| 单词 | breach | 
| 释义 | breachn. I.  The action of breaking.  a.  The physical action of breaking; the fact of being broken; breakage, fracture. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > 			[noun]		 breachOE breakingc975 brusure1382 breaka1400 crasure1413 chininga1420 bursting1487 bruisinga1500 fraction?a1560 chinking1565 springingc1595 infraction1623 disruption1646 abruption1654 diruption1656 chapping1669 chopping1669 fracturea1676 rumple1746 breakage1775 disrupture1785 fracturing1830 disruptment1834 snapping1891 fractionation1926 OE    Guthlac A 698  				Ne sy him banes bryce, ne blodig wund, lices læla ne laþes wiht. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Gött.)	 l. 8220  				Sua depe the rotis samen kest, þat miht na man þaim þeden winne widuten breche [Trin. Cambr. brekyng]. 1610    P. Holland tr.  W. Camden Brit.  i. 346  				By violence of bretch and ruins great. 1629    J. Gaule Distractions 295  				The casuall breach of a Crystall Glasse. 1676    M. Hale Contempl. Moral & Divine  i. 52  				The breach of a vein..may put a period to all those pleasures. ΘΚΠ the world > time > day and night > day or daytime > dawn > 			[noun]		 aristc825 dawingc900 dayeOE day-rimOE day-redOE mornOE lightOE lightingOE dawning1297 day-rowa1300 grekinga1300 uprista1300 dayninga1325 uprisingc1330 sun arisingc1350 springc1380 springingc1380 day-springa1382 morrowingc1384 dayingc1400 daylighta1425 upspring1471 aurora1483 sky1515 orienta1522 breaking of the day1523 daybreak1530 day-peep1530 morrow dayc1530 peep of the morning1530 prick of the day?1533 morning1535 day-breaking1565 creek1567 sunup1572 breach of the day1579 break of day or morn1584 peep of day1587 uprise1594 dawna1616 day-dawn1616 peep of dawn1751 strike of day1790 skreigh1802 sunbreak1822 day-daw1823 screech1829 dayclean1835 sun dawn1835 first light1838 morning-red1843 piccaninny sun1846 piccaninny daylightc1860 gloaming1873 glooming1877 sparrow-fart1886 crack1887 sun-spring1900 piccaninny dawn1936 1579    G. Fenton tr.  F. Guicciardini Hist. Guicciardin  xiv. 821  				The assault began about the breach of the daye.  2.  The breaking of waves on a coast or over a vessel; hence, the nautical phr.  clean, clear breach. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > flow or flowing > wave > movement of waves > 			[noun]		 > breaking or dashing beating?c1225 jasch1513 wash1579 plash breach1582 breacha1616 breaking1647 plunge1781 jow1820 society > travel > travel by water > shipwreck > 			[noun]		 > carrying away of masts > and gear clean, clear breach1867 the world > the earth > water > flow or flowing > wave > types of waves > 			[noun]		 > other way1578 wake1753 clean, clear breach1867 feather-spray1867 south-western1872 bow-wave1877 gravity wave1877 blind roller1888 gravitational wave1899 Kelvin wave1922 rooster tail1934 slide1935 bow shock1938 beacher1956 a1616    W. Shakespeare Twelfth Night 		(1623)	  ii. i. 20  				Before you tooke me from the breach of the  sea.       View more context for this quotation 1719    D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 50  				She [sc. a boat] would be dash'd in..Pieces by the Breach of the Sea. 1867    W. H. Smyth  & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. 129  				Clear breach, the waves rolling clean over without breaking..Clean-breach, when masts and every object on deck is swept away.  3.   a.  figurative. The breaking of a command, rule, engagement, duty, or of any legal or moral bond or obligation; violation, infraction: common in such phrases as  breach of contract,  breach of covenant,  breach of faith,  breach of promise,  breach of trust. ΘΚΠ society > authority > lack of subjection > 			[noun]		 > breach of rule or custom breacha1382 transgression1426 violation1433 prevarication1561 forfeiture1575 contravention1579 infringement1628 temeration1641 contravening1645 infraction1673 the mind > language > speech > agreement > observance > non-observance or breach > 			[noun]		 borrow-breacha900 brucheOE breacha1382 violation1433 rupture1439 non-observance1453 misobservance1496 violating1523 swerving1545 infringinga1575 inobservation1579 recess1601 inobservancea1626 infringement1628 misobservancy1637 egression1651 nonconformity1653 unobservance1654 brack1658 infraction1673 violence1743 non-conformance1786 inobservancy1824 c1025    Eccl. Laws of Cnut 24  				Wið æȝhwylcne æwbryce.]			 