请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 to lay pipe
释义

> as lemmas

to lay pipe

Phrases

P1. figurative to put (also pack) up one's pipes and variants: to cease from action, desist; to stop speaking. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > ceasing > cease activity [verb (intransitive)]
i-swikec893
swikec897
atwindc1000
linOE
studegieOE
stintc1175
letc1200
stuttea1225
leavec1225
astint1250
doc1300
finec1300
blina1325
cease1330
stable1377
resta1382
ho1390
to say or cry ho1390
resta1398
astartc1400
discontinuec1425
surcease1428
to let offc1450
resista1475
finish1490
to lay a straw?a1505
to give over1526
succease1551
to put (also pack) up one's pipes1556
end1557
to stay (one's own or another's) hand1560
stick1574
stay1576
to draw bridle1577
to draw rein1577
to set down one's rest1589
overgive1592
absist1614
subsista1639
beholdc1650
unbridle1653
to knock offa1657
acquiesce1659
to set (up) one's rest1663
sista1676
stop1689
to draw rein1725
subside1734
remit1765
to let up1787
to wind (up) one's pirna1835
to cry crack1888
to shut off1896
to pack in1906
to close down1921
to pack up1925
to sign off1929
1556 J. Olde tr. R. Gwalther Antichrist f. 148 Than maye the B[ishop] of Rome put up his pypes.
1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. C2v He could haue found in his heart to haue packt vp his pipes & to haue gone to heauen.
a1625 J. Fletcher Womans Prize i. iii, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) 102/1 Put up your Pipes: to bed sir.
1648 E. Davies Writ of Restitution 6 A Writ of Restitution produced, brought in Court, stops the Lyons mouthes, forced to put up their pipes.
1686 Hickes's Coffee-house Jests (ed. 4) 132 The Farmer and his Daughter seeing they could not help themselves, put up their Pipes and went Home.
a1758 A. Ramsay Eagle & Robin 49 Poke up your pypes, be nae mair sene At court.
1821 W. Scott Pirate I. v. 100 Put up your pipes, and gang your gait.
P2. to set up one's pipes: to cry out, shout, yell (obsolete). †to take a pipe (Scottish): to weep, cry (obsolete). to tune one's pipe (Scottish): to begin to cry, to start wailing. Cf. pipe v.1 8, piping n.1 1b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or exclamation > cry or exclaim [verb (intransitive)]
remeeOE
ropeOE
gredec1000
epec1175
yeiec1175
ascry1352
to cry out1382
to lift (up) a cry, one's voice1382
cryc1384
outcryc1390
yawlc1400
openc1425
bursta1450
yelp?c1450
escry1483
assurd1523
to break forth1526
gaure1530
to call out?1532
exclaim1570
reclaim1611
voice1627
blathe1640
to set up one's pipes1671
bawze1677
sing1813
Great-Scott1902
yip1907
the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > weeping > weep [verb (intransitive)]
greetc725
weepc900
tearc950
plore1373
beweepc1374
to put one's finger in one's eye1447
waterc1450
lachryme1490
cryc1532
lerma1533
tricklec1540
to water one's plants1542
to show tears1553
shower1597
issuea1616
lachrymate1623
sheda1632
pipe1671
to take a pipe1671
to pipe one's eye (also eyes)?1789
twine1805
to let fall1816
whinnya1825
blub1866
slobber1875
blart1896
skrike1904
water-cart1914
1671 H. M. tr. Erasmus Colloquies 381 They did not speak softly, but set up their pipes aloud.
1728 Street-robberies, Consider'd 10 I [sc. an abandoned baby] began to Whindle, and Tune my Pipes.
1749 T. Smollett tr. A. R. Le Sage Gil Blas I. i. v. 23 Setting up my pipes, as if he had flead me.
1774 H. Brooke Juliet Grenville (Dublin ed.) I. 37 When I had kissed and caressed it [sc. a baby] for some time, it began to set up the pipes.
1818 J. Hogg Brownie of Bodsbeck II. 155 He's takin a pipe to himsel at the house-end..his heart..is as saft as a snaw-ba'.
1864 W. D. Latto Tammas Bodkin iii. 26 The first thing I did was to assist Chirstie to tune her pipes, an' a magnificent chorus the twa o' us made.
1988 G. Lamb Orkney Wordbk. (at cited word) Pipes, He's tunan his pipes said of a child crying.
P3.
a. colloquial (chiefly Scottish). to put a person's pipe out: to foil, thwart, or frustrate a person. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > humility > humiliation > humiliate [verb (transitive)]
anitherOE
fellOE
lowc1175
to lay lowc1225
to set adownc1275
snuba1340
meekc1350
depose1377
aneantizea1382
to bring lowa1387
declinea1400
meekenc1400
to pull downc1425
avalec1430
to-gradea1440
to put downc1440
humble1484
alow1494
deject?1521
depress1526
plucka1529
to cut (rarely to cast down) the comb of?1533
to bring down1535
to bring basec1540
adbass1548
diminish1560
afflict1561
to take down1562
to throw down1567
debase1569
embase1571
diminute1575
to put (also thrust) a person's nose out of jointc1576
exinanite1577
to take (a person) a peg lower1589
to take (a person) down a peg (or two)1589
disbasea1592
to take (a person) down a buttonhole (or two)1592
comb-cut1593
unpuff1598
atterr1605
dismount1608
annihilate1610
crest-fall1611
demit1611
pulla1616
avilea1617
to put a scorn on, upon1633
mortify1639
