单词 | spent |
释义 | spentadj. I. In predicative uses. 1. a. Of material things: Expended, consumed, used up completely. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > [adjective] > devouring > devoured consumpta1398 forfrettenc1420 spentc1440 consumed1580 engulfed1590 exhausted1656 the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > using up, expending, or consuming > [adjective] > using up completely > used up completely spentc1440 spent1620 exhaust1621 exhausted1656 tired1766 run-out1795 used up1837 played-out1856 c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 468/2 Spent, expensus, dispensatus. 1450 in Hist. MSS Comm.: Rep. MSS Var. Coll. (1907) IV. 85 in Parl. Papers (Cd. 3218) LXIV. 1 The vitailes of oure seid Towne ben al moste spent and consumed. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry V f. xlviv Their vitaile was in maner all spent and newe thei coulde gette none. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 1 (1623) ii. v. 8 These Eyes, like Lampes, whose wasting Oyle is spent, Waxe dimme. View more context for this quotation 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. vii. 329 The..cause of our Arriuall here, was in regard of our fresh Water that was spent. 1664 H. Power Exper. Philos. i. 34 When the Liquor wherin they swim is almost spent and dried up. 1772 W. Jones Poems 24 His guards retir'd, his glimmering taper spent. 1837 J. G. Lockhart Mem. Life Scott I. xi. 417 When the lamp of his own genius was all but spent. 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. v. 611 Their powder and ball were spent. 1883 R. Browning Jocoseria 116 Our acquist Of life is spent. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > shipwreck > [adjective] > wrecked (of ship) spent1477 lost1769 the world > life > death > manner of death > [adjective] > from drowning drowneda1300 drenta1350 drencheda1400 ydreynt1426 drowning1488 ydrownd1603 spent1626 1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 102 Thus by this waye they [sc. the ships] were all lost and spent. 1626 Whitburn Par. Reg. 17 July John Burne of Sheels, being casten forth of a Cobble and spent in the sea. 2. Passed, gone; come to an end; over: a. Of time. Also far spent (far adv. 3c). ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > [adjective] formerc1160 apassedc1314 past1340 preterite1340 eldera1400 elderna1400 eldernlya1400 bygone1424 bypast1452 ancient1490 by-runa1522 bywenta1522 spent1528 departed1552 forepassed1557 preter1578 by-come1592 worn-out1594 preterlapsed1599 foregone1609 worna1616 elapseda1644 lapsed1702 surpassed1725 gone-by1758 back1808 old-time1865 by-flown1884 1528 S. Gardiner Let. 1 Apr. in N. Pocock Rec. of Reformation (1870) (modernized text) I. li. 127 The day being then spent. 1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. clxxxij The time is farre spente. 1597 W. Shakespeare Richard II ii. i. 155 His time is spent, our pilgrimage must be. View more context for this quotation 1611 Bible (King James) Rom. xiii. 12 The night is farre spent . View more context for this quotation 1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 87 January being now well spent, we departed from Constantinople. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost viii. 206 Day is yet not spent . View more context for this quotation 1724 J. Gay Captives i. i. 1 Is night near spent? 1849 R. Browning Poems (new ed.) 228 New year's day is over and spent. 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps i. xi. 79 The day was already far spent. b. Of things, material and immaterial. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > end or conclusion > [adjective] > come or brought to an end past1340 consummatea1500 determined1581 finished1582 overpassed1582 overspent1597 ended1598 spent1609 expired1631 terminate1639 winded1642 petered-out1971 1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets cvii. sig. G3 And thou in this shalt finde thy monument, When tyrants crests and tombs of brasse are spent . View more context for this quotation 1634 T. Herbert Relation Some Yeares Trauaile 7 The raine is spent. 