ethnicities > division of mankind by physical characteristics > black person > [noun] AfriceOE MoorOE EthiopOE blomana1225 Ethiopiana1325 blue mana1387 Moriana1387 black mana1398 blackamoor1525 black Morian1526 black boy1530 molen1538 Nigro1548 Nigrite1554 Negro1555 neger1568 nigger1577 blackfellow1598 Kaffir1607 black1614 thick-lipsa1616 Hubsheea1627 black African1633 blackface1704 sambo1704 Cuffee1713 Nigritian1738 fellow1753 Cuff1755 blacky1759 mungo1768 Quashie1774 darkie?1775 snowball1785 blue skin1788 Moriscan1794 sooterkin1821 nigc1832 tar-brush1835–40 Jim Crow1838 sooty1838 mokec1847 dinge1848 monkey1849 Siddi1849 dark1853 nigre1853 Negroid1860 kink1865 Sam1867 Rastus1882 schvartze1886 race man1896 possum1900 shine1908 jigaboo1909 smoke1913 golliwog1916 jazzbo1918 boogie1923 jig1924 melanoderm1924 spade1928 jit1931 Zulu1931 eight ball1932 Afro1942 nigra1944 spook1945 munt1948 Tom1956 boot1957 soul brother1957 nig-nog1959 member1962 pork chop1963 splib1964 blood1965 non-voter1966 moolinyan1967 Oreo1968 boogaloo1972 pongo1972 moolie1988 1785 F. Grose Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue Snowball, a jeering appellation for a negroe. 1819 T. Moore Tom Crib's Memorial to Congress (ed. 3) 45 (note) Lily-whites (or Snow-balls), Negroes. 1842 S. Lover Handy Andy xlvi The sweep was passing by, and I called him ‘snow-ball’. 4. a. The Guelder rose, Viburnum opulus, or one of its clusters of white flowers. Also used for other species of Viburnum. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > shrubs > viburnums or guelder rose and allies > [noun] bendwithc1440 opier1548 opulus1548 ople1551 dwarf plane tree1578 water elder1578 whitten1578 guelder rose1597 rose elder1597 wayfaring man's tree1597 wayfaring tree1597 opiet1601 cotton tree1633 viorne1637 mealy tree1640 laurustinus1664 stinking tree1681 black haw1688 laurel-thyme1693 laurustine1693 viburnum1731 wayfaring shrub1731 May rose1753 pembina1760 snowball tree1760 mealtree1785 stink-tree1795 cherry-wood1821 snowball1828 sloe1846 withe-rod1846 lithy-tree1866 nannyberry1867 king's crown1879 stag bush1884 snowball bush1931 1828 W. Carr Dial. Craven (ed. 2) Snow-ball, the Guelder Rose. 1838 R. Southey Eng. Eclogues (rev. ed.) in Poet. Wks. III. 4 In spring the lilac and the snow-ball flower. 1850 Beck's Florist July 171 Here's snowballs, and waxberries, and mock-orange flowers, and lilacs. 1880 C. E. Bessey Bot. 518 Many species [of Caprifoliaceæ] are ornamental—e.g...Viburnum, the Snowball. 1948 W. Arnold-Forster Shrubs for Milder Counties iv. 184 V. Opulus sterile, the familiar ‘Snowball’, is..quite good as a hedge. b. U.S. (See quots.) ΚΠ 1834 J. J. Audubon Ornithol. Biogr. II. 121 The Swamp Snowball, Hydrangea quercifolia,..found on the broken sandy banks bordering small watercourses. 1902 Webster's Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Suppl. Wild snowball.., the New Jersey tea (Ceanothus Americanus), so called from its clusters of small white flowers. 1909 Cent. Dict. Suppl. Little snowball, the button-bush, Cephalanthus occidentalis. Compounds C1. Miscellaneous, as snowball chrysanthemum, snowball cocktail, snowball fight, snowball fritters, snowball-like adv., snowball vendor, snowball war. ΚΠ 1662 H. Hibbert Syntagma Theologicum 188 Fame (snow-ball like) crescit eundo. 1877 Cassell's Dict. Cookery 887 Snowball Fritters. 1890 J. D. Champlin & A. E. Bostwick Young Folks' Cycl. Games & Sports 660/1 Snowball fights, contests between two parties armed with snowballs. 1899 Westm. Gaz. 6 Jan. 4/1 Giant snowball chrysanthemums. 1901 ‘I. Maclaren’ Young Barbarians iv As the snowball war was a serious affair. 1930Snowball cocktail [see sense 2c]. 1948 Sun (Baltimore) 27 Aug. 24/3 Snowball vendors did a rush business. C2. So West Frisian sniebalbeam, Dutch sneeuwbalboom, Swedish snöbollsbuske, -träd. snowball bush n. