| 释义 | 
		tearn.1 Etymology: Old English téar = Old Frisian târ, Old Norse tár (Swedish tår, Danish taar, taare), contracted from earlier Old English *teahr, *teagr, teagor, Old Northumbrian tehr = Old High German zahar, zahhar (Middle High German zaher, zâr, German zähre), Gothic tagr; cognate with Greek δάκρ-υ, Old Latin dacrima (Latin lacrima, -uma), Old Provençal dacr, dêr, Welsh dagr tear. The medial h or ȝ, already lost in Old English, is found as ch in 16th cent. Scots.  Signification.  1. the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > excretions > excretions from eye > 			[noun]		 the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > 			[noun]		 > a tear the mind > emotion > compassion > 			[noun]		 > expression of > specific the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > 			[noun]		 971     189  				Þa wæron his eagan gefyllede mid tearum. OE     1872  				Hruron him tearas blondenfeaxum. c1175     159  				Þe ter þat Mon schet. c1300     		(Laud)	 		(1868)	 285  				For hire was mani a ter igroten. 1377    W. Langland  B.  xiii. 45  				But if þei synge for þo soules and wepe salt teres.  a1500 [see  β. forms].							 a1600 [see  β. forms].							 a1616 [see  β. forms].							1737    S. Berington  68  				I saw his [Eyes] swimming in Tears. 1782    W. Cowper  4 Nov. 		(1981)	 II. 85  				You tell me that John Gilpin made you laugh tears. 1808    W. Scott   i. Introd. 13  				Drop upon Fox's grave the tear, 'Twill trickle to his rival's bier. 1864    A. Bain  		(ed. 2)	  i. iv. 297  				There are also tears of joy. 1866    T. H. Huxley  		(1869)	 ix. §25  				Under certain circumstances..the secretion of the lachrymal gland exceeds the drainage power of the lachrymal duct, and the fluid, accumulating,..overflows in the form of tears. the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > 			[noun]		 a1340    R. Rolle  cxxv. 6  				Þa þat dos goed werkis in terys of penaunce. 1388    J. Wyclif  cxxv[i]. 5  				Thei that sowen in teeris; schulen repe in ful out ioiyng.   R. Misyn tr.  R. Rolle  18  				Is not þis þe vayle of teris & tribulacion? 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane  f. xviij  				The people..are all in teares and mournyng. 1638    J. Milton Lycidas in  Obsequies 20 in    				He must not flote upon his watry biere..Without the meed of some melodious tear! 1719    D. Defoe  8  				I was happy in listening to her Tears. 1751    T. Gray  11  				He gave to Mis'ry all he had, a Tear. 1815    W. Wordsworth  I. 232  				Yet tears to human suffering are due. the world > action or operation > easiness > easy, easily, or without difficulty			[phrase]		 the world > action or operation > easiness > 			[adjective]		 1857    F. L. Mortimer 		(title)	  				Reading without tears. 1877    F. L. Mortimer 		(title)	  				Latin without tears; or, One word a day. 1896    G. B. Shaw in   12 Dec. 623/2 		(heading)	  				Ibsen without tears. 1914    W. Owen  1 June 		(1967)	 257  				I have a design in sending you this, viz. to keep you hungry to learn French I hope it won't be long before you read such works ‘without tears’; at least without tears due to grammatical difficulties. 1932    A. Huxley  xvii. 280  				Anybody can be virtuous now. You can carry at least half your morality about in a bottle. Christianity without tears—that's what soma is. 1937    T. Rattigan  		(title)	  				French without tears. 1956     11 Feb. 143/1  				The late 19th-century concept of progress without tears. 1962     7 June 17/3  				It is a without-tears book. 1974    J. I. M. Stewart  i. 19  				Charles and Mary..were well-mannered young people, and docile at least to the extent of being resigned to Scrabble as a species of Philology without tears.   2.  transferred and  figurative. the world > matter > liquid > 			[noun]		 > a quantity of > small > globular the world > matter > liquid > 			[noun]		 > a quantity of > small > like a tear OE     1174  				Ða wearð beam monig blodigum tearum birunnen, under rindum, reade ond þicce. c1000     II. 28  				genim cileþonian..& huniges teares.  c1175 [see sense  1a].							a1240    Ureisun in   200  				Swete iesu..min huni ter. 1597    W. Shakespeare   v. vi. 14  				I would these dewie teares were from the  ground.       View more context for this quotation 1600    R. Surflet tr.  C. Estienne  & J. Liébault   vi. xiii. 751  				The vine sometimes powreth forth great store of teares, whereupon..it looseth his force altogether. a1626    F. Bacon  		(1650)	 29  				The Teares or Woundings of Trees. 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  iii, in  tr.  Virgil  111  				The pearly tears Of Morning  Dews.       View more context for this quotation 1820    L. Hunt  23 Feb. 156  				The tears of the sky at least were dried up. 18..    B. Taylor Manuela in   		(1866)	 316  				With the tears of amber dropping. 1864    C. Dickens  		(1865)	 I.  i. xiv. 130  				Hawse-holes long discolored with the iron's rusty tears. 1883     Oct. 873/1  				Carrying large candles, which drip their waxen tears along the road [at a funeral]. the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > wine > Italian wines > 			[noun]		 1526    W. Bonde   ii. sig. Ovv  				There groweth the myghty swete wynes, as maluesees, tyerys, and muscadelles.  the world > matter > constitution of matter > density or solidity > viscosity > 			[noun]		 > viscous substance > from trees or plants > drop of a1000    in  T. Wright  & R. P. Wülcker  		(1884)	 I. 139/28  				Opobalsamum, balsames tear. a1400–50     4974  				Þar trekild doun of þa teres of iemmes, Boyland out of þe barke bawme & mirre. 1578    H. Lyte tr.  R. Dodoens   iii. xvi. 308  				Evphorbium is the gumme or teare of a certayne strange plante growing in Lybia. 1585    T. Washington tr.  N. de Nicolay   ii. vi. 36  				The Mastic is the teare or droppings of the Lentiscus. 1604    E. Grimeston tr.  J. de Acosta   iv. xxviii. 286  				One kinde..which they call Opobalsamum, which be the very teares that distil. 1677    W. Harris tr.  N. Lémery   ii. xii. 277  				Opium is a Tear, or Liquor which distills of itself, by Incision of Poppy-heads. 1715    tr.  