1766 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. II. 237 Till both the immediate bloods of George Stiles, the paternal grandfather, are spent. 1804 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. III. 548 The lease..determined by the estate tail being spent. 3. a. Of persons or animals: Deprived of force or strength; tired or worn out by labour, exertion, hardship, etc.; completely exhausted. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > [adjective] wearyc825 asadc1306 ateyntc1325 attaintc1325 recrayed1340 methefula1350 for-wearya1375 matea1375 taintc1380 heavy1382 fortireda1400 methefula1400 afoundered?a1425 tewedc1440 travailedc1440 wearisomec1460 fatigate1471 defatigatec1487 tired1488 recreant1490 yolden?1507 fulyeit?a1513 traiked?a1513 tavert1535 wearied1538 fatigated1552 awearya1555 forwearied1562 overtired1567 spenta1568 done1575 awearied1577 stank1579 languishinga1586 bankrupt?1589 fordone1590 spent1591 overwearied1592 overworn1592 outworn1597 half-dead1601 back-broken1603 tiry1611 defatigated1612 dog-wearya1616 overweary1617 exhaust1621 worn-out1639 embossed1651 outspent1652 exhausted1667 beaten1681 bejaded1687 harassed1693 jaded1693 lassate1694 defeata1732 beat out1758 fagged1764 dog-tired1770 fessive1773 done-up1784 forjeskit1786 ramfeezled1786 done-over1789 fatigued1791 forfoughten1794 worn-up1812 dead1813 out-burnta1821 prostrate1820 dead beat1822 told out1822 bone-tireda1825 traiky1825 overfatigued1834 outwearied1837 done like (a) dinner1838 magged1839 used up1839 tuckered outc1840 drained1855 floored1857 weariful1862 wappered1868 bushed1870 bezzled1875 dead-beaten1875 down1885 tucked up1891 ready (or fit) to drop1892 buggered-up1893 ground-down1897 played1897 veal-bled1899 stove-up1901 trachled1910 ragged1912 beat up1914 done in1917 whacked1919 washy1922 pooped1928 shattered1930 punchy1932 shagged1932 shot1939 whipped1940 buggered1942 flaked (out)1942 fucked1949 sold-out1958 wiped1958 burnt out1959 wrung out1962 juiced1965 hanging1971 zonked1972 maxed1978 raddled1978 zoned1980 cream crackered1983 1591 H. Savile tr. Tacitus Ende of Nero: Fower Bks. Hist. i. 7 Galba was spent and feeble for age. 1647 H. Hexham Copious Eng. & Netherduytch Dict. (Hunting) The Hart, Stagg, Hinde, Buck, or Doe, is spent. 1692 J. Ray Wisdom of God (ed. 2) i. 128 Why the Hare when she is near spent makes up a Hill? 1713 J. Addison Cato iv. iv Now thou seest me Spent, overpower'd, despairing of success. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth V. 33 Many..quite spent by the fatigues of their flight, drop down into the sea. 1841 C. Dickens Old Curiosity Shop ii. xlv. 46 So very weak and spent, she felt. b. Const. with age, fatigue, toil, etc.Frequently from c1600 to 1730. ΚΠ 1603 R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 137 Ertogrul now spent with age, shortly after died. a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iii. vi. 60 Almost spent with hunger, I am falne in this offence. View more context for this quotation 1712 A. Pope tr. Statius First Bk. Thebais in Misc. Poems 37 On the cold Marble spent with Toil he lies. 1769 H. Brooke Fool of Quality IV. xvii. 38 Being spent with fatigue, I..sat me down to die. 1817 P. B. Shelley Laon & Cythna x. xxxvii. 230 They will sleep with luxury spent. 1867 F. Parkman Jesuits in N. Amer. iv. 26 Spent with travel, and weakened by precarious and unaccustomed fare. 4. a. Of things: Exhausted of the active or effective power or principle. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > using up, expending, or consuming > [adjective] > using up completely > used up completely > of a power or principle spent1596 1596 T. Lodge Margarite of Amer. sig. F4v Thy sap by course of time is blent, My sence by care and age is spent. 1633 T. James Strange Voy. 85 Our tooles were all so spent, that we could cut none. 1665 T. Manley tr. H. Grotius De Rebus Belgicis 437 For by the..long distance of place, the Shot was spent, before it came to the place, which it was intended to batter. 