单词 | tight |
释义 | † tighttyhtn.1 Obsolete. 1. The action of drawing, draught; going, marching, march, course, way. Only Old English. ΚΠ OE Cynewulf Elene 53 Werod wæs on tyhte. Hleopon hornboran, hreopon friccan, mearh moldan træd. OE Phoenix 525 Fyr bið on tihte, æleð uncyste. 2. Bringing up, rearing, training, education; (good) breeding; behaviour. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > [noun] tightc888 workOE laitsc1225 rule?c1225 guise1303 conditionsc1374 actiona1393 governancea1393 governailc1425 port?a1439 fashion1447 dressa1450 governinga1450 walkingc1450 abearing?1454 deport1474 behaving1482 dealing1484 guidinga1500 demeanoura1513 behaviour?1521 walk?1567 daps1582 courses1592 deportment1601 behave?1615 deportation1616 containment1619 conduct1673 haviour1752 daddyism1984 c888 Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. viii Ic ðe geongne..me to bearne genom, & to minum tyhtum getyde... Þu me wære..leof..ær þon þe ðu cuðe minne tyht & mine þeawas. a1240 Sawles Warde in Cott. Hom. 247 For þat is þeaw in euch stude ant tuht forte halden. c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. Wace (Rolls) 9307 What for laughynge & oþer tyhtes, What for presentes & oþer delites [v.r. sightes], Þe Erl perceyued..Þe kyng [Uther] louede his wyf Igerne. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2021). tightadj.adv.n.2 A. adj. a. Dense, as a wood or thicket; = thight adj. 1; superseded by thick (thick adj. 4) Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > wood or assemblage of trees or shrubs > [adjective] > dense or consisting of large trees sounda1387 tighta1500 heavy1843 a1500 (?a1400) Sir Torrent of Portyngale (1887) l. 589 Hys squyer Rod all nyght In a wod, that wase full tyght. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > density or solidity > [adjective] thickc888 fastOE sada1375 massya1382 sounda1387 massya1398 corpulent1398 grossa1475 tight1513 massive1526 spiss?1527 solid?1533 thight1539 solidate1542 crass1545 bodily1557 spissy1570 dense1599 consolid1613 materiate1626 crassy1630 cakey1705 rocky1825 1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid ix. ii. 64 The wyld wolf..Abowt the bowght, plet all of wandis tyght, Bayis and gyrnis. 1682 N. Grew Anat. Plants iv. iii. v. 188 The Outer Part..is softer and more succulent; the Inner a tite and strong Membrane. a1728 [implied in: J. Woodward Attempt Nat. Hist. Fossils Eng. (1729) 125 The Bones are inflexible, Which does not arise from the Inflexibility of the Corpuscles that compose them; but from the Greatness of their Number, and the Firmness and Tightness of their Union. (at tightness n. 1)]. 1797 Encycl. Brit. XVII. 424/1 Construct a block of as tight wood as possible. 2. Of such close texture or construction as to be impervious to a fluid, etc. a. as the second element in combinations, as watertight, wind-tight, airtight, gas-tight, oil-tight, light-tight, the first element denoting that which the vessel keeps in or out. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > closed or shut condition > [adjective] > stopping up or blocking > without leak or tight tight1507 unleakable1838 leakless1899 leak-proof1926 1507 in H. Littlehales Medieval Rec. London City Church (1905) 23 Yat they..ye said tenement..shall kepe, repaire and mayntene, wynd tyght, water tyght. 1760 J. Ferguson Lect. vi. ii. 194 Push the open end of the glass tube through the collar of leathers..which it fits so as to be air-tight. 1832 D. Brewster Lett. Nat. Magic v. 109 A short tube d e, moveable up and down within it, so as to be gas-tight. 1896 Pop. Sci. Jrnl. 50 267 The human mind is not built in thought-tight compartments. 1905 Westm. Gaz. 11 Mar. 14/2 Untoned prints should be kept under close pressure in a light-tight and air-tight box. b. as simple word.See also tight barrel n., tight cooper n. at Compounds 3, etc. in C. 3. ΚΠ 1501 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1900) II. 24 Item, for vij pund of rosait to mak the clath thicht..xiiij d.] 1661 [see sense A. 2d]. 1669 R. Boyle Contin. New Exper. Physico-mech. i. xxxvii The Nose of a pair of Bellows that are Tite enough is well stopt. 1749 G. Berkeley Word to Wise in Wks. (1871) III. 443 A tight house, warm apparel, and wholesome food. 1856 F. L. Olmsted Journey Slave States 2 I have faith that there is a tight roof above the very much cracked ceiling. 1857 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. (1862) III. 144 A portion of bread was enclosed in a tight case, to prevent loss of water by evaporation. c. esp. Of a ship: watertight; well caulked and pitched; not leaky. Cf. thight adj. 4. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessel with reference to qualities or attributes > [adjective] > seaworthy or stable > water-tight tight1568 1568 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. xlvi. 4 Quhat pylett takis my schip in chairge, Mon hald hir clynlie, trym, and ticht. 1615 Bp. J. Hall Contempl. III. O.T. xi. 367 As some tight vessell that holds out against winde and water, so did Ruth against all the powers of a mothers persuasions. a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) ii. i. 375 Two Galliasses And twelue tite Gallies. a1625 J. Fletcher Womans Prize iii. v, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Ppppp/1 A ship..which..With more continuall labour then a Gally To make her tith, either she grows a Tumbrell,..or springs more leakes. 1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I Tite, the Seamen say a Ship is Tight, or Tite, when she is so staunch as to let in but very little Water. 1747 Gentleman's Mag. Apr. 170/2 The pitch being put in very hot will..make the ship as tight as a bottle. a1826 A. Cunningham Wet Sheet & Flowing Sea (song) ii The good ship tight and free. d. transferred and figurative leading to 3. Uncommunicative; secret; spec. Oil Industry, applied to a well about which little information is released. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > drilling for oil or gas > [adjective] > attributes of wells torpedoed1873 shut-in1931 tight1949 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > [adjective] > disposed to secrecy, secretive dernOE covert1340 secrec1385 secretc1440 mum1532 closec1540 whist1577 as silent as the grave1613 privatea1625 dark1650 uncommunicating1650 dry1681 uncommunicative1691 unexpansive1847 secretive1853 tight-lipped1876 cagey1909 zip-lipped1943 closet1948 coy1961 tight1977 1661 O. Felltham Resolves (rev. ed.) 240 They are not tyte enough to trust with a secret. 1730 in J. Copywell Shrubs Parnassus (1760) 130 Old Chaucer and Drayton I found in good plight, And Shakespear and Spencer appear pretty tight. 1809 B. H. Malkin tr. A. R. Le Sage Adventures Gil Blas III. vii. i. 8 He is a tight vessel, well armed and manned. 1817 Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 4 Jan. 31 A Sinecure, which you have secured for your Son,..who is (if all remains tight) to enjoy it for his life after your death. 1841 T. J. Dibdin in C. Dibdin Songs Addenda 242 O, it's a snug little island! A right little, tight little island! 1864 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend (1865) I. i. viii. 70 Mr. Boffin's notions of a tight will. 1949 Amer. Speech 24 34 If information about the venture is withheld from the public, then it becomes a tight well. 1966 Natural Resources Jrnl. (Univ. New Mexico) 6 55 If the draining well is what is commonly known in the industry as a ‘tight hole’, the information concerning its performance is probably more closely guarded than most national defense secrets. 1976 M. Machlin Pipeline ii. 32 ‘Who knows about this [sc. an oil-strike]?’ ‘Nobody but me and a couple of guys here on the platform know for sure... Communication is lousy here, but rumour travels faster than radio waves.’ ‘Okay. Shut it off..and see if you can keep it as tight a hole as possible.’ 1977 B. Freemantle Charlie Muffin v. 59 The British..[have] gone completely silent... The British Embassy is tighter than the Kremlin itself. 3. figurative of a person, expressing somewhat indefinite commendation: Competent, capable, able, skilful; alert, smart; lively, vigorous, stout; also in ironical use: cf. fine adj. 7c. Obsolete exc. dialect. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > [adjective] > specifically of person goodlyOE thriftyc1374 duec1449 prettya1450 honest1551 well-qualitied1567 tight1601 of sort1606 reg'lar1814 bricky1864 sublimish1864 1601 [implied in: B. Jonson Every Man in his Humor i. iv. 138 He shall heare on't, and that tightly too. 1602 [implied in: W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor ii. iii. 59 He will claperclaw thee titely. (at tightly adv. 1)]. 1602 [implied in: W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor i. iii. 74 Here sirrha beare me these Letters titely. (at tightly adv. 1)]. a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) iv. iv. 15 Thou fumblest Eros, and my Queenes a Squire More tight at this, then thou. View more context for this quotation a1625 J. Fletcher Monsieur Thomas (1639) ii. ii. sig. E Then take a widow, A good stanch wench, that tith. 1655 R. Baillie Disswasive Vindic. Pref. sig. Av That reverent, famous, most able, and tight writer. 1733 H. Bracken in W. Burdon Gentleman's Pocket-farrier 81 The less Physick the better, provided your Judgment's tite. 1821 W. Scott Pirate III. xiii. 304 He..swore..that if he had a thousand daughters, so tight a lad, and so true a friend, should have the choice of them. a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) Tight,..prompt; active; alert. ‘A tight fellow!’ 1829 F. Marryat Naval Officer I. ii. 47 I'll pay you off for this, my tight fellow. 1851 N. Hawthorne House of Seven Gables xiii. 202 It will take a tighter workman than I am to keep the spirits out of the seven gables. 1891 R. G. K. Wrench Winchester Word-bk. Tight, fast, hard. A tight bowler, etc. 4. a. Neat in appearance; neatly and carefully dressed; trim, tidy, smart; also, Of a neat compact build, well-made, shapely. archaic or dialect. Cf. taut adj. 5b. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > beauty > pleasing appearance > [adjective] > neat or trim netc1330 pertc1330 cleanc1386 nicec1400 picked?c1425 dapperc1440 feata1471 gim1513 trig1513 well-trimmedc1513 trick1533 smirk1534 tricksy1552 neat1559 netty1573 deft1579 primpc1590 briska1593 smug1598 spruce1598 sprink1602 terse1602 compt1632 nitle1673 sprig1675 snod1691 tight1697 smugged1706 snug1714 pensy1718 fitty1746 jemmy1751 sprucy1774 smartc1778 natty1785 spry1806 perjink1808 soigné1821 nutty1823 toiletted1823 taut1829 spick and span1846 spicy1846 groomed1853 spiffy1853 well-groomed1865 bandboxy1870 perjinkity1880 spick-span1888 bandbox1916 tiddly1925 whip-smart1937 spit and polish1950 spit-and-polished1977 1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World i. 11 They wear good Cloaths, and take delight to go neat and tight. 1707 G. Farquhar Beaux Stratagem i. 10 But you look so bright, And are dress'd so tight. 1712 J. Arbuthnot John Bull Still in Senses ii. 10 Tho' the Girl was a tight clever Wench as any was. 1721 A. Ramsay Bessy Bell & Mary Gray iii She blooming, tight, and tall is. c1830 M. M. Sherwood Houlston Tracts III. No. 81. 2 I was tight and smart in my own person; so that, as the neighbours used to say, every thing looked well upon me. 1886 M. K. Macmillan Dagonet the Jester 8 The tightest and cleanliest lads in the village. b. Of things: Neatly arranged or constructed; tidy, neat, snug, compact. Now dialect. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > [adjective] > tidy queemc1450 trig1513 trimc1521 neat1594 polite1602 terse1602 unlittered1612 ship-shape1644 snod1717 tight1720 redd1753 (as) neat (also clean) as a (new) pin1769 mack1825 tidy1828 slick1833 ship-shapely1843 trimly1858 taut1870 1720 A. Ramsay Edinb.'s Salut. to Ld. Carnarvon v Than I, nor Paris, nor Madrid, Nor Rome, I trow's mair able To busk you up a better bed, Or trim a tighter table. 1725 T. Thomas in Portland Papers VI. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) 126 Improved grounds..with tight, low, new farm houses. 1818 M. M. Sherwood Stories Church Catech. (ed. 4) xvi. 101 Sarah was contented with the coarsest gown..if it were but clean and tight. 1831 J. Ogilvie in Aberdeen Mag. Dec. 638 His wordy wife..Hauds a' thing tight about the house. 5. a. Firmly fixed or bound in its place; strongly attached or secured; not easily moved; also figurative faithful, steadfast, constant. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > absence of movement > [adjective] > stable > firmly fixed steadfast993 fastOE rootfastlOE sicker1297 sada1333 well-rooted1340 rooteda1393 surec1400 surefast1533 unremoved1551 fixed1577 implanted1595 firm1600 seateda1616 secure1675 tight1687 sitfast1837 locked1895 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > condition of being fast bound or firmly fixed > [adjective] fastOE sickera1400 branded1535 holdfast1567 firm1600 defixed1652 tight1687 anchored1789 well-reeved1812 hardfast1878 hand-tight1881 the mind > will > decision > constancy or steadfastness > [adjective] fasteOE stathelfasteOE anredOE hardOE starkOE trueOE steadfast993 fastredeOE stithc1000 findyOE stablea1275 stathelyc1275 stiffc1275 stablec1290 steel to the (very) backa1300 unbowinga1300 stably13.. firm1377 unmovablea1382 constantc1386 abidingc1400 toughc1400 sure1421 unmoblea1425 unfaintedc1425 unfaint1436 permanent?a1475 stalwartc1480 unbroken1513 immovable1534 inconcuss1542 unshaken1548 stout1569 unwavering1570 undiscourageable1571 fixed1574 discourageable1576 unappalled1578 resolute1579 unremoved1583 resolved1585 unflexiblea1586 unshakeda1586 square1589 unstooping1597 iron1598 rocky1601 steady1602 undeclinable1610 unboweda1616 unfainting1615 unswayed1615 staunch1624 undiscourageda1628 staid1631 unshook1633 blue?1636 true blue?1636 tenacious1640 uncomplying1643 yieldless1651 riveting1658 unshakened1659 inconquerable1660 unyielding1677 unbendinga1688 tight1690 unswerving1694 unfaltering1727 unsubmitting1730 undeviating1732 undrooping1736 impervertible1741 undamped1742 undyingc1765 sturdy1775 stiff as a poker1798 unfickle1802 indivertible1821 thick and thin1822 undisheartened1827 inconvertible1829 straightforward1829 indomitable1830 stickfast1831 unsuccumbing1833 unturnable1847 unswerved1849 undivertible1856 unforsaking1862 swerveless1863 steeve1870 rock-ribbed1884 stiff in the back1897 1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid iii. viii. 52 Our fallowis fangis in thair salis tycht [L. Vela legunt socii]. 1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 23 To gird it about with great bars of Iron to keep it tight, and hinder it from falling. 1690 C. Ness Compl. Hist. & Myst. Old & New Test. I. 153 His faith..kept him all along tight, steady and constant. 1715 J. T. Desaguliers tr. N. Gauger Fires Improv'd 129 You may fix it without any trouble, and be sure that it is tight. 1902 M. Barnes-Grundy Thames Camp 202 I pulled and strained, but it was as tight as wax. b. On terms of close friendship, intimate. Cf. thick adj. 10. U.S. slang. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > friendliness > [adjective] > intimate or familiar homelya1387 familiarc1405 familarya1500 internal1581 intrinsical1602 intimated1606 intrinsic1613 intimea1618 intimous1619 domestica1631 intimate1635 pack1686 thickc1756 throng1768 versant1787 solid1882 chummy1884 tutoyant1899 cosy1927 schmoozy1954 tight1956 1956 ‘B. Holiday’ & W. Dufty Lady sings Blues ii. 32 Blue..had me busted... He and Bub were real tight with the cops. 1971 Current Slang (Univ. S. Dakota) Winter 10 Tight, very much in love; very friendly. John and Mary were really tight for awhile but now they seem to have drifted apart. 1977 Rolling Stone 5 May 55/1 I was very tight with him for a long time. 6. a. Drawn or stretched so as to be tense; not loose or slack: said of a rope, etc., or of a surface; = taut adj. 4. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > hardness > types of hardness > [adjective] > taut stiffc1386 unrelaxed1508 taut1567 tight1576 strait1578 strict1578 starka1642 tense1671 stith1825 strict1860 stent1886 1576 A. Fleming tr. C. Plinius Novocomensis in Panoplie Epist. 256 (Like vnto a bowe) sometimes bent very tight, and sometimes againe made slack for the nones. 1589 G. Peele Tale of Troy in Farewell 14 Away they flye, their tackling teft [1604 toft] and tight. a1625 J. Fletcher Monsieur Thomas (1639) i. iii. sig. C4v Be sure then His tewgh be tith and strong:..He'l catch no fish else. 1703 W. Dampier Voy. New Holland i. 19 When the Rope is hal'd tight. 1816 S. T. Coleridge Christabel ii. 30 That (so it seem'd) her girded vests Grew tight beneath her heaving breasts. 1846 F. Brittan tr. J. F. Malgaigne Man. Operative Surg. 39 The knots ought to be tight enough to hold in apposition the edges of the wound; but not so tight as to cut the skin when the inflammation comes on, and the parts swell. 1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. iv. 87 Tom has eaten..and imbibed coffee, till his little skin is as tight as a drum. 1885 Law Rep.: Queen's Bench Div. 15 360 The belt..was passed over the drums..and drawn tight. b. figurative. Strict, stringent; severe. ΘΚΠ society > authority > strictness > [adjective] cruelc1230 straitc1430 closea1466 district1526 hard1577 obstrictc1600 strict1603 restricta1617 uninclining1794 tight1872 headmistressy1972 1872 W. Bagehot Physics & Politics i. iv. 37 The efficacy of the tight early polity so to speak and the strict early law. 1884 R. S. Storrs Divine Orig. Christianity v. 152 The larger moral power won by woman, by degrees made the tightest legal restrictions loose and elastic. 1887 Poor Nellie (1888) 294 Every boy wants a good tight hand over him. c. Of an organization or group: strict, disciplined, well co-ordinated; spec. of a pop group or an individual member of it. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > obedience > [adjective] > disciplined or trained disciplinedc1384 ruleda1398 well-disciplineda1533 disciplinated1590 seasoneda1643 well-drilled1756 tight1968 society > leisure > the arts > music > musician > instrumentalist > company of instrumentalists > [adjective] > well-co-ordinated tight1968 1968 L. Deighton Only when I Larf vi. 80 I ran a tight unit, and if that meant repeating my lecture every week, then I'd do that. 1971 Melody Maker 9 Oct. 21/3 Keef can be proud of his [jazz-rock] band... It's well rehearsed, tight and above all fun. 1977 Melody Maker 26 Mar. 46/6 (advt.) Wanted. Good tight drummer for funky group. 1980 Motson & Rowlinson European Cup 1955–80 ix. 190 This tight triumvirate, Smith in the boardroom, Robinson at the administrative helm, and Paisley on the training ground, headed an Anfield staff which worked as efficiently..as the team. 7. Drunk; tipsy. Cf. screwed adj. 5. slang. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [adjective] > drunk fordrunkenc897 drunkena1050 cup-shottenc1330 drunka1400 inebriate1497 overseenc1500 liquor1509 fou1535 nase?1536 full1554 intoxicate1554 tippled1564 intoxicated1576 pepst1577 overflown1579 whip-cat1582 pottical1586 cup-shota1593 fox-drunk1592 lion-drunk1592 nappy1592 sack-sopped1593 in drink1598 disguiseda1600 drink-drowned1600 daggeda1605 pot-shotten1604 tap-shackled1604 high1607 bumpsy1611 foxed1611 in one's cups1611 liquored1611 love-pot1611 pot-sick1611 whift1611 owl-eyed1613 fapa1616 hota1616 inebriated1615 reeling ripea1616 in one's (or the) pots1618 scratched1622 high-flown?1624 pot-shot1627 temulentive1628 ebrious1629 temulent1629 jug-bitten1630 pot-shaken1630 toxed1635 bene-bowsiea1637 swilled1637 paid1638 soaken1651 temulentious1652 flagonal1653 fuddled1656 cut1673 nazzy1673 concerned1678 whittled1694 suckey1699 well-oiled1701 tippeda1708 tow-row1709 wet1709 swash1711 strut1718 cocked1737 cockeyed1737 jagged1737 moon-eyed1737 rocky1737 soaked1737 soft1737 stewed1737 stiff1737 muckibus1756 groggy1770 muzzeda1788 muzzya1795 slewed1801 lumpy1810 lushy1811 pissed1812 blue1813 lush1819 malty1819 sprung1821 three sheets in the wind1821 obfuscated1822 moppy1823 ripe1823 mixed1825 queer1826 rosined1828 shot in the neck1830 tight1830 rummy1834 inebrious1837 mizzled1840 obflisticated1840 grogged1842 pickled1842 swizzled1843 hit under the wing1844 obfusticatedc1844 ebriate1847 pixilated1848 boozed1850 ploughed1853 squiffy?1855 buffy1858 elephant trunk1859 scammered1859 gassed1863 fly-blown1864 rotten1864 shot1864 ebriose1871 shicker1872 parlatic1877 miraculous1879 under the influence1879 ginned1881 shickered1883 boiled1886 mosy1887 to be loaded for bear(s)1888 squiffeda1890 loaded1890 oversparred1890 sozzled1892 tanked1893 orey-eyed1895 up the (also a) pole1897 woozy1897 toxic1899 polluted1900 lit-up1902 on (also upon) one's ear1903 pie-eyed1903 pifflicated1905 piped1906 spiflicated1906 jingled1908 skimished1908 tin hat1909 canned1910 pipped1911 lit1912 peloothered1914 molo1916 shick1916 zigzag1916 blotto1917 oiled-up1918 stung1919 stunned1919 bottled1922 potted1922 rotto1922 puggled1923 puggle1925 fried1926 crocked1927 fluthered1927 lubricated1927 whiffled1927 liquefied1928 steamed1929 mirackc1930 overshot1931 swacked1932 looped1934 stocious1937 whistled1938 sauced1939 mashed1942 plonked1943 stone1945 juiced1946 buzzed1952 jazzed1955 schnockered1955 honkers1957 skunked1958 bombed1959 zonked1959 bevvied1960 mokus1960 snockered1961 plotzed1962 over the limit1966 the worse for wear1966 wasted1968 wired1970 zoned1971 blasted1972 Brahms and Liszt?1972 funked up1976 trousered1977 motherless1980 tired and emotional1981 ratted1982 rat-arsed1984 wazzed1990 mullered1993 twatted1993 bollocksed1994 lashed1996 the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [adjective] > drunk > partially drunk merrya1382 semi-bousyc1460 pipe merry1542 totty1570 tipsy1577 martin-drunk1592 pleasant1596 mellow1611 tip-merry1612 flustered1615 lusticka1616 well to live1619 jolly1652 happy1662 hazy1673 top-heavy1687 hearty1695 half-seas-over1699 oiled1701 mellowish1703 half channelled over1709 drunkish1710 half-and-half1718 touched1722 uppisha1726 tosie1727 bosky1730 funny1751 fairish1756 cherry-merry1769 in suds1770 muddy1776 glorious1790 groggified1796 well-corned1800 fresh1804 to be mops and brooms1814 foggy1816 how-come-ye-so1816 screwy1820 off the nail1821 on (also, esp. in early use, upon) the go1821 swipey1821 muggy1822 rosy1823 snuffy1823 spreeish1825 elevated1827 up a stump1829 half-cockedc1830 tightish1830 tipsified1830 half shaved1834 screwed1837 half-shot1838 squizzed1845 drinky1846 a sheet in the wind1862 tight1868 toppy1885 tiddly1905 oiled-up1918 bonkers1943 sloshed1946 tiddled1956 hickey- 1830 [implied in: H. Lee Mem. Manager I. iii. 110 ‘I think they be getting on pretty tightish!’ ‘What do you mean, getting drunk!’ (at tightish adj. 3)]. 1840 in Amer. Speech (1951) 26 184 After supper I got tight, sick with oysters, and slept. 1843 Knickerbocker Mag. 22 366 We were never ‘groggy’, ‘intoxicated’, ‘boozy’..or ‘tight’, but once. 1853 G. A. Sala Slang in Househ. Words 24 Sept. 75/2 For the one word drunk, besides the authorised synonyms tipsy, inebriated, intoxicated, I find of unauthorised or slang equivalents..thirty-two, viz.: in liquor,..half-seas-over, far-gone, tight [etc.]. 1860 C. J. Lever One of Them II. 151 (Flügel) He was very ‘tight’, as we call it..far gone in liquor, I mean. 1868 C. J. Lever Bramleighs II. xxiv. 46 ‘No, sir, not a bit tipsy’, said Harding, interpreting his glance; ‘not even what Mr. Cutbill calls “tight”!’ 1882 G. A. Sala Amer. Revisited (1885) 269 By the time they reached their hotel [they] were quite ‘tight’. 8. a. Of a garment, etc.: Fitting closely, tight-fitting; often = too tight, closely fitting because not large enough. a tight fit, a garment, etc. which fits tightly; hence transferred (colloquial). ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [adjective] > that fits in specific way > close-fitting straita1387 justc1440 sitting1440 close1488 well-fitted1590 close-bodied1677 succinct1714 tightish1775 tight1784 full-fashioned1812 skintight1838 snug1838 fully-fashioned1844 tight-fitting1846 close-fitting1870 slim1884 skin-fitting1915 skinny1915 slinky1921 tight-ass1969 1784 J. King Cook's Voy. Pacific III. vi. vii. 377 A pair of tight trowsers, or long breeches, of leather. 1831 Examiner 11/2 It's rather a tight fit. 1841 C. Dickens Barnaby Rudge vi. 271 A very particular gentleman with exceedingly tight boots on. 1867 A. Trollope Last Chron. Barset I. xxxv. 308 A wedding-ring growing always tighter as I grow fatter and older. 1872 Punch 15 June 250/2 A tight uniform is so bad a thing for the soldier. b. Of ground: allowing (vehicles) little room for manœuvre. Of a turn, curve, etc.: having a short radius. ΘΚΠ the world > space > [adjective] > confined, restricted, or insufficiently spacious narroweOE straitc1290 unwidea1400 scanta1533 angust1540 roomless1548 pinched?1567 niggard1595 strict1598 straitened1602 pinching1607 incommodious1615 incapacious1635 over-strait1645 straiteninga1652 cramp1786 bottleneck1854 cramped1884 tight1937 claustrophobic1946 claustrophobe1954 1937 Sun (Baltimore) 20 Apr. 4/2 He expressed a hope the airport work would be completed as rapidly as possible, pointing out that Logan Field was ‘rather tight’ for large transports. 1947 A. C. Douglas Gliding & Adv. Soaring i. 24 He based this opinion on the belief..that they [sc. contemporary airplanes] could not be turned in tight circles like the birds. 1958 Times 19 Feb. 5/4 She [sc. an aircraft] started to turn to starboard, and it seemed clear that the turn became tighter and tighter. 1969 Times 23 May 1/3 The L.M. was due to spend about an hour in a tight orbit approaching within eight nautical miles of the surface. 1979 Beautiful Brit. Columbia Fall 19/1 The highway narrows down to one lane which clings in tight curves around a sheer mountainside. c. Applied to persons: tough, hard, unyielding; also, aggressive, ‘stroppy’. U.S. dialect or slang. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > decision > obstinacy or stubbornness > [adjective] starkOE moodyOE stithc1000 stidyc1175 stallc1275 harda1382 stubbornc1386 obstinate?1387 throa1400 hard nolleda1425 obstinant?a1425 pertinacec1425 stablec1440 dour1488 unresigned1497 difficultc1503 hard-necked1530 pertinatec1534 obstacle1535 stout-stomached1549 hard-faced1567 stunt1581 hard-headed1583 pertinacious1583 stuntly1583 peremptory1589 stomachous1590 mulish1600 stomachful1600 obstined1606 restive1633 obstinacious1649 opinionated1649 tenacious1656 iron-sided1659 sturdy1664 cat-witted1672 obstinated1672 unyielding1677 ruggish1688 bullet-headed1699 tough1780 pelsy1785 stupid1788 hard-set1818 thick and thin1822 stuntya1825 rigwiddie1826 indomitable1830 recalcitrant1830 set1848 mule-headed1870 muley1871 capitose1881 hard-nosed1917 tight1928 the mind > emotion > anger > irascibility > ill-naturedness > [adjective] stour1303 thwarta1325 elvishc1386 wrawc1386 wrawfulc1386 crabbeda1400 crousea1400 cursedc1400 doggeda1425 currishc1460 disagreeable1474 dour1488 thrawn1488 terne?1507 apirsmarta1522 crustyc1570 incommodious1570 bilious1571 mischievous-stomached1577 thrawn-faced1578 thrawn-mowit1578 wearisha1586 shrewish1596 rhubarbative1600 crabbish1606 ill-tempereda1616 cur-like1627 thrawn-faceda1628 terned1638 cross1639 splenial1641 frumpish1647 wry1649 bad-tempered1671 hot-tempered1673 sidy1673 ugly1687 ornery1692 cankerya1699 ramgunshoch1721 cantankerousc1736 frumpy1746 unhappy1756 grumpy1778 crabby1791 grumpish1797 thraw-gabbit18.. snarlish1813 cranky1821 stuntya1825 ill-natured1825 nattery1825 rantankerous1832 foul-tempered1835 cacochymical1836 as cross as two sticks1842 grumphy1846 knappy1855 carnaptious1858 cussed1858 three-cornered1863 snotty1870 sniffy1871 snorty1893 grouchy1895 scratchy1925 tight1950 stroppy1951 snitty1978 arsey1989 1928 R. Fisher Walls of Jericho 306 Tight, tough; redoubtable; hard. 1950 H. Patterson & E. Conrad Scottsboro Boy i. iii. 30 ‘You'll get it [sc. a bath] Saturday,’ he said. Saturday came and he put me off... I got tight with him. ‘I got to have a bath!’ 1950 H. Patterson & E. Conrad Scottsboro Boy i. iii. 31 I was a tight guy who would not show people tears, but I felt the water behind my lids. 1950 H. Patterson & E. Conrad Scottsboro Boy ii. vii. 129 There were guys there [i.e. in a prison], they made reputations for themselves as tight guys and killers just from defending themselves against the insane. 1960 L. Buckley Hiporama of Classics 16 He was a hard, tight, tough Cat. 9. Difficult to deal with or manage; hard, severe, ‘tough’, ‘stiff’; esp. in a tight place, a tight corner, a tight squeeze, etc., a position of difficulty. colloquial. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > [adjective] arvethc885 uneathOE arvethlichc1000 evilc1175 hardc1175 deara1225 derfa1225 illc1330 wickeda1375 uneasy1398 difficul?a1450 difficile?1473 difficulta1527 unready1535 craggy1582 spiny1604 tough1619 uphill1622 shrewda1626 spinousa1638 scabrous1646 spinose1660 rugged1663 cranka1745 tight1764 thraward1818 nasty1828 upstream1847 awkward1860 pricklyc1862 bristling1871 sticky1871 rocky1873 dodgy1898 challengeful1927 solid1943 ball-busting1944 challenging1975 1764 S. Foote Mayor of Garret ii. 35 Is Lady Barbara's work pretty tight? 1772 T. Nugent tr. J. F. de Isla Hist. Friar Gerund I. 10 This question of yours is a tight one. 1852 Townshend of Ohio in House Representatives 23 June I felt myself in a tight spot. 1855 T. C. Haliburton Nature & Human Nature II. iv. 121 It's a tight squeeze sometimes to scrouge between a lie and a truth in business. 1864 Daily Tel. 26 Sept. When they find they are getting into a tight place—to borrow an Americanism—[they] gather up their gold, and run off. 1889 F. E. Gretton Memory's Harkback 80 We were subjected to a very tight examination; for the prize was one of considerable value. 