G. Panciroli  I.  i. xii. 29  				Myrrh, is a Drop or Tear, distill'd from a Tree in Arabia Felix. 1825    ‘J. Nicholson’  753  				½ oz. mastic in tears. 1838    T. Thomson  671  				Gum arabic..is in small rounded drops or tears. 1895     25 Nov. 7/1  				Fine tears of frankincense, the gum resin produced by an Indian tree. the world > space > shape > curvature > curved three-dimensional shape or body > 			[noun]		 > tear-shaped object society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > glass and glass-like materials > 			[noun]		 > glass > marks or imperfections in 1832    G. R. Porter  xi. 249  				Tears are, perhaps, the greatest defect that can be found in glass. 1832    G. R. Porter  xi. 249  				Wherever these tears exist, the material is brittle in a very high degree, so as frequently to crack, without any apparent cause. 1837     VII. 15/1  				The smaller and rounder the eyes, the better the cheese is reckoned. They should contain a clear salt liquor, which is called the tears. 1839    A. Ure  746  				It [Plomb gomme] has been found only at Huelgoet, near Poullaouen, in Brittany, covering with its tears or small concretions the ores of white lead and galena. 1839    A. Ure  1250  				The block of metal is heated till it becomes brittle, when..it is broken to pieces, and presents an agglomeration of elongated grains or tears; whence it is called grain tin. 1857    D. Livingstone  xxxi. 650  				It [iron] occurs generally in tears or rounded lumps. 1858    O. W. Holmes  ii. 42  				A Prince-Rupert's-drop..is a tear of unannealed glass. 1877    E. H. Knight   				Tears, the vitreous drops from the melting of the walls of a furnace. 1899    R. H. Allen  335  				In the later Middle Ages they were known as the Larmes de Saint Laurent, Saint Laurence's Tears, his martyrdom upon the red-hot gridiron having taken place on the 10th of August, 258. Compounds General  attributive.  C1.   Attributive.  a.  a1600    in  E. Farr  		(1845)	 II. 444  				Thou let'st me wash thy feete in my teare-bath. 1893    F. Thompson Hound of Heaven in   53  				And now my heart is as a broken fount, Wherein tear-drippings stagnate. a1631    J. Donne  ii  				No teare-flouds, nor sigh-tempests move. 1916    R. Graves  21  				Till it seemed through a swift tear-flood That dead men blossomed in the garden-close.   b.  1922    J. Joyce   iii. xviii. [Penelope] 718  				That was the last time she turned on the teartap. 1965    S. Smith in   2 Sept. 347/3  				Those awful tear-tracks on her cheeks, As if she had cried a lot!    C2.   Objective and objective genitive.  b.  1868    M. Collins  I. 210  				That tear-compelling tragedy. 1597    W. Shakespeare   iv. ii. 67  				Teare falling pittie dwels not in this  eie.       View more context for this quotation 1597    M. Drayton  f. 16  				If all remorcelesse, no teare-shedding eye, My selfe will moane my selfe. 1606    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas  		(new ed.)	  ii. iii. 6  				O contrite heart's Restorer! Teares-wiping tame-grief!    C3.   Instrumental.  a.  1625    F. Quarles   xx. sig. E2  				My teares-baptized Loue. a1644    F. Quarles  		(1645)	 xii. 58  				To meet Thy tear-bedabled fun'rals in the Street. c1610    God Hears, etc. in  E. Farr  		(1848)	 110  				Thy teares-bedewed praiers, And thy repentant sighes, shall haue accesse Before the throne of heaven. 1906     Mar. 28/1  				Crowds with tear-bedewed cheeks thronged the streets. 1809    B. H. Malkin tr.  A. R. Le Sage  III.  ix. iv. 391  				My tear-besprinkled visage. 1813    W. Scott   v. 232  				Tear-blinded to the castle hall, Came as to bear her funeral pall. 1938    E. Bowen   ii. i. 178  				Her manner..had threatened the afternoon like a cloud that covers the sky but is almost certain never to break. Her eyelids looked rigid—tear-bound, you would have said. a1618    J. Sylvester  Author's Invoc. 5  				In this teare-composed terrene Globe. the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > soiled condition > 			[adjective]		 > by tears 1915     Jan. 46/2  				She raised a tear dabbled countenance. 1944    W. de la Mare  217  				Tear-dabbled cheeks, wild eyes I see. a1600    J. Bryan in  E. Farr  		(1845)	 II. 333  				Heare, heare with acceptation The teare~dew'd words I speake. 1811    W. Bristow  ii  				She cannot see my tear-dim'd eye. 1594    W. Shakespeare  sig. L2v  				About her teare-distained eye Blew circles  stream'd.       View more context for this quotation 1632    W. Lithgow   i. 5  				Teare-rent Sophyre, Synon-like betrayd What votall oathes, loues sterne fort, ne'er bewrayd. 1776    W. J. Mickle tr.  L. de Camoens   vii. 298  				The tear-dropt bough hangs weeping in the vale. 1605    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas   ii. i. 314  				His tear-drown'd eyes a night of clouds bedims. 1951    in  M. McLuhan  11/2  				Miss Grable, with tear-filled eyes, showed..a letter she'd received from a soldier's buddy. a1600    J. Bryan in  E. Farr  		(1845)	 II. 334  				My long teare-fraught eies Haue seene thy plagues redoble Vpon mine enemies. 1842    F. W. Faber  261  				White flowers, tear-freshened, for pale sorrow's brow. 1811    W. Bristow  iii  				At widow'd Love's tear-glistning shrine. 1931    R. Campbell  ii. 41  				Holding our course among the tear-logged wrecks. 1840    R. Browning   iii. 744  				Lashless eyes Inveterately tear~shot. the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > soiled condition > 			[adjective]		 > by tears a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. iv. 17  				Ile prepare My teare-stayn'd eyes, to see her  Miseries.       View more context for this quotation 1868    A. I. Menken  		(1883)	 120  				Take my cold, tear-stained face up to yours. the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > soiled condition > 			[adjective]		 > by tears 1923    J. Galsworthy  181  				The girl's face, tear-streaked, confusedly pretty, had come up before him. 1942    S. Smith  76  				My reverent reveries and fruitful plod Of tear-strewn steps. 1593    T. Nashe  Ep. Ded., sig. *2v  				That which my Teare-stubbed penne..hath attempted. 