a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Douce 369(1))	 		(1850)	 Jer. iii. 13  				To the Lord thi God thou hast do lawe breche. c1440    York Myst. v. 143  				Lorde, Eue garte me do wronge and to þat bryg me brought. 1533–4    Act 25 Hen. VIII xvii  				Attempted the breche or violacion of the same statutes. ?1560    T. Norton Orations of Arsanes sig. A.iii  				Those whoes Antichristian Popish doctrine pronounceth open allowrance of breach of fayth to Christians whome they call heretikes. 1573    G. Harvey Let.-bk. 		(1884)	 13  				Better then the breach of ani custum. 1598    W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost  ii. i. 169  				Receiue such welcome..As honor (without breach of honor) may, Make tender  of.       View more context for this quotation 1608    W. Shakespeare King Lear ii. 143  				Nuptial breaches .       View more context for this quotation 1612    T. Taylor Αρχὴν Ἁπάντων: Comm. Epist. Paul to Titus iii. 1  				Who..liue in the breach of Gods commaundement. 1619    J. Taylor Kicksey Winsey sig. B7  				They being Romists, I a Protestant: Their Apostaticall Iniunctions saith, To keepe their faith with me, is breach of faith. a1640    P. Massinger Bashful Lover  iv. ii. 68 in  3 New Playes 		(1655)	  				A vertue, and not to be blended With vitious breach of faith. 1659    H. Hammond Paraphr. & Annot. Psalms (xxv. 7 Paraphr.) 141  				The breaches innumerable, wherewith I have..offended against thee. 1711    R. Steele Spectator No. 262. ⁋7  				Nor shall I look upon it as any Breach of Charity. 1725    D. Defoe New Voy. round World  i. 202  				With Breach of Faith, and with Cruelty and Barbarity. 1764    T. Reid Inq. Human Mind ii. §6. 109  				They can..break them and be punished for the breach. 1803    Duke of Wellington Dispatches 		(1837)	 II. 174  				In breach of your promises to me. 1833    H. Martineau Manch. Strike 		(new ed.)	 iv. 53  				Convicted of a breach of contract. 1834    T. Arnold in  A. P. Stanley Life & Corr. T. Arnold 		(1844)	 I. vii. 379  				What it would be a breach of duty in me to omit. 1879    W. Stubbs Constit. Hist. II. xvi. 370  				The breach of the truce by the Scots.  b.  spec. and technical, as   breach of arrestment n. illegal disposal of property which has been ‘attached’, or placed under the control of a law-court.  breach of close n. unlawful entry upon private ground, trespass.  breach of peace n. 		(also breach of the peace)	 an infringement or violation of the public peace by an affray, riot, or other disturbance.  breach of pound n. the action of breaking into a pound or similar enclosure without right or warrant.  breach of prison n. escape of a prisoner from confinement.  breach of privilege n. a violation of the rights of a privileged body.  breach of promise n. gen. as in preceding sense; spec. = breach of promise to marry. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > observance > non-observance or breach > 			[noun]		 > particular types of refusal1482 vow-breaking1533 stretch1541 breach of promise1613 vow-break1646 vow-breach1647 breach of privilege1650 fedifraction1650 breach1841 repudiation1842 stand-up1921 society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > specific offences > 			[noun]		 > breach of peace grithbreachc1000 mundbreachc1210 breach of peace1671 unstillness1846 1613    S. Purchas Pilgrimage 631  				Which Boferes after with like perfidiousnes, and breach of promise, requited on three thousand Marochians. a1616    W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors 		(1623)	  iv. i. 49  				You vse this dalliance to excuse Your breach of promise to the Porpentine. 1650    R. Stapleton tr.  F. Strada De Bello Belgico ii. 30  				They..might fairly declaim against [it] by the name of Breach of Priviledge. 1671    F. Philipps Regale Necessarium 50  				For the breach of the peace 120 shillings. 1786    W. Paley Princ. Moral & Polit. Philos. 		(ed. 2)	  iii.  i. xvi. 164  				God will punish false swearing with more severity than a simple lie, or breach of promise. 1817    Parl. Deb. 1st Ser. 796  				The Speaker said..the House should pronounce, whether the passage in the work..was or was not a breach of privilege. 