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单词 to lay up
释义

> as lemmas

to lay up
to lay up
1. transitive. See simple senses and up n.; to put up and extend (one's limbs) on a couch; †to erect (a building); †to vomit, ‘throw up’ (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > digestive disorders > have digestive disorder [verb (transitive)] > vomit
spew971
aspewc1200
to gulch out?c1225
casta1300
vomea1382
brake1393
evacuec1400
to cast outa1425
deliver?a1425
voida1425
evomec1450
evomit?a1475
disgorge1477
to cast up1483
degorge1493
vomish1536
retch1538
parbreak1540
reject1540
vomit1541
evacuate1542
revomit1545
belch1558
vomit1560
to lay up1570
upvomit1582
to fetch up1599
puke1601
respew1606
inbelch1610
spew1610
to throw up1614
exgurgitate1623
out-spew1647
egurgitate1656
to throw off1660
to bring up1719
pick1828
sick1924
yark1927
barf1960
to park the tiger1970
vom1991
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > build or construct [verb (transitive)]
timbera900
workOE
betimberOE
craftOE
buildc1275
lifta1300
stagec1330
upraise1338
wright1338
edifya1340
to make outa1382
to make upa1382
biga1400
housea1400
risea1400
telda1400–50
to work upa1450
redress1481
levy1495
upmake1507
upbuild1513
exstruct?c1550
construct1663
to run up1686
practise1739
to lay up1788
elevate1798
to put up1818
to lay down1851
practicate1851
the world > space > relative position > posture > action or fact of stretching body > stretch [verb (transitive)] > on a couch
to lay upc1830
1570 B. Googe tr. T. Kirchmeyer Popish Kingdome iv. f. 53 And miserably they reele, till as their stomacke vp they lay.
1579–80 T. North tr. Plutarch Lives (1676) 757 Antonius being queasie stomacked with his Surfeit he had taken, was compelled to lay up all before them, and one of his friends held him his Gown instead of a Bason.
1788 J. May Jrnl. 19 July (1873) (modernized text) 86 To-day finished laying up the house, and put on the roof.
c1830 Houlston Tracts No. 87. 11 Her daughter must go home, and lay up her legs till they got quite well.
2. Agriculture (a) To throw up (land) in ridges as a preparation for sowing: often with complement, as dry, rough, in ridges. (b) To reserve for hay. Cf. to lay in 5 at Phrasal verbs.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > breaking up land > break up land [verb (transitive)] > throw up ridges
rig?1523
ridge?1530
to trench up1763
upset1764
to lay up1842
hill1884
1842 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 3 ii. 171 Every arable field which is laid up in ridges probably requires..to be drained.
1844 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 5 i. 167 After being fed the meadows are laid up, and in about six weeks produce an excellent crop of hay.
1852 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 13 i. 62 The land..is either sown with wheat at Michaelmas or laid up dry, for barley in the spring.
1883 J. A. Froude Hist. Sketches 74 (Norway Fjords) There were forty or fifty acres of grass laid up for hay.
3. To deposit or put away in a place for safety; to store up (goods, provisions); to put by. Often absol. to save money. Also with immaterial object to lay up in lavender: see lavender n.2 2.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > store [verb (transitive)]
again-layOE
to put upc1330
to lay up?a1366
bestow1393
to set up1421
reserve1480
powder1530
store1552
uplay1591
garnera1616
storea1616
revestry1624
reposit1630
barrel1631
magazine1643
stock1700
to salt down1849
reservoir1858
tidy1867
larder1904
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > place or put in a position [verb (transitive)] > deposit or put away
to put upc1330
to lay up?a1366
leavea1375
disposec1420
stowc1485
reposea1500
repose?c1525
commit1531
reject1541
dispatcha1566
tuck1587
to put away1607
reposit1630
repositate1716
to stow away1795
park1908
?a1366 Romaunt Rose 184 Gret tresours up to leyn.
c1400 Rom. Rose 5680 They..ley not up for her living.
1526 Bible (Tyndale) Luke i. f. lxxiiij And all they that herde them layde them vppe in their hertes.
1526 Bible (Tyndale) 2 Cor. xii. 14 The children ought nott to laye vppe for the fathers and mothers. [So 1611.]
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. ccxxixv That the same should be laied vp into a cheste fast locked.
1626 F. Bacon New Atlantis 8 in Sylua Syluarum The Strangers House, is at this time Rich, and much aforehand; For it hath layd vp Reuenew these 37 yeares.
1651 N. Bacon Contin. Hist. Disc. Govt. 198 It incourages men to gather and lay up, when they have Law to hold by what they have.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding ii. x. 67 This faculty of laying up, and retaining the Ideas that are brought into the Mind.
1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 91. ⁋1 I have, by leading a very wary Life, laid up a little Money.
1736 T. Lediard Life Marlborough III. 194 The Allies design'd to lay up large Magazines at Douay.
1877 C. M. Yonge Cameos cxli, in Monthly Packet Oct. 319 Lines, which she had probably composed and laid up in her memory.