1939    D. Thomas  12  				After the feast of tear-stuffed time and thistles. 1768    C. Shaw  i  				These tear-swoln eyes beheld her fall. 1880    G. M. Hopkins  		(1967)	 88  				In his hands he has flung His tear-tricked cheeks of flame. 1755    J. Shebbeare  		(1769)	 II. 431  				The tear-washed eye surveyed the severe trials. 1916    H. G. Wells   iii. i. 389  				Her tear-washed mind became vaguely friendly. 1922    J. Joyce   ii. viii. [Lestrygonians] 169  				Davy Byrne, sated after his yawn, said with tearwashed eyes:—And is that a fact? a1649    W. Drummond  		(1711)	 33/1  				Her Tear-wet Locks hang'd o'er her Face. 1786    R. Burns  		(1968)	 I. 232  				My toil-beat nerves, and tear-worn eye. 1823    Ld. Byron  xiv. 30  				They voted..tear-wrung millions—why? for Rent!   b.  1873    E. J. Brennan  70  				For she Tear-nourishes the bud her true love bare Unto her lord.    C4.   Of other kinds. 1874    M. Collins  & F. Collins  II. 191  				Her hazel eyes tear-bright with glee. the world > matter > liquid > liquid flow > action or process of dripping or falling in drops > 			[adjective]		 > in the form of or occurring in drops > like a tear 1567    J. Maplet  f. 32  				This Tree..by and by droppeth and distilleth a certaine humor, in a manner tearlike. the world > space > shape > curvature > curved three-dimensional shape or body > 			[adjective]		 > like a tear-drop 1893    J. A. Hodges  		(1907)	 88  				Tear-shaped markings may be produced. 1579    S. Gosson  f. 32  				Calling [Mars] the bloody God, the angry God,..πολύδακρυς the teare thirsty God. 1938    S. Beckett  iv. 51  				The human eyelid is not teartight. 1916    D. H. Lawrence  74  				Tear-trembling stars of autumn.   C5.   Special combinations: See also  tear-bottle n.the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > family Cervidae (deer) > 			[noun]		 > body or parts of > gland beneath eye 1893    R. Lydekker  64  				The lachrymal fossa—in which rests the gland termed the crumen, larmier, or ‘tear-bag’. society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > explosive device > 			[noun]		 > bomb > smoke bomb or tear bomb 1929    M. Lief  xv. 238  				I'm going to have Katie actually taken for a ride..and Rat-Face Walsh's yeggs following..with machine guns and tear bombs. 1953    Wendt  & Kogan  xxiii. 271  				Police squads cruising the city, machine-guns in their laps and tear bombs in their pockets. society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > use of chemicals, etc. > attack with chemicals, etc.			[verb (transitive)]		 society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > fire, radiation, or chemical weapons > 			[noun]		 > gas 1917    W. Owen  19 Jan. 		(1967)	 429  				It was only tear-gas from a shell, and I got safely back (to the party) in my helmet. 1927     12 Oct. 202/2  				The troopers on the outskirts..hurled tear-gas bombs and charged. 1927     16 Dec. 15  				I imagine him, first, tear-gassing a river bank and so reducing all the crocodiles to genuinely hopeless grief. 1934    R. Stout  ii. 25  				A gangster had been tear-gassed out of a Brooklyn flat. 1978    R. Ludlum  xliii. 499  				Tear gas and Mace were not unknown in Yakov's line of work. 1927     9 Aug. 4  				Old English witch-balls and tear-glasses..are among the curious collecting quests of the moment. the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > burial > grave or burial-place > 			[noun]		 > grave goods > tear-bottle 1869    ‘M. Twain’  xxiv. 252  				A Pisan antiquarian gave me an ancient tear-jug. 1916     23 Dec. 451/2  				Tear-masks were to be kept handy. 1926    M. Leinster  246  				Through a tear-mist she looked at a myriad ghost-pale lights. the world > life > the body > secretory organs > ducts > 			[noun]		 > tear duct 1892     30 Mar. 4/3  				The treatment of obstructions of the tear passages. the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > family Cervidae (deer) > 			[noun]		 > body or parts of > gland beneath eye 1834     II. 69/1  				The possession of lachrymal sinuses, or, as they are vernacularly called with reference to the stag and fallow-deer, tear-pits,..distinguishes the greater number of the antelopes. 1903    J. S. Farmer  (at cited word)  				To work thetear-pump,..to weep. the world > life > the body > secretory organs > ducts > 			[noun]		 > tear duct > orifice of 1876    T. Bryant  		(ed. 2)	 I. viii. 338  				The tear puncta..lie in contact with the ocular conjunctiva. society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > missile > ammunition for firearms > 			[noun]		 > bullet or shell > shell > smoke or gas shell 1916     23 Dec. 451/3  				Don't you know the scent of tear-shells when you smell it? society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > fire, radiation, or chemical weapons > 			[noun]		 > gas 1946    F. Burrows Let. 22 Aug. in  Mansergh  & Moon  		(1979)	 VIII. 296  				He added that the Police had used tear-smoke on crowds frequently. 1949    A. Koestler   i. xii. 136  				The boarding party finally gained control of the vessel by using tear-smoke grenades..against them.  				Draft additions  1993  society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > glass and glass-like materials > 			[noun]		 > glass > decoration in 1916    J. S. Lewis  iii. 62  				The tear of the glass-blower is a bubble of air blown into the centre of a mass of molten glass, possibly at first by accident and afterwards by design, as a form of ornamentation. 1961    E. M. Elville  13/2  				The formation of a tear was a quick and easy operation for the glass-maker. Using a blunt metal tool, he merely dented the surface of the metal he was working and covered the depression with a second layer of glass.   				Draft additions March 2004 1579    T. Churchyard  sig. Bii  				To tell you all, their battailes here a rowe, Would moue your minde, and heauie harte to tears. 1678    T. Shadwell   v. 73  				Good men, you much surprise me, even to tears. 