1891 Daily News 14 Nov. 2/3 [It] would suffice to drive the Bears of Russian stock into a tight corner. 10. colloquial or technical. a. Said of a contest in which the combatants are evenly matched; close; so of a bargain: with little margin of profit. Originally U.S. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > dissent > competition or rivalry > [adjective] > types of competition drawn1610 indifferent?1611 cut-throat?a1625 equal1653 runaway1797 close-run1813 neck and neck1828 tight1828 dog-eat-dog1872 winner-take(s)-all1969 two-horse1976 society > leisure > sport > match or competition > [adjective] > types of maiden1598 well-run1601 unequal1654 well contested1722 returned1758 friendly1780 close-run1813 foursome1814 lightweight1823 tight1828 side1829 one-sided1839 scratch1851 international1859 all-comers1860 scrub1867 pointless1876 scoreless1885 replayed1886 peg-down1887 all-star1889 stiff1890 varsity1891 postseason1893 knock-out1896 best-of-(a specified odd number)1897 seeded1901 junior varsity1902 Simon Pure1905 pegged-down1908 JV1923 zero-sum1944 tie-breaking1970 1828 N. Webster Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. (at cited entry) A tight bargain. 1848 J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms Tight match, a close or even match, as of two persons wrestling or running together. 1903 Westm. Gaz. 1 Sept. 3/1 The tighter the match the better he plays. Thesaurus » Categories » b. Of a person: Unwilling to part with money, close-fisted. c. Finance, Of money: Difficult to obtain except on high terms; also transferred of the money-market when money is scarce. Of a person: in financial straits, hard up (dialect or slang). ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > [adjective] > state or condition of money market stiff1845 tight1846 stringent1870 the mind > possession > poverty > [adjective] > poor > lacking money to the boneOE silverlessc1325 pennilessc1330 moneylessc1400 impecunious1596 crossless1600 penceless1605 unmoneyed1606 coinless1614 emptya1643 out of pocket1679 money-bound1710 broke1716 embarrassed1744 stiver cramped1785 plackless1786 taper1789 poundlessa1794 shillingless1797 unpennied1804 fundless1809 impecuniary1814 hard up1821 soldier-thighed1825 cashless1833 stiverless1839 fly-blown1853 strapped1857 stick1859 tight1859 stone-broke1886 stony1886 oofless1888 stony-broke1890 motherless1906 penny-pinched1918 skinned1924 skint1925 on the beach1935 potless1936 boracic1959 uptight1967 brassic1982 1805 W. Clark Jrnl. 12 Dec. in Jrnls. Lewis & Clark Exped. (1990) VI. 123 They are tite Deelers, value Blu and white beeds verry highly, and Sell their roots also highly. 1828 N. Webster Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. (at cited entry) A man tight in his dealings. 1846–7 F. M. Whitcher Widow Bedott Papers 30 The Deacon was as tight as the skin on his back; begrudged folk their victuals when they came to his house. 1846 Daily News 21 Jan. 4/6 In Paris money is ‘tight’ also, and discounts difficult. 1859 J. C. Hotten Dict. Slang 109 Tight,..hard up, short of cash. 1864 J. S. Le Fanu Uncle Silas II. xvi. 247 It is a hard case, Miss, a lad o' spirit should be kept so tight. I havn't a shilling. 1866 A. Crump Pract. Treat. Banking vii. 152 A tight money market will force sales, and make purchasers..reluctant to buy. 1868 C. J. Lever Bramleighs I. xvi. 219 Money was ‘tight’ being the text of all he said. 1892 ‘T. Cobbleigh’ Gentleman Upcott's Daughter ix. 173 Any man might find himself tight—temporarily. d. Journalism. (See quot. 1970.) Hence also of (a day of) restricted newspaper space. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > journal > newspaper > [adjective] > mostly advertising tight1927 1927 Amer. Speech 2 241/2 If advertising crowds out news, the paper is said to be ‘tight’; if advertising is scant, the paper is ‘wide open’. 1927 New Republic 12 Oct. 202/1 Possibly space was ‘tight’ that day, and the newspapers didn't have room for this minor angle of the story. 1928 Amer. Speech 4 135 The ‘desk’ must know whether ‘room’ is ‘tight’, ‘fair’, ‘good’ or ‘wide open’. If news is ‘heavy’ on a ‘tight day’ and is permitted to ‘run’ in length practically as written, ‘oversets’..may result. 1970 R. K. Kent Lang. Journalism 133 Tight. 1. designating a newspaper that has little room for news because there is a great deal of advertising: opposite of open. 2. designating a newspaper on a day when there are a great many newsworthy events to record, and hardly enough space to cover them all. 11. a. Closely packed (cf. tighten v. 1b). Of a group or formation: having the individual members positioned close together. Frequently in Sport; also transferred (esp. in Cricket), that allows the opposition little chance to score, etc.: tight bowling, tight fielding, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > ice > body of ice > [adjective] > closely-packed (of pack-ice) tight1856 the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [adjective] > densely packed thickc893 thick-set?a1366 rankc1450 compact1563 thronged1581 thickened?1611 close1654 dense1776 tight1942 society > leisure > sport > types of play, actions, or postures > [adjective] > other actions or types of play short1545 standing1728 unpenetrative1795 loose1802 scratched1869 cannonball1872 scratchy1881 punishable1910 wrong-footing1928 open1934 overhead1938 power1959 run-and-gun1960 tight1961 1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xxiv. 313 For thirty-five miles south the straits are absolutely tight [i.e. with ice]. 1942 R.A.F. Jrnl. 13 June 22 They lived in dread of our fighters, and normally kept a tight formation. 1961 F. C. Avis Sportsman's Gloss. 138/2 Tight field, the fieldsmen when drawn closely round the wicket, so preventing the easy scoring of runs. 1961 Times 12 May 4/1 Surrey's bid for quick runs..was foiled by tight bowling. 1965 Daily Express 13 Aug. 15/5 Tight position, an area of the field in which there are a large number of players, both attacking and defending. 1968 I. Ure Ure's Truly xvii. 116 Let's have expressions such as ‘a steady defence’ rather than a side being described as ‘tight at the back’. 1976 Milton Keynes Express 11 June 41/5 Farnham Royal found it difficult to score against the tight Wolverton bowling. 1977 Arab Times 13 Dec. 9/6 Tight fielding by the Airlines prevented easy scoring and the FSC batsmen had to rely on quick singles and doubles. b. Of language: Terse, concise, condensed. Also in general, of literary, artistic, or intellectual work: kept within strict limits; pared to essentials; disciplined, taut, not loose or diffuse. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > conciseness > [adjective] compendious1388 briefc1430 short1487 short and sweet1545 curted1568 summarc1575 laconical1576 summary1582 succinct1585 totala1586 laconic1589 concisec1590 compendiary1609 press?1611 curt1631 Spartan1644 nutshell1647 severe1680 Lacedaemonian1780 straightforward1806 uncircumlocutory1808 shorthand1822 Spartanlike1838 unwordy1841 nutshelly1843 tight1870 Spartanic1882 unfarced1890 serried1899 taut1916 1870 A. C. Swinburne in Fortn. Rev. May 565 The highest form of ballad..must condense the large loose fluency of romantic tale-telling into tight and intense brevity. 1958 C. A. Larson Who: Sixty Years Amer. Eminence 75 Quaint little items and details were often inserted in these early biographical sketches which would scarcely survive the tight editing of a modern Marquis editor. 1962 [implied in: Listener 18 Oct. 633/2 A little tighter and tauter and the production would have looked for all the world like a pilot for a new series. (at pilot n. 11)]. 1979 Sci. Amer. Aug. 24/1 The author..seeks the answer in this small book of tight argument. c. Art slang. Lacking freedom or breadth of treatment; cramped. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > work of art > [adjective] > types of artistic treatment or style antica1536 Moresque1611 barbaric1667 massive1723 popular1730 maniéré1743 regency1811 tedesco1814 massy1817 Barbaresque1831 sensualistic1838 broad1849 conventional1851 expressional1856 tight1891 stylized1898 distressed1940 pop1956 transgressive1969 1891 Spielman in Contemp. Rev. July 60 It [Tenniel's art in 1850] is certainly ‘tighter’: it is younger. 1902 Encycl. Brit. XXVII. 252/1 In his first style [Corot] painted traditionally and ‘tight’—that is to say, with minute exactness, clear outlines, and with absolute definition of objects throughout. 1905 Q. Rev. July 234 His style, if a little what artists call ‘tight’, has the rare gift of being entirely lucid in the expression of subtleties. Thesaurus » d. Of the edge of a saw: Compressed by hammering ( Cent. Dict. 1891). e. Of a schedule or timetable: packed with engagements, leaving little free time. Also applied to a space of time which is limited or restricted. ΘΚΠ the world > time > spending time > [adjective] > tight or allowing no spare time tight1959 sharp1977 1959 J. Pope-Hennessy Queen Mary iii. ii. 386 Princess May concentrated on seeing as many of the wonders and beauties of the spacious old Imperial city as she could crowd into four days and a tight social schedule. 1968 P. G. Hollowell Lorry Driver ii. 31 The older drivers are constantly aware that schedules are getting tighter. 1971 J. Sangster Your Friendly Neighbourhood Death Pedlar vii. 187 It was unlikely that anything would happen that night, and the following morning was going to be awfully tight for time. 1972 M. Crichton Terminal Man i. v. 42 ‘I can't see her to-day,’ Morris said, ‘and to-morrow is tight.’ 1976 New Yorker 1 Mar. 30/3 ‘How about seven at O'Hoolihan's? I'm going there with Pat and Betsy.’ ‘Seven's a little tight.’ 