1865    Derby Mercury 1 Mar.  				Alleged contempt of that House, and a breach of its privileges. 1888    N.E.D. at Breach  				Mod. The damages in a breach-of-promise case. 1895    G. B. Shaw Shaw on Theatre 		(1958)	 61  				Trial by Jury is..unintelligible except as a satire on..the breach-of-promise suit. 1949    M. Mead Male & Female xv. 299  				Breach-of-promise cases are a silly excrescence in a world in which women do half the proposing.  c.  In colloquial use, short for breach of promise n. at sense  3b. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > observance > non-observance or breach > 			[noun]		 > particular types of refusal1482 vow-breaking1533 stretch1541 breach of promise1613 vow-break1646 vow-breach1647 breach of privilege1650 fedifraction1650 breach1841 repudiation1842 stand-up1921 1841    C. Dickens Old Curiosity Shop  i. viii. 122  				There's the chance of an action for breach. 1905    Daily Chron. 16 Aug. 6/7  				‘The breach action was not brought by her,’ said Mr. Burnett, opening the present proceedings on behalf of the major. 1905    Daily Chron. 16 Aug. 6/7  				At the breach trial. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > hostile action or attack > 			[noun]		 assault1297 venuea1330 scoura1400 wassailc1400 frayc1430 brunta1450 sault1510 onseta1522 attemptate1524 onsetting1541 breach1578 dint1579 objectiona1586 invasion1591 extent1594 grassation1610 attack1655 run1751 wrack1863 mayhem1870 serve1967 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > 			[noun]		 > violent breakc1565 irruption1577 breach1578 breaking1617 inbreaking1652 inruption1809 inbreak1837 inburst1837 break-in1856 inbursting1858 incrash1861 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > hostile action or attack > 			[noun]		 > attack by hostile measures or words bruntc1425 assaultc1449 battery1562 onset1566 brash1573 breach1578 onslaught1613 onfall1646 attack1653 assay?1705 to return to the charge1752 arietation1797 set-to1808 set1829 dead set1835 go-in1858 on-ding1871 hatchet work1938 blitzkrieg1939 blitz1940 carpet bombing1956 bowling1959 1578    J. Lyly Euphues f. 35  				The Axiomaes of Aristotle,..haue sodaynelye made..a breache into my minde. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 1 Chron. xiii. 11  				The Lord had made a breach vpon  Vzza.       View more context for this quotation 1647    N. Ward Simple Cobler Aggawam 58  				Your connivence with the Irish butcheries, your forgetfull breaches upon the Parliament. a1674    Earl of Clarendon Hist. Rebellion 		(1702)	 I.  i. 20  				Which Breach, upon his Kingly power, was so much without a President [etc.]. 1751    J. Addison Freeholder No. 13. 77  				Innocent of the great Breach which is made upon Government.  5.   a.  A breaking of relations (of union or continuity). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > 			[noun]		 > disjunction, disunion, or disconnection unknittingc1384 discretiona1398 disjunctionc1400 disjuncturec1400 discouplingc1425 unjoining?c1425 unjointing?c1425 disjoining1530 disunion1598 breach1625 disunity1632 disconnection1663 disjointure1757 disjointing1794 disarticulation1808 non-union1823 1625    F. Bacon Ess. 		(new ed.)	 iii. 11  				Nothing, doth so much..driue Men out of the Church, as Breach of Vnity. 1768    W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. 162  				By the breach and dissolution of..the relation itself. 1775    G. Stuart tr.  J. L. de Lolme Constit. Eng.  i. i. 13  				They compleated the breach of those feeble ties. 1888    N.E.D. at Breach  				Mod. It could not be done without a breach of continuity.  b.  absol. A break-up of friendly relations; rupture, separation, difference, disagreement, quarrel. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > hatred > quarrel or falling out > 			[noun]		 slit1390 variancec1425 quarrellingc1460 falling out1539 quarrel1566 feud1568 breach1573 rupture1583 outcast1620 outfall1647 outfallingc1650 fallout1725 split1729 break-off1860 society > society and the community > dissent > 			[noun]		 > division or lack of unity > a state or instance of slit1390 breach1573 rent1580 rifta1609 split1729 split-up1878 1573    G. Harvey Let.-bk. 		(1884)	 17  				A litle breach betwixt thes twoo and me was the tru and onli caus of al thes sturs. 