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > shrubs > viburnums or guelder rose and allies > [noun] bendwithc1440 opier1548 opulus1548 ople1551 dwarf plane tree1578 water elder1578 whitten1578 guelder rose1597 rose elder1597 wayfaring man's tree1597 wayfaring tree1597 opiet1601 cotton tree1633 viorne1637 mealy tree1640 laurustinus1664 stinking tree1681 black haw1688 laurel-thyme1693 laurustine1693 viburnum1731 wayfaring shrub1731 May rose1753 pembina1760 snowball tree1760 mealtree1785 stink-tree1795 cherry-wood1821 snowball1828 sloe1846 withe-rod1846 lithy-tree1866 nannyberry1867 king's crown1879 stag bush1884 snowball bush1931 1931 W. N. Clute Common Names Plants 48 Guelder rose, a common name of the snow-ball bush.., is said to be properly elder rose. 1979 Seymour (Indiana) Daily Tribune 19 May 1/3 The ‘snowball bush’ in his side yard is in full bloom. snowball tree n. the Guelder rose (cf. 4a). ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > shrubs > viburnums or guelder rose and allies > [noun] bendwithc1440 opier1548 opulus1548 ople1551 dwarf plane tree1578 water elder1578 whitten1578 guelder rose1597 rose elder1597 wayfaring man's tree1597 wayfaring tree1597 opiet1601 cotton tree1633 viorne1637 mealy tree1640 laurustinus1664 stinking tree1681 black haw1688 laurel-thyme1693 laurustine1693 viburnum1731 wayfaring shrub1731 May rose1753 pembina1760 snowball tree1760 mealtree1785 stink-tree1795 cherry-wood1821 snowball1828 sloe1846 withe-rod1846 lithy-tree1866 nannyberry1867 king's crown1879 stag bush1884 snowball bush1931 1760 J. Lee Introd. Bot. App. 317 Snowball tree, Viburnum. 1783 Encycl. Brit. X. 8713/2 This tree when in bloom exhibits a singularly fine appearance; the flowers..are collected numerously into large globular umbels round like a ball; hence, it is sometimes called snowball-trees. 1856 A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. (1860) 168 The well-known Snow-ball Tree..is a cultivated state, with the whole cyme turned into large sterile flowers. 1902 E. T. Cook Trees & Shrubs for Eng. Gardens 443 Snowball tree..is too well known to need description. 1973 A. Bonar Shrubs & Decorative Trees iii. 86 The snowball tree..is more attractive florally. C3. Used to denote increase by a kind of geometrical progression, as snowball contribution, snowball effect, snowball letter, snowball prize, snowball system, etc. ΚΠ 1897 Westm. Gaz. 8 Apr. 7/2 An anonymous ‘snowball’ contribution has been started. 1899 Westm. Gaz. 28 Jan. 6/1 The scheme of old-age pensions on the snowball system... They offer magnificent terms to any assurer who gets them ten other assurers,..and so on, like the rolling snowball. 1941 I. L. Idriess Great Boomerang xxxii. 251 It will not be the amount to be spent that will be considered, but the snowball effect of the resulting benefits. 1963 Daily Tel. 23 Jan. 20/8 A ‘snowball’ prize played for evening after evening at a bingo club is legal, provided the management gives the prize money. 1979 P. Niesewand Member of Club xviii. 142 Hundreds of families emigrate [from South Africa] every month... Each one has a snowball effect. Other families start thinking: should we leave also? This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online June 2022). snowballv. 1. a. intransitive. To form balls or masses of snow. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > precipitation or atmospheric moisture > snow > snow or fall (of snow) [verb (intransitive)] > from specific accumulation snowball1684 wreathe1861 1684 O. Heywood Autobiogr., Diaries, & Event Bks. (1883) III. 343 It fell a considerable snow... I..found it very dangerous way, for it snow-balled on my horses feet. b. figurative. To increase or grow like a snowball rolled across snow; to accumulate or gather momentum at an ever-increasing rate. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > move at specific rate [verb (intransitive)] > increase speed > at ever-increasing rate snowball1929 the world > relative properties > quantity > increase in quantity, amount, or degree > [verb (intransitive)] > progressively spiral1922 snowball1929 escalate1959 1929 E. M. Nicholson Study of Birds 39 Some flocks are freshly formed each day, and recruits can be watched joining the original members at intervals until it snowballs up to its full size. 1930 Times 25 Mar. 23/5 The debts continue to ‘snowball’ in alarming fashion. 1934 Sun (Baltimore) 9 Nov. 26/7 The [housing] program in Maryland is ‘snowballing’. 1967 R. Lehmann Swan in Evening iii. 104 The success of those classes delighted and amused her. How polyglot they became and how they snowballed. 