1981 P. Harcourt Turn of Traitors ix. 82 Time's going to be tight, so take my car. 12. Billiards. slang. (a) Said of balls when they are in contact: ‘fast’, ‘frozen’. (b) Of pockets: Having a small opening compared with the diameter of the balls. ΚΠ 1909 in Cent. Dict. Suppl. ΚΠ 1894 C. N. Robinson Brit. Fleet 217 The unit of ship measurement, both in England and on the continent, at the time [of Henry VII], was, as heretofore, the tun cask of wine, and the stated tons or tuns burthen of a ship meant the number of tuns or butts of wine she could carry. Warships' tonnage was estimated by roughly comparing their bulk with merchant-ships of known carrying capacity.] B. adv. (The adjective used adverbially.) 1. Soundly, roundly; = tightly adv. 1. Now chiefly in colloquial phrase (good night) sleep tight, a conventional (rhyming) formula used when parting for the night or at bedtime. Also in slang phrase blow me tight: see blow me tight! at blow v.1 29. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > [adverb] > in thoroughgoing manner a-good?1516 tightly1601 tight1790 thoroughgoingly1832 the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > sleep > [adverb] > deeply or soundly fastOE sadlya1375 to sleep sounda1400 soundlyc1400 stronglya1500 deeply1632 tight1898 out to it1941 the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > courtesy > courteous act or expression > courteous formulae [phrase] > expressions of leave-taking > at night goodnightc1275 Gad ye good night1849 (good night) sleep tight1933 1790 J. Fisher Poems Var. Subj. 61 I charg'd them tight, An' gart them pay o' lawing clink, Mair than was right. 1898 E. von Arnim Elizabeth & her German Garden 29 She had been so tight asleep. 1933 E. O'Neill Ah, Wilderness! iii. ii. 101 Good night, Son. Sleep tight. 1957 L. Stern Midas Touch ii. xviii. 136 Nighty-night, Barbara. Sleep tight. 1960 D. Lessing In Pursuit of Eng. iii. 99 When we left him, she patted his shoulder with triumphant patronage, and said: ‘Sleep tight. And keep your dreams clean.’ 1976 ‘R. Boyle’ Cry Rape xxi. 94 Goodnight, Anne. Sleep tight. 2. a. Firmly, closely, securely; so as not to allow any movement: = tightly adv. 3. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > absence of movement > [adverb] > in a stable manner > firmly (fixed) stronglyeOE fasteOE stitha1000 hardOE fastlyOE steadfasta1300 stithlya1300 steevec1330 a-rootc1374 firmlyc1374 hard and fastc1380 sadc1380 sadlya1398 steadfastlya1400 stronga1400 stalworthlyc1440 solidatively?1541 hardfast1548 secure1578 sickera1586 solidly?1611 tighta1625 securely1642 steevely1790 inexcussably1816 tightly1866 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > condition of being fast bound or firmly fixed > [adverb] fasteOE fastlyeOE hardOE hetefastea1225 file-fasta1250 sickerlyc1275 stiff1525 tighta1625 soundly1632 starkly1819 tightlya1865 bracingly1874 a1625 J. Fletcher Loyal Subj. iii. iv, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Eee3/2 This [lass] is not so strongly built: but she is good mettle, Of a good stirring straine too: she goes tith sir. 1680 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. xii. 208 You may without more ado screw up your Work tight. 1768 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued I. ii. 151 The prospect of getting a livelihood holds them tight to their work. 1839 C. Dickens Nicholas Nickleby liii. 534 Holding tight on with both hands. 1878 T. L. Cuyler Pointed Papers 206 The tighter I clung the safer I felt. b. to sit tight, †to apply oneself closely to (obsolete); to maintain one's position firmly in reference to something; also, to sit close, to remain under cover. colloquial. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > care, carefulness, or attention > take care about [verb (transitive)] > bestow diligence upon diligent1545 to sit tight1738 the mind > will > decision > constancy or steadfastness > be constant or steadfast [verb (intransitive)] standeOE cleavec1275 to stand stiffa1290 stick1447 to stand or stick to one's tackling1529 to stand in this1538 to set down (the or one's) staff1584 to stand one's ground1600 to stand to one's pan pudding1647 to maintain one's ground1736 to nail one's colours (also flag) to the mast (also masthead)1808 to stay put1843 to stand firm1856 to sit tight1890 to keep the flag flying1914 to dig in one's toes1933 to hold the line1956 the world > movement > absence of movement > [verb (intransitive)] > remain as opposed to go bidec893 yleaveOE leaveOE wonc1000 abideOE worthOE beliveOE atstutte-nc1220 stuttea1225 atstuntc1230 astinta1250 beleavea1325 lasta1325 stounda1325 stinta1340 joukc1374 restaya1382 to leave over1394 liec1400 byec1425 onbidec1430 keep1560 stay1575 delay1655 to wait on1773 stop1801 to sit on1815 to hang around1830 to stick around1878 to sit tight1897 remain1912 stay-down1948 1738 London Mag. 131 Andromache and all the great Ladies 3000 Years ago, sat very tight to their Stitching. 1890 G. B. Shaw in Star 27 Nov. 2/7 I, therefore, again urge Mr Parnell to ‘sit tight’. 1897 V. Hunt Unkist, Unkind! xiv ‘Sit tight!’ she exclaimed, pinching my arm violently. She always talks slang when she is excited. 1898 Daily News 10 Feb. 3/2 No money is forthcoming, and banks sit tight. 1909 Athenæum 20 Mar. 345/3 Is not ‘Sit tight’ the watchword of constitutionalism? 3. With close constriction or pressure; closely, tensely; = tightly adv. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > reduction in size or extent > [adverb] > with compression or constriction tightly1758 tight1817 compressingly1830 1817 W. Scott Rob Roy III. v. 147 A horse-girth buckled tight behind him. 1853 W. S. Landor Imaginary Conversat. in Last Fruit 121 He whose dress sits tight upon him. 4. as tight as —— : as quickly or rapidly as ——. Cf. tite adv. and adj. U.S. dialect. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > swiftness > swiftly [phrase] > as swiftly as as tight as ——1833 1833 S. Smith Life & Writings Major Jack Downing lix. 200 The President shook hands with all his might an hour or two until he couldn't hardly stand it... I..stood behind him and reached my arm round under his, and shook for him for about a half an hour as tight as I could spring. 1867 W. L. Goss Soldier's Story 185 Captain Sherman..was making for Macon as ‘tight as he can come’. 1884 ‘M. Twain’ Adventures Huckleberry Finn xix. 160 A couple of men tearing up the path as tight as they could foot it. 5. Close up to, after, or on. dialect or colloquial. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > nearness > [adverb] > nearly or closely nighlyOE nighc1387 throng?a1425 justc1440 narrowly1487 foot-hot1513 meeta1522 hardly1554 fastlings1568 nearly1569 neara1592 close1596 closely1634 nicely1690 narrow1697 snugly1800 snug1831 tight1888 1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. at Tight arter The bitch was tight arter'n. 1901 Cent. Mag. May 123/1 They was tight up t'me all the way. 1919 J. C. Snaith Love Lane xxx. 160 He lived to be tight on ninety. 6. (See quot. 1930.) ΚΠ 1930 Times 15 Mar. 4/4 You will never find..instructions are given to put white stones among the coloured ones.—There are instructions to sort ‘finer’, or ‘better’, or ‘tighter’, which mean the same thing. C. n.2 (The adjective used absolutely.) 1. Rugby = scrimmage n. 3. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > rugby football > [noun] > scrum scrimmage1848 squash1857 loose scrummage1874 scrum1876 tight1904 loose ruck1906 set scrum1925 scrum-down1943 1904 Westm. Gaz. 19 Nov. 15/1 The forwards are strong and hard workers in the tight, but in the loose are slow and cumbersome... Both in the tight and loose they must remember to watch and follow the ball. 1905 Daily Chron. 1 Nov. 9/5 They have shown little dash in the open and no skill in the tight. 1939 Daily Tel. 18 Dec. 11/1 They were better served by their forwards in the tight. 1979 Times 12 Dec. 9/1 They outscrummaged their opponents in the tight. 2. An awkward situation, predicament, ‘tight corner’ ( A. 9). Usually in in a tight; occasionally const. for. U.S. dialect or colloquial. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > [noun] > difficult state of things > predicament or straits needfulnessc1350 kankedortc1374 pressc1375 needfultya1382 briguec1400 brikec1400 plightc1400 taking?c1425 partyc1440 distrait1477 brakea1529 hot water1537 strait1544 extremes1547 pickle1562 praemunire1595 lock1598 angustiae1653 difficulty1667 scrape1709 premune1758 hole1760 Queer Street1811 warm water1813 strift1815 fix1816 plisky1818 snapper1818 amplush1827 false position1830 bind1851 jackpot1887 tight1896 squeeze1905 jam1914 1896 in Dial. Notes (1916) 4 348 Tight, n. (From tight place.) A difficult or precarious position. 1902 W. N. Harben Abner Daniel xxi. 182 It would tempt five men out of ten if they were inclined to go wrong, and were in a tight. 1930 W. Faulkner As I lay Dying 29 I tell him again I will help him out if he gets into a tight, with her sick and all. 1938 M. K. Rawlings Yearling xv. 177 Jody's in a tight for a name for the new Baxter. 1950 H. Patterson & E. Conrad Scottsboro Boy ii. xi. 175 ‘You scared that man almost to death.’ ‘I was in a tight jam then, Warden. I was trying to get out of a tight.’ 1979 G. Swarthout Skeletons 18 Pat Garrett..had said of him in public: ‘I would rather have Wood with me in a tight than any man I know.’ Compounds C1. Adjectival, as tight-belted (having a tight belt), tight-bodied, tight-booted, tight-hosed, tight-limbed, tight-skinned, tight-skirted, tight-sleeved, tight-waisted adjs; cf. tight-lipped adj. (Sometimes not clearly distinguishable from Compounds 2.) ΚΠ 1767 ‘Coriat Junior’ Another Traveller! I. 315 Their habit is entirely white..and being tight-bodied, gives them the appearance of a company of millers in their holiday-cloaths. 1836 T. Hook Gilbert Gurney I. v. 227 Perhaps a tight-skinned sailor walking his way to town from Portsmouth. 1859 G. Meredith Ordeal Richard Feverel I. v. 83 The latter boy was..not so tight-limbed and well-set. 1896 W. D. Howells Impressions & Experiences 73 She wore a tight-skirted black walking-dress. 