1574    J. Baret Aluearie B 1102  				Breach of friendes. a1616    W. Shakespeare Othello 		(1622)	  iv. i. 238  				There's falne betweene him and my Lord, An vnkind breach .       View more context for this quotation a1715    Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time 		(1724)	 I. 459  				A great breach was like to follow. 1863    A. P. Stanley Lect. Jewish Church I. ix. 218  				The nearest actual approach to a breach was..when their simple pastoral monument of stones was mistaken..for an altar.  6.  The leaping of a whale clear out of the water. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > order Cetacea (whales) > 			[noun]		 > large member of (whale) > leaping out of water breach1843 breaching1843 1843    Penny Cycl. XXVII. 294/2  				The breach may be seen in a clear day from the mast-head at a distance of six miles.  II.  The product of breaking.  7.  A physically broken or ruptured condition of anything; a broken, fractured, damaged, or injured spot, place, or part; an injury. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > injury > 			[noun]		 clakec1000 wemming1100 hurt?c1225 un-i-soundc1275 breach1398 wrethec1400 discomfiture1599 tort1632 personal injury1653 punishment1811 insult1903 sports injury1932 1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(1495)	  vii. lv. 270  				Yf that breche [hernia] is grete and olde and wyth brekyng of the synewe it is sondred vneth or neuer. 1559    P. Morwyng tr.  C. Gesner Treasure of Euonymus 118  				It cureth also fistulas, old breaches, and temporall byles. 1665    Voy. E.-India in  G. Havers tr.  P. della Valle Trav. E. India 395  				Shewing him his hand and his other breaches.  b.  A disrupted place, gap, or fissure, caused by the separation of continuous parts; a break. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > an opening or aperture > 			[noun]		 > opening or break in continuity breakinga1300 breaka1400 interval1489 breach1530 gapa1616 discontinuity1676 puka1921 1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 201/1  				Breche where water breke in, breche. 1555    R. Eden tr.  S. von Herberstein Rerum moscouiticarum commentarii in  tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 292  				The yearth hath many great chynkes or breaches. 1624    J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia v. 174  				The salt water..entred at the large breaches of their poore wooden castle. 1653    T. Manton Pract. Comm. James iii. 5  				Small breaches in a sea-bank let in great inundations. 1750    S. Johnson Rambler No. 79. §11  				The crew implore the liberty of repairing their breaches.  c.  esp. ‘A gap in a fortification made by a battery’ (Johnson). Hence  to stand in the breach (often figurative). ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > attack > 			[noun]		 > destruction of walls > breach made in walls breach1598 1598    R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres  v. 138  				To ruinate their Curtine, and make good breaches. 1600    W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2  ii. iv. 49  				To come off the breach, with his pike bent  brauely.       View more context for this quotation 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Psalms cvi. 23  				Had not Moses his chosen stood before him in the breach [ Coverdale, gap]. 1665    T. Manley tr.  H. Grotius De Rebus Belgicis 363  				The Town was easily gained by Scaling Ladders, and Breaches. 1712    R. Steele Spectator No. 428. ⁋2  				No Soldier entering a Breach adventures more for Honour. 1799    Duke of Wellington Let. in  Dispatches 		(1834)	 I. 29  				On the 3rd of May the breach appeared to be practicable. 1814    W. Scott Waverley I. xiii. 184  				Being the first to mount the breach .       View more context for this quotation  d.  figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > damage > 			[noun]		 > damaged or injured part breach1608 wrack1610 bruise1670 1608    W. Shakespeare King Lear xxi. 13  				Cure this great breach in his abused  nature.       View more context for this quotation 1649    Bp. J. Taylor Great Exemplar  iii. Ded. Let.  				To bind up the great breaches of my little fortune. 