单词 | tied |
释义 | tiedadj.1 1. a. Bound or fastened with a cord or the like; joined, connected (as letters in printing, quot. 1891): see tie v. 1 - 3. Also tongue-tied adj. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > binding or tying > [adjective] > tying > tied tied1598 lashed1896 society > communication > printing > printed matter > printed character(s) > [adjective] > of letters, connected tied1891 1598 A. M. tr. J. Guillemeau Frenche Chirurg. 38 b/2 The tyed Vayne might chaunce to vntye. 1614 A. Gorges tr. Lucan Pharsalia vi. 253 He stonisht was.., His tyed tong no sound could blunder. a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) ii. iii. 40 Panth. What's the vnkindest tide? Lau. Why, he that's tide here, Crab my dog. View more context for this quotation 1739 J. Sparrow tr. H. F. Le Dran Observ. Surg. lxvi. 230 I dressed it with tied Dossils. 1864 F. C. Bowen Treat. Logic xi. 365 The nervous fluid will not travel along a tied nerve. 1891 W. Morris in J. W. Mackail Life W. Morris (1899) II. 252 We have no contractions, few tied letters. 1904 E. A. T. W. Budge Guide 3rd & 4th Egypt. Rooms Brit. Museum 110 Oxen with tied feet. b. tied note n. see quots. and tie n. 6b, tie v. 3c. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > written or printed music > notation > [noun] > character in notation > note > note bound by ligature tied note1716 1716 (title) The Dancing-Master... Sixteenth Edition... The whole Work Revised and done on the New-Ty'd-Note. 1786 T. Busby Compl. Dict. Music Tied-Notes, notes, the tails of which are joined together by cross lines, as in united quavers, semiquavers, &c., or over the heads of which a curve is drawn to denote that they are to be slurred. c. tied dyeing = tie-dying n. at tie- comb. form 4. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > colour > colouring > dyeing > [noun] > processes or techniques masteringa1475 woading1613 aluming1735 saddening1743 bouillon1791 galling1791 dunging1792 piece-dyeing1863 union dyeing1875 batik1880 batiking1880 tie-and-dye1886 cross-dyeing1901 tie-dying1903 vat dyeing1912 tie-dye1926 tied dyeing1928 ikat1931 overdyeing1939 yūzen1958 spin-dyeing1961 1928 Daily Express 21 May 5/2 ‘Tied Dyeing’ is very similar to Batik work, though much simpler, being done entirely with string and dye. 2. a. figurative. United, joined; restrained, confined, etc.: see tie v. 4, 5. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > hindrance > restriction of free action > [adjective] > restricted in free action coarctc1420 shackledc1440 coarcteda1500 haltered?1510 catesnd1566 straited1581 immurate1593 chained1613 hampered1633 muzzled1647 throttled1677 tethereda1680 fetlocked1725 strangled1813 trammelled1813 spancelled1835 iron-bound1850 cabined1853 manacled1861 vaulted1863 tied1876 strait-jacketed1894 the mind > language > speech > agreement > promise > [adjective] > bound by promise troth-plighta1300 sworna1325 plightedc1390 assured1426 jurate1433 abjured1552 sure1567 trothed1567 obliged1600 testeda1616 ingudged1650 betrothed1651 sacramental1785 undertaking1786 oath-bound1795 committed1821 word-bound1836 tied1876 society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > [adjective] > restricted or limited > in free action coarctc1420 shackledc1440 coarcteda1500 haltered?1510 catesnd1566 straited1581 chained1613 hampered1633 muzzled1647 tethereda1680 fetlocked1725 strangled1813 trammelled1813 spancelled1835 iron-bound1850 cabined1853 manacled1861 vaulted1863 tied1876 strait-jacketed1894 1876 T. Hardy Hand of Ethelberta I. xxiii. 229 That's why married men advise others to marry. Were all the world tied up, the pleasantly tied ones would be equivalent to those at present free. 1907 Daily Chron. 22 Mar. 7/1 The sight of the Progressives banded together emphasized the fact of their being the tied party of the Chamber of Mines. b. spec. Of an inn or public house: Of which the tenant is bound to take his liquor from a particular brewing firm (which usually owns the house), hence transferred of a labourer's cottage: of which the tenant is astricted to work on the farm. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal right > right of possession or ownership > tenure of property > a legal holding > [adjective] > held in leasehold or by tenant > in specific manner full-stated1746 ryoti1772 sub-rented1796 tied1887 untied1888 1887 Pall Mall Gaz. 23 July 16/1 Local breweries have almost entirely depended upon tied houses for the sale of their products. 1890 Guardian 17 Sept. 1434/2 The question of renewing licences to ‘tied houses’ has been considered at some of the licensing sessions. 1899 Daily News 7 Dec. 4/1 The labourers hate the ‘tied cottage’ system. 1901 Daily News 16 Feb. 5/3 Certain brewers are in the habit of turning unsuccessful houses into tied-house clubs. c. Of an international loan, etc.: given subject to conditions as to its use (see tie v. 5f). ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > moneylending > [adjective] > types of loan self-liquidating1851 non-recourse1905 bridging1930 tied1958 underwater1975 sovereign1977 single currency1978 roll-up1983 self-certified1989 sub-sovereign1991 subprime1993 1958 C. N. Henning Internat. Finance iv. xxi. 441/1 The so-called ‘tied loan’ principle. 1961 Ann. Reg. 1960 470 The issue of tied grants and credits was the subject of some dispute at international meetings. 1965 McGraw-Hill Dict. Mod. Econ. 515 The advantages of tied loans are that they stimulate employment and income in the creditor nation and do not affect the balance of payments of that country adversely. 1976 New Internationalist Jan. 5 For the Third World, ‘tied’ aid generally means having to pay between 20% and 50% more for goods than the competitive world market level. d. Of a retail garage: of which the tenant is bound to receive fuel from a particular supplier. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > testing, servicing, and storage of motor vehicles > [adjective] > service station tied1957 1957 Economist 7 Dec. 885/1 About a third of these ‘tied garages’ have been signed up for periods of five years or less; the other two-thirds, which sell over half the petrol sold through dealers, are tied to their suppliers for longer periods of up to 20 years. 1965 Economist 7 Aug. 542/1 The major companies selling petrol in Britain have been sure for many months now that the Monopolies Commission would not find the ‘solus’ or ‘tied garage’ system, in itself, to be against the public interest. 3. a. tied up, in literal and figurative senses: see to tie up at tie v. Phrasal verbs. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > binding or tying > [adjective] > tying > tied > tied up uptiedc1450 tied upa1616 a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) i. iii. 32 It rested in your Grace To vnloose this tyde-vp Iustice. View more context for this quotation 1693 W. Bowles tr. Juvenal in J. Dryden et al. tr. Juvenal Satires v. 73 And with a Matt, and Crutch, and ty'd-up Leg, More Honestly and Honourably Beg. 1712 J. Swift Jrnl. to Stella 6 Jan. (1948) II. 456 It was not proper to go to Court without a long wig, and his was a tyed-up one. 1822 W. Savage Pract. Hints Decorative Printing 46 Four or five octavo pages of tied up letter. 1876 [see sense 2a]. b. tied-back adj. held back by tying. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > binding or tying > [adjective] > tying > tied > held back by tying tied-back1895 1895 M. Beerbohm in Yellow Book IV. 280 The women wore jerseys and tied-back skirts. 1979 A. Buck Dress in 18th-Cent. Eng. 32/1 (caption) The tied-back hair in a bag. Draft additions March 2022 Of a match or contest: involving teams or competitors with scores that are equal to each other; without an outright leader or winner; that is a tie (tie n. 10a). Of teams or competitors: having the same score or ranking; in a tie.In North America tied (rather than drawn) is the more usual term in contexts where each competitor in a game or match has the same score: compare draw v. 70b.In Cricket a tied match is distinguished from a drawn match; see draw n. 19b. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > winning, losing, or scoring > [adjective] > draw drawn1610 patt1735 tied1848 square1887 1848 York Herald 23 Sept. 8/5 This match excites much interest in the neighbourhood, as the last time the party played it was a tied game, each party notching alike. 1883 Weekly Nebraska State Jrnl. 24 Aug. 5/6 The result, as the table shows, was a tie... It was decided that the tied teams should shoot off the tie in the afternoon. 1989 D. Morrow & M. Keyes Conc. Hist. Sport in Canada 280 If scores are deadlocked at the end of all regulation play, the tied players tee-off, usually at the fifteenth hole, and continue until a player wins one hole outright. 2019 Northern Star & Rural Weekly (New S. Wales) (Nexis) 9 Aug. 46 The first tied game of the season was 26-all between Yamba and Byron Black in the Under-12 boys. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2022). tiedadj.2 Wearing a tie. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > wearing clothing > [adjective] > wearing neckwear collaredc1405 barbeda1529 ruffed1548 wimpled1579 quilled-up1694 starch-ruffed1783 cravatted1801 neckclothed1825 bandanaed1831 boa'd1831 black-tied1848 mufflered1859 white-collared1860 chokered1865 comfortered1880 tied1911 1911 G. K. Chesterton Innocence of Father Brown iv. 105 The red-tied youth. 1976 V. J. Scott & D. Koski Walk-in (1977) ii. 17 One clean-shaven, suited and tied, scrubbed Asian. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1986; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < |
随便看 |
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。