1719    D. Defoe  282  				It would have mov'd any one to Tears, to have seen how Friday kiss'd him. 1796    F. Burney  V.  ix. ix. 201  				It sunk to his heart, dispirited him to tears, and sent him, extremely ill, to bed. 1819    P. B. Shelley  36  				His very gestures touched to tears The unpersuaded tyrant, never So moved before. 1893     Jan. 84/2  				Honorable Arthur, simple, frank, direct, sensible, and he bores me almost to tears. 1992     Jan. 22/3  				‘This thing moves me to tears’, he says of the Vespers, though he has never heard the recording in its final form. 2002    D. Aitkenhead  xii. 121  				He was starting up his own business..and within minutes was boring us to tears with share ownership and product-placement plans.  This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online June 2022). tearn.2 the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > tearing or tearing apart > 			[noun]		 1666    S. Pepys  29 Sept. 		(1972)	 VII. 301  				The wages, victuals, wear, and tear..will come to above three Millions. 1705    R. Cromwell Let. in   		(1898)	 XIII. 123  				A third for wages tare and ware, and upholding the stock. 1765    S. Foote   i. 12  				At that time of life, men can bustle and stir..; it is the only tear and wear season. 1767    A. Young  282  				With ease to the horses, and not half the tear of irons, &c. 1874    J. S. Blackie  65  				Plated work will never stand the tear and wear of life. 1901     6 Mar. 9/7  				The tear and wear of the campaign is telling severely on the..Yeomanry.  2.  concrete. the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > tearing or tearing apart > 			[noun]		 > a tear 1611    R. Cotgrave   				Deschirure, a teare, a rent. 1755    S. Johnson   				Tear,..a rent, a fissure. 1824    L. L. Cameron   ii. 21  				Mother has darned up the tears. 1891     195  				Each darn and tear has its story. 190.      				This copy has the title cut round and mounted, a few slight tears in margins, in one case the tear extends to text. the world > matter > constitution of matter > weakness > 			[noun]		 > weak place a1856    H. Miller  		(1857)	 vi. 232  				What a draper would term the tear of the one layer or fold.   3.  An act of tearing, in senses   8   and   9   of the verb. the world > movement > rate of motion > swiftness > 			[noun]		 > a rapid rate > full speed 1838    C. Dickens  II. xxxiii. 232  				He..could have..galloped away full tear to the next stage. 1892     2 Jan. 16/1  				The rattling tear across country. society > leisure > social event > a merrymaking or convivial occasion > 			[noun]		 > noisy or riotous 1869    B. Harte How Santa Claus, etc. in   		(1872)	 363  				May be ye'd all like to come over to my house to-night and have a sort of tear round. 1895     27 189/2  				Then I should go on a tear—a regular one you know—and not come home for three whole days. 1896     Apr. 775/2  				Got me off on a tear somehow, and by the time I was sober again the money was 'most all gone. the mind > emotion > violent emotion > 			[noun]		 > fit of violent emotion 1880    M. A. Courtney W. Cornwall Words in  M. A. Courtney  & T. Q. Couch  57/2  				Taer, a rage. ‘She got into a pretty taer’. 1890     128  				If you keep quiet you may see a way out of the difficulty that you most certainly would not if you got in a ‘tare’. the mind > mental capacity > expectation > surprise, unexpectedness > exclamation of surprise			[interjection]		 1841    C. J. Lever Charles O'Malley lxvii, in   Feb. 282/2  				Tear and ages! how sore my back is. 1842    S. Lover  iii  				‘Tare an' ouns!’ roared Murphy, ‘how Andy runs’. 1893    S. Baring-Gould  I. i. 13  				‘Tear and ages!’ sez I; ‘that's a wonder of the world.’  Compounds the world > the earth > structure of the earth > structural features > discontinuity or unconformity > 			[noun]		 > fault > other types of fault 1900     16 465  				It is this [‘lag’ fault] which gives one a clue as to the nature of some of the most striking ‘tear’ faults. 1924    J. G. A. Skerl tr.  A. Wegener  58  				A lateral displacement of great dimensions, a so-called tear fault. 1957     113 59  				They occur..as infolds, and slices brought up along the Strathconon tear-fault. 1977    A. Hallam  60/1  				Another common type of shear—which caused little trouble to miners and so was unrecognised for many years—is variously known as a strike-slip, wrench, tear or transcurrent fault.  				Draft additions  1993 society > leisure > sport > winning, losing, or scoring > 			[adverb]		 > a winning streak 1975     31 Mar. 2- d/4  				Ted Simmons, on a hitting tear for the past week, singled twice, scored a run and drove in two as the Cards built a 3–1 lead going into the eighth. 1988     17 Aug. (Sports section) 1/5  				In the fifth, Mitch Webster, who has been on a tear, hustled his second single of the night into a double.  This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022). tearadj.n.3 Etymology: Known c1400; apparently  <  Dutch or Low German: compare Middle Dutch, Middle Flemish, Middle Low German, Low German teer, têr, contracted  <  teeder, têder fine, thin, delicate, tender: compare Old English tíedre, týdre, tydder tender.  Now  technical. †A. adj.the world > food and drink > food > flour > 			[adjective]		 > fine the world > matter > constitution of matter > other specific kinds of texture > 			[adjective]		 > fine the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > treated or processed textiles > 			[adjective]		 > flax, hemp, or jute c1400     (Rolls) III. 9  				Salomon his mete was euery day þritty corues of clene [v.rr. teer, tere, ter] floure and foure score corues of mele. 1532    in  J. W. Clay  		(1902)	 VI. 34  				ij pare of harden shettes, ij pare of hempe tere, and ij pare of lynan shettes. 1541–2    in   		(1857)	 80  				A xj payre of teir hempen shetis. 1544    in  J. W. Clay  		(1902)	 VI. 214  				A pare of newe hempe tere shetes. ?1553						 (c1501)						    G. Douglas Palice of Honour 		(London)	  i. l. 542 in   		(1967)	 40  				Damesflure, tere, pyle quhare on thair lyis Perle, orphany quhilk euery state renewis.   B. n.3 (The adjective used absolutely.) Something of the finest or best quality:  the world > food and drink > food > flour > 			[noun]		 > fine flour c1440     489/1  				Teere, of flowre, amolum. 