1657    Bp. J. Taylor in  W. B. Scoones Four Cent. Eng. Lett. 106  				By your wise counsel and comfort stand in the breaches of your own family. a1713    Ld. Shaftesbury Let. conc. Design in  Characteristicks 		(1715)	 III. 398  				An unhappy Breach in my Health..forc'd me to seek these foreign Climates. 1722    D. Defoe Moll Flanders 152  				Vice breaks in at the breaches of Decency. 1836    F. Marryat Mr. Midshipman Easy II. ii. 45  				To heal the breach in his wounded honour. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > flow or flowing > wave > foam or surf > 			[noun]		 > surf > breaking over rocks or reefs breach1624 reef break1965 1624    J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia 		(1629)	 19  				We found many shoules and breaches. 1626    J. Smith Accidence Young Sea-men 18  				A shoule, a ledge of rockes, a breach, a shallow water. 1707    London Gaz. No. 4380/3  				The Royal Anne..saw several Breaches, and soon after, the Rocks above Water. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > land mass > shore or bank > bend in coast > 			[noun]		 > bay or gulf bay1385 bosomc1400 gulfc1400 gouffre1477 break?1520 reach1526 bight1555 opening1576 sine1605 breach1611 cod1611 traversea1645 sinus1684 embayment1815 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Judges v. 17  				Asher continued on the sea shore and abode in his breaches [L. portubus,  Wyclif hauens] .       View more context for this quotation ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > continuity or uninterruptedness > discontinuity or interrupted condition > 			[noun]		 > a break in continuity interruption1390 breach1589 hiatus1613 chasm1654 solution of continuity1654 gap1670 caesura1846 break-in1856 breakage1871 scission1884 time out1892 1589    G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie  i. xix. 33  				By breaches or diuisions to be more commodiously song to the harpe. 1589    G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie  i. xxvi. 41  				This Epithalamie was deuided by breaches into three partes... The first breach was song at the first parte of the night. 1590    E. Spenser Faerie Queene  iii. iv. sig. Ff3v  				And all her sister Nymphes..Supplide her sobbing breaches with sad complement.  11.  A condition of broken relations; a gap in sentiment or sympathy. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > hatred > state of variance or disunion > 			[noun]		 unsaughtnessa1000 unsaughta1122 schismc1425 variancec1425 variationc1485 variety1546 breach1745 strain1884 1745    J. Wesley Answer to Rev. Church 1  				I do not want..to widen the Breach between us. 1816    W. Scott Antiquary I. v. 104  				The breach was speedily made up between them. 1863    Parl. Deb. 3rd Ser. 171 1829  				Create an everlasting breach between the people of England and the people of the United States of America.  12.  A piece of land broken up by the plough. dialect. ΚΠ 1594    H. Plat Diuerse Sorts of Soyle 43 		(margin)	 in  Jewell House  				Erith breaches [that surrounded leuell at Erith]. 1594    H. Plat Diuerse Sorts of Soyle 43 in  Jewell House  				That exceeding fertilitie which I haue herd commended in those two breaches, euen by the seuerall farmers thereof. Draft additions March 2014   more honoured in the breach (than the observance) and variants: used to refer to an unjust rule or objectionable custom which is better broken than obeyed or observed. Later also: used to refer to a just rule that, in practice is often broken (though this usage is sometimes deprecated). ΚΠ 1603    W. Shakespeare Hamlet  i. iv. 18  				It [sc. drunken revelry at court] is a custome, more honourd in the breach, Then in the obseruance. 1750    Compar. Horace of Corneille & Rom. Father of Mr. Whitehead 3  				'Tis a barbarous Custom [sc. catcalling in theatres]..and, as Hamlet says, More honoured in the Breach than the Observance. 1788    Public Advertiser 17 May  				The custom of attending at Court on Sunday, however long established and highly sanctioned, would be more honoured in the breach than in the observance. 1832    S. G. Goodrich Syst. Universal Geogr. xxii. 260  				In the cities, the custom [sc. of drinking juleps] is, perhaps, ‘more honored in the breach, than the observance’; but in the country..it is a general and daily practice to indulge in these drams. 1896    Amer. Bookmaker Jan. 11/2  				The old-time rule that en quads shall be used in poetry is now more honored in the breach than in the observance. 