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单词 terrible
释义

terribleadj.adv.n.

Brit. /ˈtɛrᵻbl/, U.S. /ˈtɛrəb(ə)l/
Forms:

α. Middle English terable, Middle English terrabyl, Middle English–1500s terrable, Middle English–1500s terryble, Middle English– terrible, 1500s terreble, 1500s teryble, 1500s tirable, 1500s–1600s tirreble, 1500s–1600s tirrible, 1600s tyrrable; English regional 1800s turrible, 1800s– tarrable (chiefly northern), 1800s– tarrible (northern), 1800s– terraayble (Berkshire), 1800s– terrable (northern), 1800s– turrabul (Devon), 1900s– tirrible (northern); Scottish pre-1700 terrabill, pre-1700 terrable, pre-1700 terrebill, pre-1700 terrebyll, pre-1700 terribil, pre-1700 terribill, pre-1700 1700s– terrible, 1800s terriple, 1900s– tairrable; Irish English (northern) 1900s– tarrible.

β. English regional 1800s– taarble (northern), 1800s– tarble (Sussex), 1800s– tar'ble (Devon), 1800s– tarr'b'e (northern), 1800s– terble, 1800s– terr'ble, 1900s– ter'ble (Devon), 1900s– tur'ble (Dorset); Scottish 1800s tarble, 1800s terr'ble; Irish English (chiefly northern) 1800s– tarble, 1800s– terble, 1900s– tarrble.