1521    R. Whittington  		(rev. ed.)	 sig. Bvi  				Pollis vel pollen..est idem in tritico quod flos in siligine, the tere of floure. 1521     669  				But on haly-cake, and that they put no more theryn but the Teyre of thre stryke of whete. the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > treated or processed textiles > 			[noun]		 > flax, hemp, or jute > heckled > finest parts 1541–2    in   		(1857)	 81  				xxv teir of hempe slippingis. 1601    P. Holland tr.  Pliny  II.  xix. i. 4  				As for the good Flax indeed, which is the teere or marrow as it were within of the Line. 1657    W. Coles  cclxxxi  				The Summer Hemp affordeth most Teere as they call it. 1706     		(new ed.)	  				Tare of Flax, the finest dress'd part of it made ready for the Spinner. 1805    Usef. Proj. in   851/2  				A machine for discharging a woolcomb or combs, by separating the tears from the noiles. 1837    N. Whittock et al.   		(1842)	 238  				[article Flax Dresser] The strike is to pass through a fine hackle, and the hurds coming from thence saved for middling cloth, and the tear itself for the best linen.   This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022). tearv.1 Inflections:					 					  Past tense   tore Brit.  /tɔː/,  U.S.  /tɔr/, 		( archaic and  dialect)	  tare Brit.  /tɛː/,  U.S.  /tɛ(ə)r/;  Past participle   torn Brit.  /tɔːn/,  U.S.  /tɔrn/;  Etymology: Old English ter-an, past tense tær, plural tǽron, past participle toren, = Old Low German *teran (Middle Dutch, Middle Low German teren, Dutch teren, Old High German zeran (Middle High German zeren, zern, German zehren) to destroy, consume, Gothic gatairan to destroy. Old Germanic *teran (tar, ˈtâron, ˈtoran-) was cognate with Greek δέρειν to flay, Old Church Slavonic derą to tear asunder, Sanskrit dar- to burst. The Old English past tense tær ( <  tar) survived as tare to 17th cent., when it gave place in standard English to tore, with o from past participle toren, torn: compare bore, swore. A weak past tense and participle terede, tered, found in 15th cent., are still dialectal, along with a mixed form tored, tord.  Signification.  I.  Senses related to pulling apart or rending.  1. the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > tearing or tearing apart > tear			[verb (transitive)]		 the world > space > place > removal or displacement > extraction > extract			[verb (transitive)]		 > pull out or up > violently tear out or up c10001 [see  α. forms].							c1386    G. Chaucer  136  				Though men me wolde al in to pieces tere. a1400     		(W.)	 782  				The grehound wolde nowt sessed be, Til that adder ware toren of thre. a1440     1688  				Leve syre, where have ȝe bene, ȝoure clothus to tere. 1530    J. Palsgrave  754/2  				He hath torne my gowne a foote and more. 1597    W. Shakespeare   v. iii. 35  				By heauen Ile teare thee ioynt by  ioynt.       View more context for this quotation 1649    E. Reynolds  		(new ed.)	 i. 32  				The Serpent can sting, but he cannot teare in pieces. 1709    M. Pierrepont Let. 21 Aug. in   		(1837)	 I. 140  				She will..tear the letter, and never answer it. 1784    J. Douglas  I.  ii. vii. 291  				They are always careful to join the small pieces lengthwise, which makes it impossible to tear the cloth in any direction but one. 1841    W. Spalding  III. 96  				The unpopular minister of finance was torn in pieces by the mob. 1857    T. Hughes   i. vii. 162  				Engaged in tearing up old newspapers..into small pieces. 1902    J. Buchan   v. 268  				The boy had torn his clothes.  the world > existence and causation > creation > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > fashion, shape, or form > form by cutting, pounding, tearing, rubbing, etc. 1597    W. Shakespeare   v. v. 20  				How these vaine weake nailes May teare a passage thorow the flinty ribs Of this hard  world.       View more context for this quotation 1911     at Tear  				Mod. You've torn a hole in my coat. the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break			[verb (transitive)]		 > break to pieces, shatter, or burst 1582    N. Lichefield tr.  F. L. de Castanheda   i. lxxi. 145 b  				Their Fregates..were torne in pieces and sunke. 1588    W. Wynter  28 Feb. (P.R.O.)  				This winters weather..hath..torn many of our blocks, pulleis and sheevers. a1600    R. Hooker  		(1612)	 31  				As water split or poured into a torne dish. c1626     		(1955)	 229  				From ye armed winds an hoast brake forth wch tare their shipps, & sav'd ours. 1746    P. Francis tr.  Horace  642  				Like a baited Bear, If he hath Strength enough his Den to tear. 1828     Nov. 481  				In this county [Hampshire] break is used for tear, and tear for break, as, I have torn my best decanter, or china dish; I have broke my cambric apron. 1888    F. T. Elworthy  (at cited word)  				Mind you don't tear the pitcher. Who've a-bin an' a-tord the winder? society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > acting > act			[verb (intransitive)]		 > in specific manner 1600    W. Shakespeare   i. ii. 25  				I could play Ercles rarely, or a part to teare a Cat in, to make all  split.       View more context for this quotation 1610     8  				Sirrha is this you, would rend and teare the cat upon a stage?  the world > health and disease > ill health > injury > injure			[verb (transitive)]		 > wound > lacerate a1000    Confess. Ecgberti §40 in  B. Thorpe  		(1840)	 II. 164)  				gif hy[swin] deade men terað [L. laceraverint]. a1050     78  				Terende weleras his he gefremð yfel. a1200     274  		(Lamb.)	  				Þeor beð naddren and snaken..Þa tereð and freteð þe uuele speken. a1400     		(Bodl.)	 5969  				Hij ne shulle hem wiþ tooþ tere. c1440      viii. 91  				To tere her skynnes bothe. 1526     Mark ix. f. lvijv  				As sone as the sprete sawe him, he tare him. 1574    J. Baret  R 167  				All his body is rent or torne, laceratus est toto corpore. 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  iii, in  tr.  Virgil  116  				Their defenceless Limbs, the Brambles tear .       View more context for this quotation 1743    P. Francis tr.  