1896 Edith Thompson in Monthly Packet Christmas No. 80 Tight-booted and tight-belted in correct Continental military style. C2. Adverbial, as tight-bound (= tightly bound), tight-closed, tight-draped, tight-drawn, tight-fitting, tight-looking, tight-made, tight-packed, tight-pressed, tight-rooted, tight-shut, tight-stretched adjs.; tight-reining n.; tight-clasp, tight-tie verbs. See also tight-laced adj., etc. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [adjective] > that fits in specific way > close-fitting straita1387 justc1440 sitting1440 close1488 well-fitted1590 close-bodied1677 succinct1714 tightish1775 tight1784 full-fashioned1812 skintight1838 snug1838 fully-fashioned1844 tight-fitting1846 close-fitting1870 slim1884 skin-fitting1915 skinny1915 slinky1921 tight-ass1969 1801 M. Edgeworth Angelina ii, in Moral Tales II. 39 She was hospitably received by a tight-looking woman. 1820 J. Keats Ode on Melancholy in Lamia & Other Poems 140 Go not to Lethe, neither twist Wolf's-bane, tight-rooted, for its poisonous wine. 1835 C. Howard Gen. View Agric. E. Riding Yorks. 8 in Brit. Husbandry (Libr. Useful Knowl.) (1840) III A large and tight-bound sheaf will require to stand two days longer than a small one. 1843 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) v. 50 I didn't think you were half such a tight-made fellow! 1846 E. A. Poe in Godey's Lady's Bk. Nov. 216/1 He had on a tight-fitting parti-striped dress. 1860 C. Reade Cloister & Hearth (1861) I. 20 Clad in a pair of tight-fitting buckskin hose. 1865 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend II. iv. vii. 224 With the palms of his hands tight-clasping his hot temples. 1879 R. Browning Ivan Ivanovitch in Idyls I. 166 I'll..tight-tie you with the strings Here of my heart! 1884 E. Yates Recoll. & Experiences I. ii. 74 After tight-reining and regular hours. 1896 A. Palmer in Academy 25 Jan. 80/3 It is strange how the tight-stretched tambourine can be called molle. 1905 Daily Chron. 21 Oct. 5/2 Strong men stood with tight-drawn lips. 1918 G. Frankau One of Them xxix. 223 Tight-packed as, face to tail and tail to face, Bristle in Watson's tins the silvery ‘Skippers’. 1950 E. Partridge Slang To-day & Yesterday (ed. 3) iii. iii. 257 The ten-page, tight-packed chapter entitled ‘War Words’ in Collinson's Contemporary English. C3. Special combinations: tight back n. Bookbinding a book cover which is stuck directly on to the spine; cf. fastback n. 1. ΘΚΠ society > communication > book > parts of book > [noun] > back > type of fastback1912 tight back1913 1913 Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dict. Eng. Lang. II. 2518/1 Tight back (Bookbinding), a back that clings to the signatures or to the paster attached to them: distinguished from loose back or spring back. 1929 A. J. Vaughan Mod. Bookbinding i. 2 (caption) A limp paper book bound with a tight back. Effect of a tight back binding upon stiff paper. 1957 E. A. Clough Bookbinding for Librarians vi. 60 Because the tight back bends with the spine of the book, there is a tendency for the tooling on the spine to crack. tight barrel n. a barrel for liquids; also called wet barrel or cask; cf. slack adj. and adv. Compounds 1. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > barrel or cask > [noun] > for liquids tight barrela1884 a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 820/2 Slack Barrel, one for flour, sugar, cement, fruit, and what not, of a dry character. In contradistinction to tight barrel. tight cask n. = tight barrel n. ΚΠ 1760 J. Ellis in Philos. Trans. 1759 (Royal Soc.) 51 209 This was put into a tight cask. 1877 Encycl. Brit. VI. 338 Tight or wet and dry or slack cask manufacture. tight cooper n. (see quot.). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > producer > makers of containers or receptacles > [noun] > maker of casks or cooper > types of white cooper1688 dry-cooper1715 under-cooper1745 butt cooper1813 tight cooper1889 herring-cooper1892 1889 Cent. Dict. at Cooper Wet or tight cooper, a cooper who makes casks for liquids. tight-corking n. Angling a method of float-fishing in which the line (with the float or cork) is kept taut between the point of the rod and the plummet at the bottom. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > type or method of fishing > [noun] > angling > using float trimmer-angling1799 trimmering1870 tight-corking1872 1872 F. Francis Bk. Angling (ed. 3) i. 54 Tight corking..is..using a heavyish float well shotted and plumbed some two feet too deep. tight end n. American Football an offensive end (end n. 3g) who lines up close to the tackle; the position occupied by this player. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > American football > [noun] > types of player side tackle1809 nose guard1852 rusher1877 goalkicker1879 quarterback1879 runner1880 quarter1883 full back1884 left guard1884 snap-back1887 snapper-back1887 running back1891 tackle1891 defensive end1897 guard1897 interferer1897 receiver1897 defensive back1898 defensive tackle1900 safety man1901 ball carrier1902 defensive lineman1902 homebrew1903 offensive lineman1905 lineman1907 returner1911 signal caller1915 rover1916 interference1920 punt returner1926 pass rusher1928 tailback1930 safety1931 blocker1935 faker1938 scatback1946 linesman1947 flanker1953 platoon player1953 corner-back1955 pulling guard1955 split end1955 return man1957 slot-back1959 strong safety1959 wide receiver1960 line-backer1961 pocket passer1963 tight end1963 run blocker1967 wideout1967 blitzer1968 1963 Huff & Smith Defensive Football vi. 72 When playing the tight end head to head, the linebacker must be aware [etc.]. 1972 J. Mosedale Football ii. 29 With Fears spread out on one side and Shaw in close, the ‘three end offense’ was born. Today the positions are called split end, tight end and flanker. 1978 J. Irving World according to Garp viii. 162 A standout tight end for the Philadelphia Eagles. tight-fisted adj. parsimonious, close-fisted. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > retaining > niggardliness or meanness > [adjective] gnedec900 gripplea1000 fastOE narrow-hearteda1200 narrow?c1225 straitc1290 chinchc1300 nithinga1325 scarcec1330 clama1340 hard1340 scantc1366 sparingc1386 niggardc1400 chinchy?1406 retentivea1450 niggardousa1492 niggish1519 unliberal1533 pinching1548 dry1552 nigh1555 niggardly1560 churlish1566 squeamish1566 niggardish1567 niggard-like1567 holding1569 spare1577 handfast1578 envious1580 close-handed1585 hard-handed1587 curmudgeonly1590 parsimonious?1591 costive1594 hidebound1598 penny-pinching1600 penurious1600 strait-handed1600 club-fisted1601 dry-fisted1604 fast-handed1605 fast-fingered1607 close-fisted1608 near1611 scanting1613 carkingc1620 illiberal1623 clutch-fisteda1634 hideboundeda1640 clutch-fista1643 clunch-fisted1644 unbounteous1645 hard-fisted1646 purse-bound1652 close1654 stingy1659 tenacious1676 scanty1692 sneaking1696 gripe-handed1698 narrow-souled1699 niggardling1704 snippy1727 unindulgent1742 shabby1766 neargoinga1774 cheesemongering1781 split-farthing1787 save-all1788 picked1790 iron-fisted1794 unhandsome1800 scaly1803 nearbegoing1805 tight1805 nippit1808 nipcheese1819 cumin-splitting1822 partan-handed1823 scrimping1823 scrumptious1823 scrimpy1825 meanly1827 skinny1833 pinchfisted1837 mean1840 tight-fisted1843 screwy1844 stinty1849 cheeseparing1857 skinflinty1886 mouly1904 mingy1911 cheapskate1912 picey1937 tight-assed1961 chintzy1964 tightwad1976 1843 C. Dickens Christmas Carol i. 3 He was a tight-fisted hand at the grindstone. tight-fistedness n. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > retaining > niggardliness or meanness > [noun] fastship?c1225 scarcenessa1300 scarcity1340 niggardyc1390 nithingheada1400 scarcehead1420 nigonryc1430 niggardship?a1439 pinching1440 straitheadc1450 straitnessc1460 niggard cheap1463 niggardnessc1487 nigonshipa1500 niggardise1502 niggishness1519 niggardliness1556 parsimony1561 illiberality1581 nearness1584 tenacity1586 Euclionism1599 paring1607 servilitya1610 niggeralitya1612 scanting1625 scant-handednessa1627 closefistedness1631 niggardess1632 close-handedness1646 strait-handedness1649 penury1651 unbountifulness1660 parsimoniousness1671 penuriousness1672 stinginess1682 closeness1712 illiberalness1727 meanness1755 cheeseparing1834 scrimping1835 churlishness1846 screwing1848 skinflintism1853 screwiness1856 flint-paring1860 skinflintiness1861 scrimp1864 flint-skinning1873 penny-pinching1895 skimping1898 tight-fistedness1975 1975 Church Times 25 Apr. 2/3 Let it be seen..that we have asked the very necessary questions about the liberality or tight-fistedness of the [European] Community's policy on trade with the under-developed countries. tight head n. Rugby (the position of) the prop forward supporting the hooker on the opposite side of the scrum from the loose head; to win a tight head: to win the ball against the head (see head n.1 Phrases 1b). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > rugby football > [noun] > types of player > player or position full back1875 goal kick1875 No. eight1876 goalkicker1879 three-quarter back1880 handler1888 three-quarter1889 heeler1892 scrum half1894 lock forward1898 standoff1902 five-eighth1905 hooker1905 threes1905 flying half1906 loose head1907 standoff1908 fly-half1918 fly1921 inside half1921 outside half1921 scrum1921 inside centre1936 flank forward1937 out-half1949 prop1950 prop forward1951 number eight1952 flanker1953 tight head1959 back-rower1969 second rower1969 striker1973 packman1992 1959 N.Z. Listener 28 Aug. 7 You can't afford to give tight heads in your own 25 when you've got fast backs like that against you. 1960 V. Jenkins Lions Down Under xiii. 170 Dawson won six tight-heads to three in the scrums. 