1914    Med. Summary Mar. 21/1  				Among the things more honored in the breach than the observance is the practice of giving medicines when there is really no necessity for it. 1957    T. W. Freeman Pre-famine Ireland ii. 22  				Leases generally contained a stipulation, sometimes more honoured in the breach, that no subletting or subdivision would be permitted. 1981    Salina 		(Kansas)	 Jrnl. 2 Apr. 4/5  				We fight off gun control, honoring in the breach the few laws that do get passed. 2006    Times 25 Nov. 18/1  				Although we all know that sitting down as a family is good and grazing on the hoof or eating slumped in front of TV is bad, the rules we make are often more honoured in the breach than the observance. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1888; most recently modified version published online December 2021). breachv. 1.   a.  transitive. To make a breach in (a wall, defence, natural boundary, etc.); to break through. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > attack > attack			[verb (transitive)]		 > penetrate by force force1695 breach1803 the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > making holes or becoming holed > make (an opening or hole)			[verb (transitive)]		 > make an opening or hole in or into > make gaps or breaches in slap1513 breach1803 gap1893 1803    Duke of Wellington Let. 6 Nov. in  Dispatches 		(1837)	 II. 479  				If the wall..should be breached when the place shall be stormed. 1817    J. Mill Hist. Brit. India II.  iv. iv. 149  				The English had breached the fort. 1845    C. Darwin Jrnl. 		(ed. 2)	 xx. 477  				Every reef of the fringing-class is breached by a narrow gateway in front of the smallest rivulet. 1878    T. H. Huxley Physiography 		(ed. 2)	 193  				It often happens that the lava..breaches one side of the conical hill.  b.  figurative; spec. in Financial and Stock Exchange jargon, to go beyond (above or below) (a figure). Cf. break v. 9c. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > stocks and shares > deal in stocks and shares			[verb (transitive)]		 > performance of shares or prices breach1547 shed1947 break1964 split1967 underperform1975 1547    A. Borde Breuiary of Helthe  i. f. C  				[Obliviousness] maye come to yonge men & women, whan theyr mynde is bryched.  c.  intransitive. To develop a breach, to become broken through. ΚΠ 1894    C. Moncrieff in  Working Men's Coll. Jrnl. 153  				If by any chance an embankment breached and a province was flooded. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > hatred > quarrel or falling out > quarrel or fall at variance			[verb (intransitive)]		 varyc1450 quarrel1530 square1530 to fall offa1535 breach1573 snarl1593 snarl1597 breaka1616 to break offa1645 to cast out1730 to get wrong1803 split1835 split1843 society > society and the community > dissent > be in dissension or at variance			[verb (intransitive)]		 > become disunited breach1573 subdivide1581 splita1732 society > society and the community > dissent > be in dissension or at variance			[verb (intransitive)]		 > cause dissension > cause a breach breach1573 1573    T. Tusser Fiue Hundreth Points Good Husbandry 		(new ed.)	 f. 2  				At first for want of teaching, at first for trifles breaching. 1641    R. Greville Disc. Nature Episcopacie  i. ix. 52  				If the Church will breach (with the Anabaptists).  3.  Nautical. Of whales: To leap out of the water. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > order Cetacea (whales) > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > miscellaneous actions of whale calvec1000 spout1683 blow1726 peak1839 sound1839 fluke1840 mill1840 breach1843 white-water1856 round1881 1843   [implied in:   Penny Cycl. XXVII. 294/2  				Other habits of this whale, such as ‘breaching’, or leaping clear out of the water and falling back again on its side. (at breaching n. 2)]. 1854    Chamb. Journ. I. 53  				‘There she blows again!.. There she breaches.’ 1866    C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. vi. 167  				They saw the witch-whale again..spouting, and breaching. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1888; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < | 
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