Horace  iv. 3  				Thou Wretch, whose Back with flagrant Whips is torn. 1813    J. Thomson  207  				In wounds, in which the divided surfaces are much torn or bruised. 1875    T. Seaton  96  				To avoid tearing the wood when cutting against the grain.  absolute.c1000    Ælfric  II. 532  				Ne sceal he teran ne bitan swa swa wulf.?1542    H. Brinkelow  xxiii. sig. F6v  				To teare lyke bearys, and to byte lyke cruel woluys. 3. c1000     v.  		(1849)	 46  				Ne ðu hine ne tæl ne ne ter mid wordum. 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane  f. cxxij  				The members of the churche tone a sondre. 1597    W. Shakespeare   iii. iii. 82  				Though you thinke that all as you haue done Haue torne their  soules.       View more context for this quotation 1603    W. Shakespeare   iii. ii. 10  				To heare a rebustious periwig fellow, To teare a passion in totters. 1609     D iij  				A Rogue..so tearing the sence, I neuer met with. 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  ii, in  tr.  Virgil  92  				Nor, when contending Kindred tear the Crown, Will set up one, or pull another  down.       View more context for this quotation 1779     No. 21. ⁋2  				My sneezing..which, she said, tore her poor nerves in pieces. 1845    S. Austin tr.  L. von Ranke  III. 113  				Christendom itself was torn with divisions. 1908     24 Mar. 6  				He, too, tears his finish, while he still has his old fault. society > faith > worship > sacrilege > blasphemy > blaspheme			[verb (intransitive)]		 c1325    Song of Mercy 150 in   		(1862)	 123  				We stunt noþer for schame ne drede To teren vr god from top to to. c1386    G. Chaucer  146  				It is grisly for to heere hem swere Oure blissed lordes body they to-tere.]			 1539    C. Tunstall  		(1823)	 80  				The tearynge of goddis name, and particular mention of all the woundes and peynes that Christe suffered for vs. 1557    F. Seager  xi. C vij  				What better art thou for this thy swearyng Blasfamouslye, the name of god tearyng? a1624    Bp. M. Smith  		(1632)	 126  				Did not the Spaniards sweare, and curse, and teare God? the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > make a loud sound or noise			[verb (transitive)]		 > assail the ears or air 1597    W. Shakespeare   ii. i. 206  				Els would I teare the Caue where Eccho lies..With repetition of my Romeos  name.       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  v. iii. 152  				To teare with Thunder the wide Cheekes a' th'  Ayre.       View more context for this quotation 1671    J. Milton  1472  				What noise or shout was that? it tore the  Skie.       View more context for this quotation 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Georgics  iv, in  tr.  Virgil  142  				All her fellow Nymphs the Mountains tear With loud  Laments.       View more context for this quotation 1823    C. Lamb Praise of Chimney-sweepers in   259  				A shout that tore the concave. the mind > emotion > suffering > suffer mental pain			[verb (intransitive)]		 the mind > emotion > suffering > mental anguish or torment > cause of mental anguish or torment > cause anguish to or torment			[verb (transitive)]		 1666    J. Bunyan  §46  				Now was I tore and rent in heavy case for many days together. 1720    A. Pope tr.  Homer  VI.  xxii. 526  				Grief tears his Heart. 1859    A. Helps  New Ser. I. i. 28  				That man torn by domestic affliction. 1872    W. Black  xi  				The young man is torn asunder with doubts and fears. 1898    F. P. Dunne  47  				They say th' Spanyards is all tore up about it. 1950    R. Moore  240  				Jeb, poor lamb, he was so tore out about you that he never said nothing. 1956    ‘B. Holiday’  & W. Dufty  xiii. 132  				The few I did see when they came back tore me apart. One night..a kid came in to see me... His hair had turned completely white. 1972     24 June 9/1  				Robert A. Power, who said he was tore up from work in his younger days and was ‘no good now to trade and no good to sell.’ 1974    K. Millett  		(1975)	  iii. 323  				Pete is too delicate to pattern. Tears him up just to hear Winnie yell. the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > state of uncertainty, suspense > be in suspense			[verb (intransitive)]		 > hesitate between alternatives 1871    L. W. M. Lockhart  I. viii. 148  				Torn between her desire to underrate Eila and to preserve her own dignity. 1888    Mrs. H. Ward  III.  v. xxxv. 110  				Agnes, torn between her interest in what was going on and her desire to get back to her mother, had at last hurriedly accepted this Mrs. Sherwood's offer. 1922    T. Wolfe  		(1956)	 ii. 31  				The girl Laura, ‘torn between’ (as the saying goes) love for her beaten father and the blunt young apple grower. 1948    A. Paton   ii. viii. 172  				Jarvis was torn between compassion and irritation, and he stood and watched uncomfortably. 1971    ‘G. Charles’  iii. 104  				As usual in such cases he was torn between both sides, angry with Dorn for his patronage of the couple, impatient with them for being what they were. the world > action or operation > failure or lack of success > fail or be unsuccessful			[verb (intransitive)]		 > fail to reach goal or objective 1909    ‘I. Hay’  xvii. 320  				‘I've fairly torn it, this time!’ he reflected morosely. a1918    W. Owen in   		(1920)	 22  				First wave we are, first ruddy wave; that's tore it. 1919    War Slang in   29 Aug. 822/2  				A much more popular and pregnant expression than ‘knock the end in’ is ‘that's torn it’. 1924    R. Kipling  		(1926)	 258  				I expect I must 'ave kept carryin' on, till Headquarters give me that wire from Ma... That wire tore it. 1938    G. Greene  		(1947)	 77  				‘I am English,’ Mr. Calloway said. Even that didn't tear it. 1954    M. Procter   vi. iii. 180  				He looked at his watch. ‘That's torn it,’ he said. 1960    D. Lessing  v. 185  				Oh, my God, that tears it, if he's going to start. 1972    D. Delman  		(1973)	 iv. 110  				‘Ouch,’ she said, grinning... ‘Well, that tears that, doesn't it?’ society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > perform music			[verb (intransitive)]		 > specific style or technique > in jazz 1932    J. Dos Passos  270  				Bud had been tearing things up at the University and was on the edge of getting fired. 