γ. Scottish 1800s ter'l, 1800s terral, 1800s tirrel, 1800s– terrl, 1900s– terl, 1900s– terril, 1900s– terr'le.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French terrible; Latin terribilis.
Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman and Middle French terrible (French terrible ) causing or fit to cause terror (c1160 in Old French), awe-inspiring (second half of the 14th cent.), very harsh, severe, or painful, very great (second half of the 15th cent.; the use in sense A. 2b is apparently not paralleled in French until later: 1672), and its etymon (ii) classical Latin terribilis inspiring terror or alarm, frightening < terrēre to frighten (ultimately < the same Indo-European base as Sanskrit tras- to tremble, ancient Greek τρεῖν to flee, to fear, dread) + -bilis -ble suffix. Compare Old Occitan tarrible (15th cent.), Catalan terrible (14th cent.), Spanish terrible (end of the 13th cent.), Portuguese terrível (15th cent. as †terribel , †terribil ), Italian terribile (early 14th cent.). With use as noun compare post-classical Latin terribilia (neuter plural) terrible marvels (Vulgate), French terrible terrible thing (1669). With use as adverb compare slightly earlier terribly adv.With the forms in -able compare -able suffix.
A. adj.
1. Causing or fit to cause terror; inspiring great fear or dread. Also: awe-inspiring, awesome.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of inspiring fear > quality of terribleness > [adjective]
eislichc888
eyesfulOE
awfulc1175
smarta1200
ferlya1225
sternc1275
grisea1300
uglya1300
dreadfula1325
fell?c1335
stout1338
perilousc1380
terriblec1400
ghastfulc1449
timorous1455
epouventable1477
bedreadc1485
dreadablec1490
dreadc1540
buggisha1555
dreaded1556
monster-like1561
dire1567
scareful1567
terrifying1577
scary1582
direful1583
affrighting1592
dismal1594
affrightful1603
diral1606
tirable1607
frighting1619
scaring1641
affrighteninga1651
formidolous1656
terrific1667
terrifical1677
atrocious1733
terrorful1789
orful1845
lurid1850
terrorsome1890
turble1893
timorsome1894
like the wrath of God1936
c1400 tr. Aelred of Rievaulx De Institutione Inclusarum (Vernon) (1984) 57 (MED) Byholde þe horrour..his chaar þat be terrible as eny tempest.
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) vi. l. 30 (MED) Hir face seemyng cruel & terrible, And bi disdeyn manacyng of look.
1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos xv. 58 Wherof was made a monstre fulle terrible, that hath as many eyen in her hede..as she hathe fedders vpon her.
?1507 W. Dunbar Tua Mariit Wemen (Rouen) in Poems (1998) I. 48 With a terrebill tail..stangand as edderis.
a1525 (c1448) R. Holland Bk. Howlat l. 620 in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1925) II. 114 That terrible felloun my spreit affrayd.
1562 W. Bullein Bk. Simples f. 37, in Bulwarke of Defence Doth kepe the minde..from tirable and fearefull dreames.
1565 in J. A. Picton City of Liverpool: Select. Munic. Rec. (1883) I. 108 The marvelloussest and terriblest storm.
1586 R. Lane Acct. in R. Hakluyt Principal Navigations (1589) 743 The Mangoaks (whose name, and multitude besides their valour is terrible to al the rest of the provinces).
1612 J. Brinsley Ludus Lit. xxvii. 277 In verie many schooles..the whole gouernment maintained only by continuall and terrible whipping.
1638 J. Ford Fancies i. 8 What a terrible sight to a lib'd breech is a sow gelder?
a1661 Earl of Monmouth tr. P. G. Capriata Hist. Wars Italy (1663) x. 371 A French-like fury, more terrible then the raging of the Sea.
1721 J. Strype Eccl. Memorials II. i. v. 36 Punished..to the terrible example of all others.
1791 W. Cowper tr. Homer Iliad in Iliad & Odyssey I. iv. 515 The Greeks..With martial order terrible advanced.
1835 R. M. Bird Infidel I. vi. 86 The gigantic beast, whose voice was to him..more terrible than the yell of the mountain tiger.
1871 A. C. Swinburne in Fortn. Rev. July 62 Superb instances of terrible beauty undeformed by horrible detail.
a1933 J. A. Thomson Biol. for Everyman (1934) II. 892 Fafnir, the terrible nine-headed dragon whom Sigurd slew.
1951 S. H. Bell December Bride i. viii. 63 Martha's God was a terrible but hearkening God.
2009 Guardian 21 Nov. 4/4 10% of children in the UK suffer from ‘night terrors’... Most of them grow out of it but at least 2% of adults carry on having terrible, vivid dreams.
2.
a. Very harsh, severe, or painful; formidable; very difficult. Hence: (usually of something disapproved of) very great, extreme; excessive, extreme; extremely bad; appalling. (Cf. the similar use of awful adj., dreadful adj., frightful adj., horrible adj., tremendous adj., etc.)
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > mental anguish or torment > [adjective] > severe
heavya1000
tartc1000
unridec1175
unsoftc1275
uglya1300
smartc1300
sternc1300
cruelc1384
sharpc1386
shrewda1387
snella1400
painousa1450
painlyc1460
sensible1502
terrible1509
heinous?1541
severe1747
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adjective] > very great or extreme
strangec1380
overpassinga1382
passinga1387
most?c1430
extremec1460
horriblea1464
violenta1500
mainc1540
immortal?c1550
exquisite1552
sore1555
three-piled1598
thundering1618
devilish1639
shrewda1643
deadly1660
woundy1681
vast1696
monstrous1711
mortal1716
terrific1743
hell-fired1754
hellish1764
colossal1794
severe1805
awful1818
all-fired1829
terrible1829
quare and1847
ferocious1877
pluperfect1889
raging1889
giddy1896
utter1898
stiff1905
1509 S. Hawes Conuercyon Swerers (de Worde) sig. A.ii The cruell swerers whiche do god assayle On euery syde his swete body to tere With terryble othes as often as they swere.
1565 in D. H. Fleming Reg. Christian Congregation St. Andrews (1889) I. 235 Bursting owt wyth tearis throw the aufull and terrebyll fear.
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 128 Thair constant amitie..to thair nychtbouris the Britanis brocht a terrabill feir.
1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xxx. sig. F4v He is a terrible fastner on a piece of Beefe.
1670 A. Marvell Let. 21 Mar. in Poems & Lett. (1971) II. 314 The terrible Bill against Conventicles.
1725 A. Pope Wks. Shakespear IV. 7 'Tis not impossible it might have been filled up with—Francis Drake—tho' that were a terrible anachronism.
1779 Mirror No. 41. ⁋6 I was told it was a great way off, and over terrible mountains.
1829 E. Bulwer-Lytton Devereux I. i. ii. 11 He was a terrible caviller at the holy mysteries of catholicism.
1879 F. Rogers & M. Holmes Our German Senator (typescript) i. 30 Ah Bertie, I'm afraid you are a terrible flirt.
1939 G. B. Shaw In Good King Charles's Golden Days i. 7 Just as I have my terrible weakness for figures Mr. Rowley has a very similar weakness for women.
1965 E. J. Howard After Julius vii. 100 Her mother had made his life so terrible—not worth living.
2008 Independent 8 Feb. 43/3 There are also animals that are miscarrying..because of the terrible cold.
b. Of a person: outrageous; behaving in a shocking or outrageous manner; very badly behaved. terrible child or infant [in later use after French enfant terrible enfant terrible n.] : a badly behaved or rebellious child; = enfant terrible n.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > wickedness > [adjective] > extremely wicked