1969 New Yorker 19 Apr. 94/2 When a man knows what to look for, his value snowballs. 1973 Lebende Sprachen 18 69/2 Management must appreciate the extra profit that snow~balls from making use of advanced techniques. 1976 Ilkeston Advertiser 10 Dec. 15/4 Anyone is welcome to join in at any time during the day. A coach will ferry people around the circuit and singers usually ‘snowball’ throughout the day. 2. transitive. To throw a snowball at (a person); to pelt with snowballs. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impelling or driving > projecting through space or throwing > throw [verb (transitive)] > a missile or projectile > snowballs snowball1850 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > strike with specific thing [verb (transitive)] > strike with an object > with something thrown > with snowballs snowball1850 1850 L. Sawyer Way Sketches (1926) iii. 46 Our men amused themselves with snowballing each other. 1854 B. P. Shillaber Life & Sayings Mrs. Partington 257 He had snowballed the cattle into a frenzy. 1855 in H. Clarke New Dict. Eng. Lang. 1889 Pall Mall Gaz. 26 Feb. 2/3 The..Opposition..could do nothing but snowball the other side with Pigott all the evening. 1899 Westm. Gaz. 24 Apr. 10/1 To hear the old gentleman tell how he had actually snowballed Keats. 3. intransitive. To throw snowballs. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impelling or driving > projecting through space or throwing > throw [verb (intransitive)] > throw a missile > snowballs snowball1852 1852 F. A. Buck Let. 18 Dec. in Yankee Trader in Gold Rush (1930) 112 At first we snow-balled, the whole town engaging in the sport like school boys. 1860 J. E. Worcester Dict. Eng. Lang. 1866 C. M. Yonge Dove in Eagle's Nest ix Christina..had been watching them snowballing in the castle court. Derivatives ˈsnowˌballing n. the action or pastime of making and throwing snowballs; also figurative and adj. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > [adjective] > of or relating to increase in speed > at ever-increasing rate snowballing1861 the world > relative properties > quantity > increase in quantity, amount, or degree > [adjective] > increasing progressively feeding1641 rolling1719 snowballing1861 spiralling1944 escalatory1965 the world > movement > impelling or driving > projecting through space or throwing > [noun] > throwing missiles > snowballs ballingc1600 snowballing1861 society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > children's game > other children's games > [noun] > snowballing snowball1709 snowballing1861 the world > movement > rate of motion > [noun] > increasing rate of movement or progress > at ever-increasing rate snowballing1966 the world > relative properties > quantity > increase in quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > progressive increase mo and moOE crescendo1785 spiral1931 escalation1938 spiralling1944 snowballing1966 1861 F. A. Buck Let. 20 Jan. in Yankee Trader in Gold Rush (1930) 186 Christmas we had a nice lot of egg nog and cake and snow balling. 1870 T. B. Aldrich Story Bad Boy xii. 124 Snow-balling at school, skating on the mill-pond,..were sports no less exhilarating. 1887 H. Smart Cleverly Won iv. 28 They skated,..and at times even relaxed so far as to fall to snowballing. 1887 Times (Weekly ed.) 30 Dec. 10/1 The mobbing and snowballing of Mr. Gladstone's party. 1941 Sun (Baltimore) 3 Nov. 14/1 The constantly snow-balling defense effort may cut into the everyday things we use in normal civilian existence. 1966 Word Study Dec. 4/1 Dubious meaning..starts a snow~balling that soon places the intended meaning beyond retrieval. 1971 Daily Tel. 29 Dec. 10 The snowballing success of Alan Ayckbourn's plays abroad..is a constant surprise to him. 1973 Times 14 Aug. 3/3 The ‘snowballing’ technique by which researchers were introduced to one drug taker; who introduced a second and so on. 1977 N.Y. Times 16 Jan. iv. 19/3 Mr. Kissinger's pet theory of ‘linkage’, a kind of snowballing of détente, had to be given up. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.c1400v.1684 |
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