1969 Advanced Coaching (Rugby Football Union) 73 On the tight head it may still be preferable to hook with the nearside foot, but with the body facing the loose head side so as to hook the ball with the inside..part of the foot. 1978 Rugby World Apr. 17/1 There seems nothing to stop Graham Price reigning for many years to come as the world's outstanding tight-head prop. tight-jeff n. see jeff n.1 tight junction n. Cytology a specialized connection of two adjacent animal cell membranes such that the space usually lying between them is absent. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > substance > cell > parts of cell > [noun] > wall or membranes > connection of tight junction1961 1961 Jrnl. Exper. Med. 119 706 The normal slits as well as the tight junctions have structural features reminiscent of usual epithelial desmosomes. 1982 Nature 1 Apr. 464/1 Our evidence, which is based on direct rapid freezing of newly formed tight junctions between rat prostate epithelial cells, indicates that individual tight junction strands are pairs of inverted cylindrical micelles sandwiched between linear fusions of the external membrane leaflets of adjacent cells. tight-lock n. dialect (see quot.). ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > a grass or grasses > reedy or aquatic grasses > [noun] > sedges starc1300 carexa1398 float-grassc1440 red sedge1480 sag1531 pry grassa1600 flea-grass1670 star-grass1782 sedge1785 sea sedge1796 sharp-pry-grass1803 blue star grass1807 whip-grass1814 flea-sedge1816 saw-grass1822 mud rush1824 tight-locka1825 nut grass1830 razor grass1834 twig-rush1836 nut rush1843 sand grass1856 mud sedge1859 niggerhead1859 nutsedge1861 pingao1867 sword-rush1875 tupak-grass1884 tussock-sedge1884 sennegrass1897 nigger's-head1921 a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) Tight-lock, any species of coarse sedge growing in marsh ditches. So called, from its being used to bind the sheaves of beans or oats, growing very luxuriantly on such land. tight shop n. a cooperage where tight work is done. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > place where specific things are made > [noun] > casks > type of tight shop1892 stave mill1937 1892 Labour Comm. Gloss. Tight Shops, workshops in which tight work is performed. tight work n. (see quot.). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > cask-making > [noun] > type of tight work1892 1892 Labour Commission Gloss. at Work Tight work is a term used in the coopering industry to denote the making of casks or any vessels to hold water or liquids. Draft additions March 2004 colloquial. (as) tight as a drum: as tight as possible; extremely tight or close-fitting; (also) †watertight (obsolete). ΚΠ 1777 S. J. Pratt Liberal Opinions V. cxvi. 176 The cold bath, sir,..is a bracer of the solids; it will wind you up as tight as a drum. 1840 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast xxii. 223 The crew said she was as tight as a drum, and a fine sea boat. 1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. iv. 87 Tom has eaten..and imbibed coffee, till his little skin is as tight as a drum. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. xi. [Sirens] 259 Trousers tight as a drum on him. 1941 B. Schulberg What makes Sammy Run? xi. 262 If I nip a couple more hundred feet out of it it'll be tight as a drum. 1968 E. Buckler Ox Bells & Fireflies 51 You had helped bind the load tight as a drum with the girdling chain, then sprung to your seat on the bag of straw at the load's pinnacle. 2001 P. Reizin Dumping Hilary? (2002) iii. 89 Peeling off the cellophane like I've been doing it for years, I pull away the little bit of gold foil and there they are, twenty Bennies, packed tight as a drum. Draft additions May 2001 Of a building or its construction: relatively airtight; well-insulated, sealed against heat loss. Also: poorly ventilated (cf. tight building syndrome n. at Additions). ΚΠ 1978 Washington Post 26 Feb. d4/1 Combined with tight construction and good insulation, they can lower the heating load of the building by 75 per cent and more. 1989 Van Nostrand's Sci. Encycl. (ed. 7) II. 2398/2 Later investigations have discounted the importance of ventilation. Attention was shifted from ‘tight’ houses to ways in which radon may enter a building. 1993 Christian Sci. Monitor (Electronic ed.) 6 Aug. 10 (heading) Try superinsulation for a tight house, Maine builder says. 2000 Heating, Piping, Air Conditioning (Electronic ed.) 2 May §6.1 A building not only needs to be tight, it needs to operate under a positive pressure in most climatic conditions. Draft additions May 2001 tight building syndrome n. sick building syndrome, spec. when attributed to inadequate ventilation and the accumulation of indoor air pollutants. ΚΠ 1981 J. Fonda Workout Bk. v. 245 There is..the ‘Tight Building Syndrome’. Increasingly airtight buildings..have led one scientist..to say, ‘There's probably more damage to human health by indoor pollution than by outdoor pollution.’ 1987 Environmental Health Perspectives 76 195 Formaldehyde is but one of many chemicals capable of causing the tight building syndrome or environmentally induced illness (EI). 2000 Family Health (Nexis) Nov. 37 The urea formaldehyde (UFFI) incident alerted people to what is known as ‘tight building syndrome’ ‘building related illness’ ‘environmentally induced illness’ or ‘sick building syndrome’. Draft additions June 2018 tight-knit adj. connected in a closely-bound structure; (also figurative) bonded or united in a close, cohesive relationship; cf. close-knit adj. at close adj. and adv. Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1832 Satirist 19 Feb. 60/1 For working-day strength, we know of no one to compare with that tight-knit frame of his. 1839 G. Stephens tr. E. Tegnér Frithiof's Saga ii. 24 Their truefast union, In weal and woe the same,..More tight-knit, still, became. 1928 G. C. La Master New Genetics ii. 56 Firm tight knit muscles are stronger than the loose kind. 1933 N. Amer. Rev. Oct. 360 The tight-knit world must flinch in every mile concertedly aghast at each diverse atrocity. 1958 Times 24 Sept. 3/3 The playwrights who have contributed to it [sc. non-realist drama] are anything but a tight-knit group. 1992 M. Anderson Impostors in Temple iv. 120 The academic intellectuals have developed such a tight-knit scheme of intellectual logrolling that their evaluations of the merits of scholarly work have become..worthless. 2017 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 13 July 18 After a six-month break, I returned to a new, kinder and more tight-knit speciality—palliative care. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † tightv.1 Obsolete. 1. transitive. To draw, pull; = tee v.1 1; to stretch. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impelling or driving > pushing and pulling > push and pull [verb (transitive)] > pull teea900 drawOE tighta1000 towc1000 tirea1300 pullc1300 tugc1320 halea1393 tilla1400 tolla1400 pluckc1400 retract?a1475 hook1577 tew1600 hike1867 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > cover [verb (transitive)] > spread or draw over (a thing) as covering for tighta1000 hapc1390 to draw abroada1400 to draw over ——a1500 superducea1500 induce1567 overhale1579 bespread1598 strew?1615 superinduce1616 obducea1676 the world > space > relative position > posture > action or fact of stretching body > stretch [verb (transitive)] > esp. of Christ on the cross tighta1000 to-tightc1200 stretcha1240 reacha1300 extend1526 a1000 in Anglia XIII. 421/806 Oferbrædels..onbutan getiht, uelamen..in gyro tensum. a1240 Ureisun in Cott. Hom. 203 Þi sune was ituht on rode. a1400 Sir Beues (A.) 3215 Þanne was be-fore his bed itiȝt..A couertine on raile tre, For noman scholde on bed ise. c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 568 Fyrst a tule tapit, tyȝt ouer þe flet..Þe stif mon steppeȝ þeron. c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 858 Tapyteȝ tyȝt to þe woȝe, of Tuly & Tars, & vnder fete, on þe flet, of folȝande sute. c1480 (a1400) St. Ninian 1331 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 342 Quhene it [sc. his curtain] vpe ves tycht, þane wist he he [had] tynt þe sycht. 2. figurative. To draw, attract, entice, allure (to some action, or to do something); = tee v.1 2. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > motivation > attraction, allurement, or enticement > attract, allure, or entice [verb (transitive)] teec888 tightc1000 drawc1175 tollc1220 till?c1225 ticec1275 bringc1300 entice1303 win1303 wina1340 tempt1340 misdrawa1382 wooa1387 lure1393 trainc1425 allurea1450 attract?a1475 lock1481 enlure1486 attice1490 allect1518 illect?1529 wind1538 disarm1553 call1564 troll1565 embait1567 alliciate1568 slock1594 enamour1600 court1602 inescate1602 fool1620 illure1638 magnetize1658 trepana1661 solicit1665 whistle1665 drill1669 inveigh1670 siren1690 allicit1724 wisea1810 come-hither1954 c1000 Ælfric Homilies I. 174 On ðreo wisan bið deofles costnung: þæt is on tihtinge, on lustfullunge, on geðafunge. Deofol tiht us to yfele, ac we sceolon hit onscunian. 11.. Departing Soul's Addr. Body 423 Þe [deofel] tuhte his hearpe ant tuhte þe to him. 11.. Departing Soul's Addr. Body 437 Ac efre he tuhte þe. c1175 Lamb. Hom. 121 Þe deofel heom tuhte to þan werke. c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 7048 Tihhtenn & turrnenn hæþenn follc..To lefenn upp o criste. 3. To train, discipline; = tee v.1 3; to chastise. ΘΚΠ society > education > [verb (transitive)] tighta1000 teec1000 thewc1175 forma1340 informc1350 nurturec1475 train1531 breeda1568 train1600 to lick (a person or thing) into (shape , etc.)1612 scholar1807 educate1826 society > authority > punishment > [verb (transitive)] threac897 tighta1000 beswinkc1175 punisha1325 chastise1362 paina1375 justifya1393 wage1412 reformc1450 chasten1526 thwart over thumba1529 chastifyc1540 amerce?1577 follow1579 to rap (a person) on the knuckles (also fingers)1584 finea1616 mulcta1620 fita1625 vindicate1632 trounce1657 reward1714 tawse1790 sort1815 to let (a person) have it1823 visit1836 to catch or get Jesse1839 to give, get goss1840 to have ita1848 to take (a person) to the woodshed1882 to give (one) snuff1890 soak1892 give1906 to weigh off1925 to tear down1938 zap1961 slap1968 a1000 Ags. Ps. (1835) xciii[i]. 