deepOE
blackOE
outrageousa1325
heinousc1374
flagitiousc1384
excessive1393
rankc1400
enorm1481
prodigiousc1487
villainous1489
terriblec1510
sceleratea1513
monstrous1531
enormious1545
facinorous1548
monstruous1562
felonious1575
enormous1593
facinoriousa1616
rounda1638
scarlet1710
facinerose1727
atrocious1772
outraging1895
c1510 H. Watson tr. Gospelles of Dystaues sig. E.iv Whan ye se a terryble horse that wyll not suffre that they mount vppon hym..saye to hym in his ere these wordes.
1562 W. Bullein Bk. Use Sicke Men f. lij, in Bulwarke of Defence A terrible childe..whiche if he bee not corrected, and banished awaie, wyll be hys fathers death.
1694 C. Cotton tr. L. Pontis Mem. ii. iv. 220 He was a terrible man, when he was set upon mischief.
1721 R. Samber tr. A. de La Motte 100 New Court Fables ii. 185 La Fontaine calls the Wind that tore up the Oak by the Roots, The most terrible Child that till then the North Wind ever bore.
1843 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) xxiv. 300 ‘Oh you terrible old man!’ cried the facetious Merry to herself.
1859 C. Reade Love me Little I. i. 6 He was a terrible infant, not a horrible one.
1926 A. Huxley Two or Three Graces 25 Peddley was not the man to be put out by even the most terrible of terrible infants.
1970 C. Hampton Philanthropist v. 69 All the men I fall in love with turn out to be such terrible people.
1978 M. Cadogan & P. Craig Women & Children First x. 222 Violet Elizabeth, the terrible child of the William books.
2002 Hotdog Feb. 26/2 I went from being known as a more terrible person than that, so I'm not even tripping about how people perceive me.
c. Exceedingly incompetent; of shockingly poor performance or quality.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > [adjective] > very
subter-superlative1655
terrible1775
third-rate1814
ternary1826
tenth-rate1834
No. Ten1880
tenth-remove1905
awful1916
raggedy1921
stinko1924
piss-poor1945
number ten1953
1775 London Rev. Eng. & Foreign Lit. Mar. 233 Ay, take care, Reader, for this writer is a terrible poet, we assure you.
1796 G. Wakefield in A. Pope Odyssey IV. xvii. 167 (note) Terrible rhymes indeed for such a poet!
1877 R. De B. Trotter Galloway Gossip Sixty Years Ago ii. 48 He was a terrible singer, and had a powerful voice, and roared horridly.
1948 C. Fry Thor with Angels 20 As far as he can remember, Though he has a terrible memory for names, His name is Merlin.
1964 in C. Hamblett & J. Deverson Generation X 88 He was hopeless—you follow me?—terrible in bed. That's why his missus left him..to himself.
1979 ‘J. le Carré’ Smiley's People xxi. 292 She's a terrible driver, George. And I mean terrible.
2007 D. Halberstam Coldest Winter viii. 427 Keiser was blamed for the division's terrible performance on its most tragic day.
B. adv.
= terribly adv. 1a Now chiefly regional and U.S.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > state of being accursed > [adverb] > as everyday imprecation
wickedlya1375
terrible1490
cursedly1570
plaguilya1586
damnably1598
cursefully1606
damnedly1607
lousily1611
damnablea1616
execrably1633
excrementitiously1638
infernally1638
mangilya1640
putidly1654
infamously1695
consumedly1707
damned1757
damnationly1762
shockingly1768
damn1787
deucedly1819
peskily1833
pesky1833
beastly1853
dashedly1888
stinkingly1906
rasted1919
effing1945
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of inspiring fear > quality of terribleness > [adverb]
dreadlyc1175
eislichec1175
grimlyc1175
ungainlya1200
awly?c1225
grurefulliche?c1225
fiendlyc1275
dreadfullya1400
felly?c1400
awfully1487
terrible1490
terriblya1500
fearingly1556
direly1610
dismally1653
dreadful1682
formidably1685
terrifyingly1767
direfully1775
terrifically1778
terrificly1791
appallingly1825
turble1893
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > extremely or exceedingly > specifically of something bad
sorea1300
grievously1340
terrible1490
beastly?1518
shrewdlyc1533
arrantly?1548
murrainly?1548
abominablea1550
pestilence1567
pestilently1567
cursedly1570
pestiferously1570
murrain1575
plaguey1584
plaguilya1586
grievous1598
scandalously1602
horridly1603
terribly1604
monstrously1611
hellish1614
dreadfullya1616
horrid1615
pestilenta1616
infernally1638
preposterously1661
woeful1684
confoundedly1694
confounded1709
glaringly1709
cursed1719
flagrantly1756
weary1790
disgustingly1804
filthy1827
blamed1833
peskily1833
pesky1833
blame1843
blasted1854
wickedly1858
blatantly1878
shamelessly1885
disgracefully1893
ruddy1913
bastarda1935
pissing1951
sodding1954
pissingly1971
1490 W. Caxton tr. Foure Sonnes of Aymon (1885) i. 42 The duke..spored hys horse terryble.
1578 T. Churchyard Lamentable & Pitifull Descr. Wofull Warres Flaunders 12 The season was then so terrible cold, that all the way we had but Snowe and sleete in oure faces.
1606 S. Gardiner Bk. Angling 13 The world is a Sea..terrible salt thorough sin.
a1614 J. Melville Autobiogr. & Diary (1842) 237 Uzzia, the King of Juda, was sa terrible plagget, and his haill land schaken.
1634 T. Herbert Relation Some Yeares Trauaile 5 The weather being terrible hot.
1796 J. Austen Let. 9 Jan. (1995) 1 We were so terrible good as to take James in our carriage.
1825 J. Neal Brother Jonathan 106 Seen him afore to-day, I guess; haint you, Mister? turrible sharp feller, as ever you seed.
1877 E. A. Freeman in Life & Lett. (1895) II. viii. 158 I was in a terrible bad way.
1901 M. Franklin My Brilliant Career xxxi. 270 The old yeos [ewes] looks terrible skinny.
1926 E. O'Neill Great God Brown Prol. 16 My mother used to believe the full of the moon was the time to sow. She was terrible old-fashioned.
1942 L. Hughes Shakespeare in Harlem 90 He mistreated her terrible.
1990 B. Roche Poor Beast in Rain i. iii. 31 She misses you terrible of course.
C. n.
A terrible thing or being; something that causes terror or dread, esp. used with reference to death. Usually in plural. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of inspiring fear > quality of terribleness > [noun] > one who or that which terrifies
terrora1500
terrifier1586
terrible1606
terrification1622
fright1634
gastering1642
Dracula1938
1606 Bp. J. Hall Heauen vpon Earth xv. 100 The last and greatest of all terribles, Death it selfe.
1682 J. Flavell Pract. Treat. Fear (new ed.) ii. 9 Job calls it the King of terrours..or the most terrible of terribles.
a1732 T. Boston Distinguishing Char. True Believers (1791) i. 92 Death is of all terribles the most terrible, and is therefore called the king of terrors.
1826 J. Clare Let. 14 Mar. (1985) 379 You can keep away the ‘bluedevils’ & the other humbugs of misery in these terribles.
1850 J. Struthers Poet. Wks. II. 149 One has, between Grecian and Gothic story, generated a new race of terribles.
1903 Monthly Rev. 12 147 Pater is but the most perfect example of the mood of the age, an age that is above all things pitiful, especially of death which is of all terribles still the most terrible.
1983 R. Sampson Yesterday's Faces II. 90 Through the Nick Carter stories these terribles flow, a mazy stream of them. No softies here.