1879 M. Pattison Milton xiii. 212 His poems he wished laid up in the Bodleian.
1885 ‘E. F. Byrrne’ Entangled I. i. xiii. 248 You could not bear the agony that would be laid up for you in an unhappy union.
4. To place in confinement, imprison. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > imprison [verb (transitive)]
beclosec1000
setc1100
steekc1175
prison?c1225
adightc1275
imprison1297
laya1325
keepc1330
presentc1380
locka1400
throwc1422
commise1480
clapc1530
shop1548
to lay up1565
incarcerate1575
embar1590
immure1598
hole1608
trunk1608
to keep (a person) darka1616
carceir1630
enjaila1631
pocket1631
bridewell1733
bastille1745
cage1805
quod1819
bag1824
carcerate1839
to send down1840
jug1841
slough1848
to send up1852
to put away1859
warehouse1881
roundhouse1889
smug1896
to bang up1950
1565 T. Cooper Thesaurus at Carcer Condi in carcerem, to be layed vp in [prison].
1569 in J. Hooker Life Sir P. Carew App. (1857) 233 The messenger..was layed op by the helys.
1602 2nd Pt. Returne fr. Parnassus i. ii. 240 Sweete Constable doth take the wondring eare, And layes it vp in willing prisonment.
a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) i. iii. 143 When layd up for debt.
5. To cause to keep indoors or in bed through illness; often in passive to be (taken) ill, to keep one's bed. In recent colloquial use also intransitive, to take to one's bed.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > be in ill health [verb (intransitive)] > take to bed
to lay up1554
to take one's lair1633
to lie up1850
to take to one's bed1883
the world > health and disease > ill health > cause to be ill [verb (transitive)] > restrain by ill health
to lay up1554
to lay by1782
the world > health and disease > ill health > be in ill health [verb (intransitive)] > fall ill
sicklec1000
sicka1150
sickenc1175
evil1303
mislike?1440
fall1526
to take a conceit1543
to fall down?1571
to lay upa1616
to run of (or on) a garget1615
craze1658
invalid1829
wreck1876
collapse1879
to go sick1879
to sicken for1883
1554 J. Mason Let. 9 Nov. in P. F. Tytler Eng. under Edward VI & Mary (1839) II. 456 (modernized text) The constitution of his body being so easy to be overthrown, as a little travel taken more than it be able to bear were enough to lay him up.
a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) i. iii. 7 Then there were two Cosens laid vp, when the one should be lam'd with reasons, and the other mad without any. View more context for this quotation
1676 Lady Chaworth in 12th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1890) App. v. 32 This seveare weather which hath laid [me] up in the house this ten days.
1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 82. ⁋5 While he was laid up with the Gout.
c1771 S. Foote Maid of Bath iii. 50 My gout..lays me up for four or five months in a year.
1840 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast xxxi. 117 I should be laid up for a long time, and perhaps have the lock jaw.
1872 C. M. Yonge Cameos cx, in Monthly Packet June 520 An attack of small-pox..laid him up for a short time.
1893 A. S. Eccles Sciatica 49 Busy persons who can ill afford to lay up and be absent from their affairs for some days.
6. To bury. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > burial > bury or entomb [verb (transitive)]
bedelveOE
begraveOE
burya1000
beburyc1000
bifel-ec1000
layc1000
to fall, lull, lay (bring obs.) asleepOE
tombc1275
gravec1300
inter1303
rekec1330
to lap in leadc1340
to lay to rest, abed, to bed1340
lie1387
to louk in clay (lead, etc.)?a1400
to lay lowa1425
earthc1450
sepulture1490
to put awaya1500
tyrea1500
mould1530
to graith in the grave1535
ingrave1535
intumulate1535
sepult1544
intumil?c1550
yird1562
shrinea1566
infera1575
entomb1576
sepelite1577
shroud1577
funeral1578
to load with earth1578
delve1587
to lay up1591
sepulchrize1595
pit-hole1607
infuneral1610
mool1610
inhumate1612
inurna1616
inhume1616
pit1621
tumulate1623
sepulchrea1626
turf1628
underlay1639
urna1657
to lay to sleep, asleep1701
envaulta1745
plant1785
ensepulchre1820
sheugh1839
to put under1879
to lay away1885
1591 H. Savile tr. Tacitus Life Agricola in tr. Tacitus Ende of Nero: Fower Bks. Hist. 266 Yet wast thou layed vp with fewer teares.
1655 E. Terry Voy. E.-India 309 It [sc. Pile] was begun by Achabar-sha..and finished by his Son, who since was laid up beside him.
7. To put away (a ship) in dock or some other place of safety. Also intransitive for passive or reflexive.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > launching a vessel > launch or set afloat [verb (transitive)] > lay up unused
to lay by the walls1579
to lay up1667
1667 S. Pepys Diary 14 June (1974) VIII. 269 The counsel that brought us into this misery, by laying up all the great ships.
1701 in J. A. Picton City of Liverpool: Select. Munic. Rec. (1883) I. 309 Ships that are to be layd up.