1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World iii. 36 At length when the Creatures strength is spent, they..knock it on the head. a1722 E. Lisle Observ. Husbandry (1757) 154 The malt is spent and wasted before it is laid in the grounds. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth I. 201 If this acquired velocity be quite spent. 1817 P. B. Shelley Laon & Cythna iv. xxx. 90 Tho' their lustre now were spent and faded. 1883 Manch. Examiner 28 Nov. 5/1 The vigour and ‘go’ infused into the party..would show symptoms of being spent. b. Nautical. Of the tide or a current. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > flow or flowing > tide > type of tide > [adjective] > slack spentc1595 slack1670 the world > the earth > water > flow or flowing > current > [adjective] > exhausted of active power spent1719 c1595 Capt. Wyatt in G. F. Warner Voy. R. Dudley to W. Indies (1899) 3 Our master thought it not good to turne downe the channell, the tide beinge soe far spent. 1616 J. Lane Contin. Squire's Tale vii. 359 Then in hee bore for land, till th' tyde was spent. 1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 166 When I had made something more than a League of Way by the help of this Current or Eddy, I found it was spent. 1743 J. Bulkeley & J. Cummins Voy. to South-seas 137 And the Tide being spent, we put into a small Cove, and made fast. II. In attributive uses. 5. a. Of persons or animals: = sense 3. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > [adjective] wearyc825 asadc1306 ateyntc1325 attaintc1325 recrayed1340 methefula1350 for-wearya1375 matea1375 taintc1380 heavy1382 fortireda1400 methefula1400 afoundered?a1425 tewedc1440 travailedc1440 wearisomec1460 fatigate1471 defatigatec1487 tired1488 recreant1490 yolden?1507 fulyeit?a1513 traiked?a1513 tavert1535 wearied1538 fatigated1552 awearya1555 forwearied1562 overtired1567 spenta1568 done1575 awearied1577 stank1579 languishinga1586 bankrupt?1589 fordone1590 spent1591 overwearied1592 overworn1592 outworn1597 half-dead1601 back-broken1603 tiry1611 defatigated1612 dog-wearya1616 overweary1617 exhaust1621 worn-out1639 embossed1651 outspent1652 exhausted1667 beaten1681 bejaded1687 harassed1693 jaded1693 lassate1694 defeata1732 beat out1758 fagged1764 dog-tired1770 fessive1773 done-up1784 forjeskit1786 ramfeezled1786 done-over1789 fatigued1791 forfoughten1794 worn-up1812 dead1813 out-burnta1821 prostrate1820 dead beat1822 told out1822 bone-tireda1825 traiky1825 overfatigued1834 outwearied1837 done like (a) dinner1838 magged1839 used up1839 tuckered outc1840 drained1855 floored1857 weariful1862 wappered1868 bushed1870 bezzled1875 dead-beaten1875 down1885 tucked up1891 ready (or fit) to drop1892 buggered-up1893 ground-down1897 played1897 veal-bled1899 stove-up1901 trachled1910 ragged1912 beat up1914 done in1917 whacked1919 washy1922 pooped1928 shattered1930 punchy1932 shagged1932 shot1939 whipped1940 buggered1942 flaked (out)1942 fucked1949 sold-out1958 wiped1958 burnt out1959 wrung out1962 juiced1965 hanging1971 zonked1972 maxed1978 raddled1978 zoned1980 cream crackered1983 a1568 R. Ascham Scholemaster (1570) ii. f. 63v The talke of a spent old man. a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) i. ii. 8 It stood, As two spent Swimmers, that doe cling together. View more context for this quotation 1715 A. Pope tr. Homer Iliad I. ii. 465 Let..each spent Courser at the Chariot blow. 1825 in W. Hone Every-day Bk. (1826) I. 292 I remember the..squire and his..chaplain casting home on spent horses. 1859 J. M. Jephson & L. Reeve Narr. Walking Tour Brittany xii. 193 The English archers..charged down..upon the now spent and wearied French. b. Of fish: Exhausted by spawning; having recently spawned. Also elliptical as n., a spent herring. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > [adjective] > having discharged spawn shot1414 shottenc1682 spent1864 the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > subclass Actinopterygii > order Clupeiformes > [noun] > family Clupeidae and herrings > member of > that has spawned spent1957 1864 Intellect. Observer 5 369 After the performance of this function the fish is sickly and weak, and is then called a Shotten or Spent fish. 1866 Chambers's Encycl. VIII. 446/2 Salmon, which have completed their spawning, continue for some time..very unfit for the table... They are called ‘foul fish’, or more distinctively, ‘spent fish’, or Kelts. 