12 Þe þu hine..getyhtest [L. quem tu erudieris]. ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 196 Þu ne schuldest naut chastin for hire gult. ne tuchten wel þi maiden. c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 96 Hwen he haueð inoh ibeaten his child & haueð hit ituht wel. a1240 Sawles Warde in Cott. Hom. 267 Ah efter þat wit wule þat is husebonde tuhten ant teachen þat wit ga euer biuore. 4. reflexive and intransitive. To betake oneself; to go, proceed, advance; = tee v.1 6a, 6b. ΘΚΠ society > travel > [verb (intransitive)] nimeOE becomec885 teec888 goeOE i-goc900 lithec900 wendeOE i-farec950 yongc950 to wend one's streetOE fare971 i-wende971 shakeOE winda1000 meteOE wendOE strikec1175 seekc1200 wevec1200 drawa1225 stira1225 glidea1275 kenc1275 movec1275 teemc1275 tightc1275 till1297 chevec1300 strake13.. travelc1300 choosec1320 to choose one's gatea1325 journeyc1330 reachc1330 repairc1330 wisec1330 cairc1340 covera1375 dressa1375 passa1375 tenda1375 puta1382 proceedc1392 doa1400 fanda1400 haunta1400 snya1400 take?a1400 thrilla1400 trace?a1400 trinea1400 fangc1400 to make (also have) resortc1425 to make one's repair (to)c1425 resort1429 ayrec1440 havea1450 speer?c1450 rokec1475 wina1500 hent1508 persevere?1521 pursuec1540 rechec1540 yede1563 bing1567 march1568 to go one's ways1581 groyl1582 yode1587 sally1590 track1590 way1596 frame1609 trickle1629 recur1654 wag1684 fadge1694 haul1802 hike1809 to get around1849 riddle1856 bat1867 biff1923 truck1925 c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 13636 Ure Drihten heo bi-læueð and to Mahune heo tuhteð. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 407 His horn he vastliche bleu. Iherden hit Troynisce & tuhten [c1300 Otho toȝe] to þon Gricken. c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 93 To hunte þer he had tight in his new forest. a1400 K. Alis. (Bodl.) 7164 Þat neiȝ þe kyng hij ben ytiȝth. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 20506 I sal far þar mi sun has tight. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 3157 Quen he þe sted sagh þar he tight, þe child he dide o þe ass light. a1400–50 Alexander 2304 To þe temple he tight tithanndez to herken. c1400 (?c1380) Pearl l. 717 Do way, let chylder vnto me tyȝt. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 1358 All tight to þe tempull of þere tore goddes, For drede of the dethe. DerivativesΘΚΠ the mind > will > motivation > attraction, allurement, or enticement > [noun] tightingc1000 tolling?c1225 ticement1303 enticinga1340 ticinga1400 atticement1483 allure1534 luring1547 enticement1549 allurement1561 allurance1574 alluring1579 illurement1582 attraction1591 lurement1592 till1596 invitation1602 tract1620 illecebration1624 prolectation1625 invitement1627 inescation1645 inveiglement1653 allectation1656 tracture1658 solicitation1676 drumming1833 come-hither1835 chemistry1898 come-hitherness1918 c1000 [see sense 2]. a1175 Cott. Hom. 229 Þurh diofles tihtinge beswicen. c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 29 Þat is þe defles tuihting and mislore. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online December 2021). † tightv.2 Obsolete. 1. transitive. To appoint, ordain, set, fix (a time, etc.); to devise, contrive; to prepare, get ready. Cf. dight v. 2, 11, 14. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > planning > plan [verb (transitive)] > arrange beteec1275 tailc1315 castc1320 ordaina1325 setc1330 tightc1330 accord1388 tailyec1480 assign1558 raise1652 settle1694 work1761 arrange1786 engineer1831 c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. Wace (Rolls) 5488 Atte water Hamon doun lyght, Intil a bot Hamon had tyght. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Coll. Phys.) l. 24344 To ten al tiht [Gött. tight] vs was þat tim Quen we na hel moht se on him. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 18323 Þat þou thoru prophet tald and tight Nu es it fulfilled be-for vr sight. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 11050 All þat þe is tight [Vesp. hight] sal be-tyde. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 4124 Þe foly þat his breþeren tiȝt. c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness l. 1153 Ȝif ȝe wolde tyȝt me a tom telle hit I wolde. c1400 (?c1380) Pearl l. 502 Of tyme of ȝere þe terme watz tyȝt. 1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. c The renkis of the round tabill That has traistly thame tight to governe that gait. 2. With infinitive or absol. (rarely reflexive): To fix it in one's mind; to determine, intend, purpose; to set oneself to do something. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > intend [verb (reflexive)] turnc1175 tightc1300 castc1386 bethink1387 ettlec1440 the mind > will > intention > intend [verb] > intend to do something weenOE willOE thinkOE tightc1300 to be (later also to have it) in purpose1340 tend1340 cast138. reckona1450 aimc1450 willc1450 esteema1533 suspect1629 predeterminea1641 c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 2990 Hwou the swikes haueden tiht [MS. thit] Reuen hem that was here riht [MS. rith]. c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 729 To slen him had he tiȝte. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 1301 Wen þat drightim had him tight To send him þe oile þat he him hight. a1400 Sir Beues (A.) 838 A stiward was wiþ king Ermin, Þat hadde tiȝt to sle þat swin. a1400 Octouian 1476 To brewe the Crystene mennys banys Hy hadden tyght. c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 2483 Mony a venture..Þat I ne tyȝt at þis tyme in tale to remene. c1475 Songs, Carols, etc. 85/64 Alone to be, she hath her tight. ?a1500 Chester Pl. xi. 165 Therfore a songe, as I haue tighte,..I will shewe here in thy sighte. 3. a. To set, set firmly, fix, set up (an edifice), pitch (a tent). Cf. dight v. 5, 8. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > place or put in a position [verb (transitive)] > place and make fast plant1381 tight1382 affixc1448 pitch1533 pight1586 1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) Judges xx. 33 So alle the sones of Yrael..tiȝten shiltron in the place that is clepid Baalthamar. c1394 P. Pl. Crede 168 Wiþ tabernacles y-tiȝt to toten all abouten. a1400–50 Alexander (Ashm.) 1373 Quen he had tiȝt vp þis tram and þis tild rerid. c1420 Anturs of Arth. 355 Þe tasses were of topas, þat were þere to tiȝte [v.r. tyghte]. c1440 Bone Flor. 377 They tyght ther pavylons in a stede. 1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. biiii Ane hie toure that tight wes full trest. b. ? To set down in writing, to state. Cf. dight v. 6. ΚΠ c1400 (?c1380) Pearl l. 1052 Þe hyȝe trone..With alle þe apparaylmente vmbe pyȝte, As Iohan þe apostel in termez tyȝte. c. To set or deck with jewels. Cf. dight v. 10. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautify [verb (transitive)] > ornament dightc1200 begoa1225 fay?c1225 rustc1275 duba1300 shrouda1300 adorna1325 flourishc1325 apparel1366 depaintc1374 dressa1375 raila1375 anorna1382 orna1382 honourc1390 paintc1390 pare1393 garnisha1400 mensk?a1400 apykec1400 hightlec1400 overfretc1440 exornc1450 embroider1460 repair1484 empare1490 ornate1490 bedo?a1500 purfle?a1500 glorify?1504 betrap1509 broider1509 deck?1521 likelya1522 to set forth1530 exornate1539 grace1548 adornate1550 fardc1550 gaud1554 pink1558 bedeck1559 tight1572 begaud1579 embellish1579 bepounce1582 parela1586 flower1587 ornify1590 illustrate1592 tinsel1594 formalize1595 adore1596 suborn1596 trapper1597 condecorate1599 diamondize1600 furnish1600 enrich1601 mense1602 prank1605 overgreen1609 crown1611 enjewel1611 broocha1616 varnish1641 ornament1650 array1652 bedub1657 bespangle1675 irradiate1717 gem1747 begem1749 redeck1771 blazon1813 aggrace1825 diamond1839 panoply1851 1572 (a1500) Taill of Rauf Coilȝear (1882) 475 Bricht braissaris of steill..Ticht ouir with Thopas, and trew lufe atanis. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online December 2021). tightv.3 transitive. To make tight, in various senses. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > shipbuilding and repairing > build a ship [verb (transitive)] > fit out or equip > make watertight tight1532 1532 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1905) VI. 156 For boyingis and teichtein of the xij barrellis of aill forsaidis. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > structural parts > sinew, tendon, or ligament > [verb (transitive)] > brace tight1581 1581 R. Mulcaster Positions xvii. 76 Wrastling..tightes the sinews. 3. Also reflexive. To put in order, make tidy or neat. dialect. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > put in order [verb (reflexive)] > put in order or tidy spruce1598 adjust1728 tight1775 tighten1786 the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautify the person [verb (reflexive)] preenc1395 prunec1395 prank1546 to set oneself out to the life1604 adonize1611 briska1625 tight1775 to make up1778 tighten1786 smarten1796 pretty1868 tart1938 pansy1946 sharpen1952 primp1959 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Goudronner..to pitch, trimme, or tight a ship. 1775 S. J. Pratt Liberal Opinions (1783) III. lxxxvi. 138 Mr. Benjamin..had so spruced and tighted himself up, that he really looked quite interesting. 1895 W. Rye Gloss. Words E. Anglia (at cited word) 3. = Tidy. ‘Tight yourself up’. Derivatives ˈtighted adj. ΚΠ a1614 J. Melville Autobiogr. & Diary (1842) 255 His lessone was a tichted upe abregment of all he haid tetched the yeir bypast. 1661 Sc. Acts Chas. II (1820) VII. 230/2 The said barrells to be well tichted and double girthed before the transporting thairof. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1c888adj.adv.n.21379v.1a1000v.2c1300v.31532 |
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