dimit1658
to put a person's pipe out1720
to let down1747
to set down1753
humiliate1757
to draw (a person's) eyeteeth1789
start1821
squabash1822
to wipe a person's eye1823
to crop the feathers of1827
embarrass1839
to knock (also take, etc.) (a person) off his or her perch1864
to sit upon ——1864
squelch1864
to cut out of all feather1865
to sit on ——1868
to turn down1870
to score off1882
to do (a person) in the eye1891
puncture1908
to put (a person) in (also into) his, her place1908
to cut down to size1927
flatten1932
to slap (a person) down1938
punk1963
1720 A. Ramsay Wealth (new ed.) 5 Upmost to Day, the Morn their Pipe's put out.
1847 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair (1848) xxxiv. 298 (heading) James Crawley's Pipe is put out.
1892 R. L. Stevenson & L. Osbourne Wrecker x. 168 I'll put your pipe out in that quarter, my friend.
1968 Sc. National Dict. at Pipe When one clinches an argument with words that cannot be gainsaid, he will declare of his opponent that ‘I fairly pat his pipe oot.’
b. colloquial. put that in your pipe and smoke it and variants: accept or put up with what has been said or done, even if it is unwelcome.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > competition or rivalry > challenge or challenging > expressing challenge [phrase]
put that in your pipe and smoke it1800
1800 J. Alexander Acct. First Symptoms Rebellion Wexford App. I. 129 Af yew don't prent them, fwhy—Na bocklesh! That's all! Put that in your pipe and shmoak it!
1824 R. B. Peake Americans Abroad (1884) i. i. 4/2 Put that in your pipe and smoke it.
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) ii. 7 Pull him up—put that in his pipe—like the flavour—damned rascals.
1863 C. Reade Hard Cash xli I'll give you something to put in both your pipes.
1921 J. Galsworthy To Let i. ix. 81 The noble owner put this opinion in his pipe and smoked it for a year.
1947 W. S. Maugham Creatures of Circumstance 296 I'm engaged to her, so put that in your pipe and smoke it.
1977 A. Hunter Gently Instrumental x. 136 There's a dozen witnesses, so you can put that in your pipe and smoke it.
1998 P. Jooste Dance with Poor Man's Daughter (1999) iv. 71 You can tell them Miss Lily Daniels has news for them and the news is that the Daniels family aren't going anywhere and they can put that in their pipe and smoke it.
P4. figurative. to lay pipe.
a. Politics slang (originally and chiefly U.S.). To manipulate an election, esp. bringing in as voters persons not legally qualified to vote, or by voting oneself in this way; also to lay pipes. Cf. pipe-laying n. Obsolete. [Use of the word in this sense arises from a political scandal in 1838, in which the Common Council of New York brought in hundreds of labourers ostensibly to lay water pipes, but in reality so that they could vote, and hence keep the Council in power.]
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > office > appointment to office > choosing or fact of being chosen for office > election of representative body by vote > proceedings at election > [verb (intransitive)] > practise electoral corruption
to lay pipes1840
1838 Amer. Monthly Mag. Mar. 279 He [sc. the political quidnunc] having..serious business on hand, perhaps the election of the next mayor..is engrossed by vast plans for the public good, probably..laying pipes in front of his own door.]
1840 N.Y. Herald 26 Oct. 2/1 A disposable force of 5000 men..who were put up to the highest bidder, and driven about from town to town like cattle, to the polls, voting as often as they could—and ‘laying pipe’ in every city and in every ward.
1861 London Rev. & Weekly Jrnl. 16 Feb. 169 The gentlemen who succeed in appropriating these small measures will be laying down very good ‘pipe’ for Leeds, Southampton, &c.
1893 Home Missionary Oct. 305 The Irish..who began by laying our water-pipes..now lay a different kind of pipe, and make our city government.
b. U.S. slang. Of a man: to have sexual intercourse, esp. vigorously.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > engage in sexual activity [verb (intransitive)] > have sexual intercourse > specifically of a man
to hit the master-vein1592
possess1592
to get one's leg over1599
roger1763
to have one's way with1884
to dip (one's) wick1958
to lay pipe1967
1934 J. Oden in M. Leadbitter & N. Slaven Blues Records 570 (title of song) Pipe Layin' Blues.]
1967 E. Liebow in T. Kochman Rappin' & Stylin' Out (1972) 405 Descriptive phrases such as ‘I really laid some pipe last night’ tend to replace the more specific, denotative labels for intercourse.
1971 B. Malamud Tenants 80 That chick... I wouldn't mind laying some pipe in her pants.
2000 M. Herman Purely Belter 152 Take her under that tree there, warm her up... Then lay pipe like there's no tomorrow.
extracted from pipen.1
<
as lemmas
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。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/3/12 16:23:43