1883 Great Internat. Fisheries Exhib. Catal. 69 1 Barrel Large Full Herrings... 1 Barrel Spent Herrings. 1957 W. C. Hodgson Herring & its Fishery ii. 18 In this area [of the North Sea] there are large shoals of small immature herrings of low fat-content mixed with recovered spents that are just beginning to fatten. 1975 New Yorker 22 Dec. 55/1 April and May are the slack months, since the spring spawning has by then completed itself, and the herring are what are known as ‘spents’—thin, indolent, not worth the catching. c. spent gnat n. a kind of artificial fly used in trout fishing. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > means of attracting fish > [noun] > artificial fly > trout flies trout-fly1746 wren's-tail1837 Greenwell's glory1867 skipjack1867 spent gnat1867 Greenwell1872 heckum-peckum1876 Wickham1876 Saltoun1886 muddler1924 1867 F. Francis Bk. Angling vi. 229 The black drake, or spent gnat, as it is sometimes called. 1894 Daily News 9 June 832/1 All kinds were tried, including the spent gnat, but the fish would have none of them. 6. a. Of things: Exhausted, worn out, used up; no longer active, effective, or serviceable. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > using up, expending, or consuming > [adjective] > using up completely > used up completely > no longer active or effective spent1697 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics i, in tr. Virgil Wks. 52 That the spent Earth may gather heart again; And, better'd by Cessation, bear the Grain. View more context for this quotation 1830 C. Lyell Princ. Geol. I. 322 If the action of one becomes very great for a century or more, the others assume the appearance of spent volcanos. 1850 J. G. Whittier To Avis Keene 38 Where spent waves glimmer up the beach. 1883 R. Broughton Belinda II. iii. vi. 191 ‘I should like to sit down,’ says Belinda, in a spent voice. b. Of arrows, balls, or shot. ΚΠ 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Æneis ix, in tr. Virgil Wks. 491 Heaps of spent Arrows fall; and strew the Ground. 1799 Naval Chron. 1 169 A spent ball..hit him. 1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. (at cited word) Spent balls..are frequently fatal in their effects. 1858 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia I. ii. ix. 153 [He] declared, in solemn Diet, the Pope's ban to be mere spent shot. c. Of hops, tan, etc., from which the essential properties have been extracted. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > using up, expending, or consuming > [adjective] > using up completely > used up completely > from which essential properties extracted spent1826 1826 D. Booth Art of Brewing (ed. 2) 105 If the disorder do not subside readily, a gyle of spent hops thrown in will generally be advantageous. 1842 J. C. Loudon Suburban Horticulturist 390 Coverings for the surface of the ground include dead leaves,..spent tan,..rotten dung,..&c. 1857 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. III. vi. §1. 372 A quantity of common salt is next added to separate the spent leys. 1877 R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 390 The spent liquor..is discharged into the stream. 7. In combination with out. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > using up, expending, or consuming > [adjective] > using up completely > used up completely spentc1440 spent1620 exhaust1621 exhausted1656 tired1766 run-out1795 used up1837 played-out1856 1620 T. Dekker Dreame sig. B3 The Terrestiall Pauement burn'd, In which the Starres to spent-out Snuffes were turnd. 1848 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair lxi. 548 A spent-out, bootless life of defeat and disappointment. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < adj.c1440 |
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