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单词 stramash
释义

stramashn.

Brit. /strəˈmaʃ/, U.S. /strəˈmæʃ/, Scottish English /strəˈmaʃ/
Forms: Also Scottish straemash.
Etymology: Belongs to stramash v.
Chiefly Scottish.
1. An uproar, state of noise and confusion; a ‘row’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > commotion, disturbance, or disorder > [noun] > (a) noisy
rippit?1507
hubbleshowa1525
burlinga1533
hubble-shubblec1550
burle1563
coil1567
hirdy-girdy1568
riff-raff1582
rut1607
hubbuba1625
clutter1656
sputter1673
splutter1677
rattle1688
rumpus1745
ree-raw1797
bobbery1816
trevally1819
stramash1821
nitty1822
hell's delight1823
pandemonium1827
oration1828
Bob's-a-dying1829
hubbaboo1830
reerie1832
circus1869
tow-row1877
ruaille buaille1885
brouhaha1890
foofaraw1933
bangarang1943
bassa-bassa1956
1821 J. Galt Ann. Parish xii. 124 This stramash was the first time that I had interposed in the family concerns of my people.
1823 J. Galt Ringan Gilhaize I. xiv. 153 There's like to be a straemash amang the Reformers.
a1840 J. Ramsay Sports Fasten's-een in Poems v Mark ye yon fish..He's laughin' at the grand stramash, And thinks he's safe frae harm.
a1845 R. H. Barham House-warming!! in Ingoldsby Legends (1847) 3rd Ser. 303 Oh! what a fearful ‘stramash’ they are all in!
1861 H. Kingsley Ravenshoe xxxvi Last year at Oxford, I and three other University men..had a noble stramash on Folly Bridge. That is the last fighting I have seen.
1896 Spectator 28 Mar. 444 The Muscular Christians rebelled at these ideas with a stir and stramash audible to all men.
2. A state of ruin, a smash. to go (to) stramash: to be ruined.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > [noun] > breaking into pieces or shattering > state of being shattered or smashed
stramash1827
smashery1830
smash1857
smash-up1858
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (intransitive)] > be destroyed, ruined, or come to an end
losec888
fallOE
forlesea1225
perishc1275
spilla1300
to go to wreche13..
to go to the gatec1330
to go to lostc1374
miscarryc1387
quenchc1390
to bring unto, to fall into, to go, put, or work to wrakea1400
mischieve?a1400
tinea1400
to go to the devilc1405
bursta1450
untwindc1460
to make shipwreck1526
to go to (the) pot1531
to go to wreck (and ruin)a1547
wrake1570
wracka1586
to hop (also tip, pitch over, drop off, etc.) the perch1587
to lie in the dusta1591
mischief1598
to go (etc.) to rack (and ruin)1599
shipwreck1607
suffera1616
unravel1643
to fall off1684
tip (over) the perch1699
to do away with1769
to go to the dickens1833
collapse1838
to come (also go) a mucker1851
mucker1862
to go up1864
to go to squash1889
to go (to) stramash1910
to go for a burton1941
to meet one's Makera1978
1827 W. Tennant Papistry Storm'd 2 And fearfu' the stramash and stour, Whan pinnacle cam doun and tow'r.
1829 J. T. Brockett Gloss. North Country Words (new ed.) Stramash, a complete overthrow, with great breakage and confusion.
1896 ‘I. Maclaren’ Kate Carnegie 364 It's been rotten,..for a while, an' noo it's fair stramash.
1910 N. Munro in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Jan. 32/1 My business would go to stramash.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1917; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

stramashv.

/strəˈmaʃ/
Etymology: apparently onomatopoeic: compare smash v.1Notwithstanding the curiously close resemblance in sense, the commonly alleged derivation < Italian stramazzare (see stramazon n.) is out of the question.
dialect.
(See quot. 1788.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)]
to bring to noughteOE
forspillc893
fordilghec900
to bring to naughtOE
astryea1200
stroyc1200
forferec1275
misdoa1325
destroyc1330
naught1340
dingc1380
beshenda1400
devoida1400
unshapea1400
to wend downa1400
brittenc1400
unloukc1400
perishc1426
defeat1435
unmake1439
lithc1450
spend1481
kill1530
to shend ofc1540
quade1565
to make away1566
discreate1570
wrake1570
wracka1586
unwork1587
gaster1609
defease1621
unbe1624
uncreate1633
destructa1638
naufragate1648
stifle1725
stramash1788
disannul1794
destructify1841
locust1868
to knock out1944
dick1972
1788 W. Marshall Provincialisms E. Yorks. in Rural Econ. Yorks. II. 356 To Stramash, to crush, or break irreparably; to destroy.
1880 J. F. S. Gordon Bk. Chron. Keith 70 Choking the lums with a divot (which occasionally stramashed the Tea Pots).
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1917; most recently modified version published online September 2018).
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n.1821v.1788
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更新时间:2024/12/23 8:24:26