1725 D. Defoe New Voy. round World i. 18 At length we..arrived again at the Port of St. Julian... Here we resolv'd to lay up for the Winter.
1795 Ld. Nelson in Dispatches & Lett. (1845) II. 69 We must both soon be laid up to repair.
1838 C. Thirlwall Hist. Greece (new ed.) IV. xxvii. 25 The Peloponnesians..laid up their fleet for the rest of the winter.
1849 Tait's Edinb. Mag. 16 158/1 The sands, on which a vessel is laid up, are minutely and beautifully detailed.
1885 Times (Weekly ed.) 11 Sept. 9/3 The ice-hulks and the swift yawls..moored and laid up in ordinary.
1890 Murray's Mag. Oct. 469 I shall send the yacht round to Gosport to lay up.
in extended use.1856 C. Dickens Little Dorrit (1857) i. xxiv. 210 Mr. F.'s Aunt was, for the time, laid up in ordinary in her chamber.
8. Shipbuilding. (See quot. 1869.)
ΚΠ
1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding x. 197 The heads of the rivets are generally laid-up, that is, are made close to the surface, against which they fit by a few heavy blows given by the workman.
9. Rope-making. = sense 37.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > rope-making > make rope [verb (transitive)] > other specific processes
lay1486
throw?c1625
register1793
re-lay1804
warp1815
to lay upc1860
tube1863
wimble1874
strand1886
fluff1892
c1860 H. Stuart Novices or Young Seaman's Catech. (rev. ed.) 28 Lay up the centre strands together, take the next two strands and lay them up together..; when you have laid it up to within ten inches of the end, lay both strands up together [etc.].
1882 G. S. Nares Seamanship (ed. 6) 26 Gun gear [is] laid up left handed.
10. Nautical (intransitive) To direct the course.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > directing or managing a ship > direct or manage ship [verb (intransitive)] > head in a certain course or direction
steer1340
stem1487
capea1522
lie1574
put1578
bear1587
rut1588
haul1589
fetch1590
standa1594
to stand along1600
to bear away1614
work1621
to lay up1832
1832 F. Marryat Newton Forster III. iv. 46 The French squadron..tacked and laid up directly for them.
1858 Mercantile Marine Mag. 5 71 We neither could lay up for it, nor overhaul it.
11. Printing. (See quot. 1841.)
ΚΠ
1808 C. Stower Printer's Gram. 156 A form cannot be well laid up without plenty of water.
1841 W. Savage Dict. Art of Printing (at cited word) Before the letter of a worked-off form is distributed,..if the work be finished it is unlocked upon a board laid in the trough and well rinsed with water, while the compositor keeps working the pages backward and forward with his hands, and continues pouring water on them till the lye and ink are washed away..; this is termed laying-up.
12. To surpass, excel. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > advancement or progress > outdoing or surpassing > outdo or surpass [verb (transitive)] > put in the shade or put to shame
shamec1400
to put down1494
extinguish1551
stain1557
overshadow1581
cloud1582
defacea1592
shend1596
to lay up1601
to shine down1623
dazzle1643
umbrage1647
foila1687
efface1717
eclipse1718
shade?1748
put into the shade1796
to take the shine out of (less frequently from, U.S. off)1819
to put to shame1854
to leave (a person) standing1864
to lay over1869
blanket1884
upstage1921
1601 R. Johnson tr. G. Botero Trauellers Breuiat 32 In suffring of hunger, thirst, heat, cold, labour and extremities, they will lay vp any nation whatsoeuer.
13. To put up, erect.
ΚΠ
1844 D. Lee & J. H. Frost Ten Years in Oregon xxii. 289 We..were so successful as to finish laying up the cabin..at the end of two weeks.
1844 D. Lee & J. H. Frost Ten Years in Oregon xxii. 292 Mr. Smith was getting out logs for a house,..and I helped him lay it up.
14. To assemble or stack (plies or layers) in the arrangement required for the manufacture of plywood or other laminated material (usually prior to bonding into a single structure).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > a layer > arrange in layers [verb (transitive)] > as required for making layered structure
to lay up1927
1927 E. V. Knight & M. Wulpi Veneers & Plywood xxvi. 286 Stock trucks..with suitable guides against which to jog layers of stock as the freshly glued plywood is laid up.
1942 A. D. Wood & T. G. Linn Plywoods vii. 74 When working on thin 3-ply boards two panels are frequently ‘laid up’ between each caul.
1949 B. L. Davies Technol. Plastics xiii. 233 The dried, impregnated or coated material is cut to size..and the sheets are laid up, i.e. piled one upon the other to a predetermined number.
1962 Newnes Conc. Encycl. Electr. Engin. 115/2 Normally not less than three layers of tissue are laid up between the electrodes [of an industrial capacitor] for the lower voltages.
1965 Plastics Tooling & Manuf. Handbk. (Amer. Soc. Tool & Manuf. Engineers) vi. 114 Successive plies are laid up until the desired thickness is achieved; then the part is allowed to cure.
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