1955    N. Shapiro  & N. Hentoff  204  				He had the first big colored band that hit the road and tore it up. 1963     14 Mar. 478/3  				The trumpeter Wild Bill Davison, who ‘tore it up’ with admirable primitivity and sensuality. 1968     Sept. 8  				Finally Tina came on and tore the joint up. She signified, the women identified and the men just drooled. society > authority > punishment > 			[verb (transitive)]		 the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > criticism > criticize			[verb (transitive)]		 > severely 1938    M. K. Rawlings  xxix. 381  				I'll tear down all two of you. Now git down and pick up ever' one o' them peas and wash 'em off. 1978    I. B. Singer  vii. 128  				The insolence of a writer tearing down a piece before it's been performed! 1953     1 Jan. 13/2  				Carefully tear apart your editorial. 1977    ‘C. Aird’  xv. 176  				Somebody was ready to tear the place apart. You should have seen Miss Moleyn's house.  the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > suffer from frenzy or raging OE     281  				He þa lungre gefeoll freorig to foldan, ongan his feax teran, hreoh on mode, ond his hrægl somod. c1330     100  				He tar the her of hed and berd. 1490    W. Caxton tr.   		(1885)	 i. 34  				He..wrange his handes, and pulled his berde, and tare alle his heres. 1580    J. Lyly  		(new ed.)	 f. 78v  				Hee tare his haire, rent his clothes. 1700    J. Dryden Chaucer's Palamon & Arcite  i, in   20  				He roar'd, he beat his Breast, he tore his Hair. 1848    W. M. Thackeray  li. 462  				She might tear her long hair and cry her great eyes out. 1855    W. M. Thackeray  ix  				Bulbo began to cry bitterly, and tore quantities of hair out of his head.  5. the world > space > place > removal or displacement > remove or displace			[verb (transitive)]		 > remove or take away > forcibly tear off or away the world > space > place > removal or displacement > extraction > extract			[verb (transitive)]		 > pull out or up > violently tear out or up 1297     (Rolls) App.  XX. 188  				Hare fon come þere, Adoun of his hors henri hi tere Mid yrene crokes. a1400						 (a1325)						     		(Trin. Cambr.)	 l. 9072  				My kyngis robe of me ȝe tere. c1400     7315  				That men ne may in no manere Teren the wolf out of his hide. c1515    Ld. Berners tr.   		(1882–7)	 lv. 188  				He..tare of helmes & strake out braynes. c1540						 (?a1400)						     1966  				I shuld tere out þi tunge and þi tethe euyn. 1590    E. Spenser   ii. x. sig. Y  				The noble braunch from th'antique stocke was torne Through discord. 1614    W. Raleigh   i. ii. xxiii. §2. 563  				A great earth-quake, which did teare downe halfe an Hill. 1647    H. More   i. ii. cxxix  				The tallest trees up by the root ytorn. 1647    H. More   i. iii. App. xvii  				Sith unwillingly they were ytore From their dear carkasses their fate they rue. 1667    A. Wood  		(1892)	 II. 121  				I find many leaves..toren out. 1699    W. Dampier   iii. vi. 67  				By tearing up the Trees by the Roots. 1704    J. Swift Full Acct. Battel between Bks. in   248  				Who had tore off his Title-page. 1705    J. Addison tr.  Lucan in   7  				Ships, from their Anchors torn. 1821    W. Scott  III. xv. 298  				I could tear out mine own eyes for their blindness! 1849    T. B. Macaulay  I. iii. 387  				The porters..tore down the placards in which the scheme was announced. 1899    T. C. Allbutt et al.   VIII. 872  				They [molluscan tumours] may be easily torn out of the skin when mature. 1574    E. Hellowes tr.  A. de Guevara  502  				Dispitefull words that..breake hir heart, & teare the teares out of hir eyes. 1600    W. Shakespeare   iii. ii. 288  				What, will you teare Impatient answeres, from my gentle  tongue?       View more context for this quotation 1647    T. May   i. vii. 77  				If a King will suffer men to be torne from him, he shall never have any good service done him. 1797    A. Radcliffe  I. i. 5  				At length he tore himself away. 1829    E. Bulwer-Lytton  II.  ii. ii. 34  				I think I see her now, as she stood the moment after I had torn myself from her embrace. 1888    J. Payn  II. ii. 27  				Before the gentlemen come in and tear you away from me. 1941    S. J. Baker  76  				Tear off a piece, to coit with a woman. 1951    S. Longstreet   iv. v. 222  				Look, you come down and tear off a piece anytime. And the wine—Asti Spumante—she is ona me. I stand the wine. The girls, that is up to you. 1970    G. Greer  265  				The vocabulary of impersonal sex is peculiarly desolating. Who wants to ‘tear off a piece of ass?’ 1977     Nov. 67/2  				Italian wives must sit and suffer if the men tear off a bit on the sly.  the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > tearing or tearing apart > tear			[verb (intransitive)]		 the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > tearing or tearing apart > tear			[verb (intransitive)]		 > make a tear the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > tearing or tearing apart > tear			[verb (transitive)]		 1526    W. Bonde   iii. sig. XXXi  				Ye, and many mo sorowes dyd teare & thryll throwe her hert. 1848    W. E. Burton  25 (Farmer)  				They..kept on tearin at each other like a pack o' wolves. 1869    A. J. Evans  xxxi. 432  				His hands, partially confined, were tearing at the inflamed flesh. 1526    W. Bonde   iii. sig. XXXiiii  				His handes and fete dyd rent and teare, for the weyght of his blessed body. 1679    J. Moxon  I.  ix. 155  				The Boards will Tear or Shake, w[h]ich is in Vulgar English, Split or Crack. 1723    J. Clarke tr.   I.  i. xxvii. 229  				Cloths and other Stuffs of this Colour must tear and wear sooner than those of any other Colour. 1776    W. Withering  		(1796)	 III. 352  				Veil before the capsule swells, 4-sided; afterwards it tears into 2, 3, or 4 segments. 1838    Drummond in   2 156  				If attempted to be restored without..being first damped, the specimen tears through the middle. 1866    C. Kingsley  I. vi. 169  				All of a sudden..the clouds rose, tore up into ribands, and..blew clean away.   