Compounds

C1. Complementary and parasynthetic, as terrible-looking, terrible-tempered, etc.
ΚΠ
1713 C. Shadwell Humours of Army v. 59 I met that Terrible looking Fellow, my Rival just now.
1794 A. Radcliffe Myst. of Udolpho III. iv. 153 A party of the enemy..are coming towards the castle;..all those terrible-looking fellows one used to see at Venice.
1844 tr. F. H. K. de La Motte Fouqué Sintram & Compan. ii. 5/1 Upon the stairs I was met by two strange and terrible-looking people whom I had never seen before.
1876 ‘G. Eliot’ Daniel Deronda IV. vii. liv. 109 He seemed to her a terrible-browed angel.
1946 Liberty 1 June 63/3 (advt.) That terrible-tasting stuff he used to make me take was so high-powered that it would just about floor me!
1999 Dallas Morning News (Nexis) 4 Apr. (Sports Day section) 2 b The terrible-tempered Kevin Brown.
C2.
terrible twins n. a pair of associates whose behaviour is troublesome or outrageous.
ΚΠ
1856 C. Reade It is never too Late III. xxii. 219 Lust and hate, terrible twins, stung that dark heart to frenzy.
1915 A. B. Emerson Ruth Fielding at Sunrise Farm xvi. 130 It was because of the ‘terrible twins’ that Ruth had gotten Sadie to talk at all.
2005 D. Wright There's No Need to Shout! viii. 159 She dragged him into some of her naughty situations and they became the ‘terrible twins’.
terrible twos n. colloquial (with the or possessive adjective) the period in a child's social development (typically around the age of two years) associated with defiant or challenging behaviour.
ΚΠ
1950 (title of film) The terrible twos and the trusting threes. [Produced for the Department of National Health and Welfare, Canada].
1988 R. Hillis in G. Ursell Sky High 42 Dad thought of Mom, pregnant again, frantic with a boy in his terrible twos.
2002 Here's Health Mar. 66/1 Ask any parent about ‘the terrible twos’ and they'll think of tantrums and an uncontrollable toddler.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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adj.adv.n.c1400
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