II.  Senses relating to violent speech or motion. the mind > emotion > excitement > riotous excitement > behave with riotous excitement			[verb (intransitive)]		 the mind > emotion > anger > manifestation of anger > show anger			[verb (intransitive)]		 > speak angrily the mind > emotion > pride > boasting or boastfulness > blustering or bravado > bluster			[verb (intransitive)]		 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > cry or shout			[verb (intransitive)]		 > with rage 1602    B. Jonson   iii. iv. sig. Fv  				He will teach thee to teare and rand, Rascall; to  him.       View more context for this quotation 1673    J. Dryden   iii. i. 34  				Three Tailors..who were tearing out as loud as ever they could sing. c1690    S. C. Further Quæries Pres. State New Eng. in   		(1868)	 I. 207  				Towns..which Rant and Tear at a great rate, because of a small Rate, not exceeding a score of Pounds. 1736    R. Ainsworth  		(1783)	 at Tear  				To rant, or tear along, tumultuor, debacchor, vociferationibus vias incessu implere. 1853    W. M. Thackeray  i. 31  				He goes through life, tearing, like a man possessed with a devil. 1897    G. Bartram  v. 132  				She stamped and foamed, and swore and tore.  9. the world > movement > rate of motion > swiftness > swift movement in specific manner > move swiftly in specific manner			[verb (intransitive)]		 > move with impetuous speed a1627    T. Middleton  & W. Rowley  		(1656)	  v. 61  				The nimble Fencer this that made me tear And traverse bout the Chamber. 1638    J. Suckling   v. 37 		(stage direct.)	  				Enter, tearing in, Pasithas. 1779    F. Burney Let. Nov. in   		(1994)	 III. 416  				I cannot bear to see Othello tearing about in that violent manner. 1786    S. Henley tr.  W. Beckford  56  				I thought I heard..the shrieks of a thousand bats, tearing from their crannies. 1842    W. M. Thackeray  ix  				Edward came tearing down to the borders on the news. 1877    A. B. Edwards  vi. 142  				The boat tears on before the wind. 1894    G. M. Fenn  I. 43  				This river tore down the narrow valley with headlong violence. 1901    H. Furniss  I. iii. 79  				The animals snorted..and..tore off..at a tremendous rate. 1853    C. Kingsley  II. xiv. 328  				Furiously..he burst up as if from the ground..tearing his way toward his idol. 1888    Mrs. H. Ward  I.  i. x. 282  				A little gully deep in bracken, up which the blast was tearing its tempestuous way. (a) 1901    M. Franklin  xxxvi. 301  				‘Syb, I want to speak to you.’.. ‘Very well; “tear into it”,’ as Horace would say. 1929    W. J. Smyth  xiii. 131  				‘Three notes a man if we win out!’.. ‘Aw, make it five an' we'll tear into th' job.’ 1949    R. Harvey  8  				Then the lights went down, the baton rapped sharply, and the orchestra tore into the overture. 1961    J. B. Priestley  ii. 12  				I tore into the business of getting visas.  (b)1934    in    				1946    F. Sargeson  93  				You could still hear them tearing into each other.1954    J. Masters   ii. xi. 94  				The sahib tore into me as if I was a little boy he'd caught making a mess on the carpet.1984     6 Apr. 10 a/1  				Jackson..tore into both candidates in past debates.  This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online June 2022). tearv.2  Now  rare. †1. the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > weep			[verb (intransitive)]		 c950     John xi. 35  				Tæherende [Rushw. teherende] uæs se hælend. c1430     		(1869)	  ii. li. 95  				I bigan to tere and to weepe and to sigh. 1599    T. Moffett  9  				Its mother..Who absent blear'd and tear'd as much for him. a1660    in  J. T. Gilbert  		(1880)	 II. 60  				Eneas himself..too often teared for the losse of Troye. 1719    Hamilton in   		(1832)	 694  				Some of them were so affected that they teared also. 1806    J. Cock  103  				I fell in wi' Geordy Brown, And he, poor saul, was tearin'! the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > weep for			[verb (transitive)]		 > spend or consume in weeping 1575    G. Gascoigne  iii  				I teare my time (ay me) in prison pent. the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > lachrymal organs > flow			[verb (intransitive)]		 > of eyes: shed or emit tears the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > weep			[verb (intransitive)]		 > shed tears (of the eyes) c1000   [implied in:    I. 72  				Wið tyrende eagan, genim þa ylcan wyrte betonican. (at tearing adj.2)]. 1527   [implied in:   L. Andrewe tr.  H. Brunschwig  sig. Civv  				The same is good put in the iyen agaynst tering iyen. (at tearing adj.2)]. 1650    in  A. I. Ritchie  		(1880)	 86  				Putting sneishen in his eyes to mak them tear. 1879   [implied in:    9 778  				A white spot formed on the cornea, along with much ‘tearing’ and ‘fear of light’. (at tearing n.2)]. 1971    E. Shorris  i. 16  				When your eyes teared and your head fell, I was afraid you were dying. 1980    J. Ball  		(1981)	 vi. 47  				When her eyes teared again, he pulled out his own clean handkerchief.  the world > matter > liquid > condition of being or making wet > make wet			[verb (transitive)]		 > with or as with tears a1653    Z. Boyd  		(1855)	 112  				Feare teares your eyes. 18..     37 545 (Cent. Dict.)  				The lorn lily teared with dew. 				Draft additions December 2021Phrasal verbs   to tear up the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > weep			[verb (intransitive)]		 > shed tears (of the eyes) the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > lachrymal organs > flow			[verb (intransitive)]		 > of person: shed tears 1941    H. Hedrick   iv. ii. 260  				‘I'll be glad to do anything—anything. I've laid away one husband—’ the white handkerchief dabbed at her nose, the blue eyes teared up. 1977     31 Jan. 		(caption)	 54  				[He] wept three times in three days before the election... He teared up again during his recent State of the Union address. 2018     17 Apr. 26/2  				At Heathrow arrivals, I find myself tearing up as I watch people greet each other.  This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022). > see alsoalso refers to : tear-comb. form <  |