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单词 to turn down
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to turn down
to turn down
1. transitive. To turn (something) so as to have a particular surface facing down, to turn upside down; esp. to invert (a glass), to turn (a card) face downwards. Cf. sense 9 and down adv. 6a. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > inversion > invert [verb (transitive)]
to-wendc893
whelvec1000
to turn down?c1335
to turn up?c1335
whelmc1340
overturna1382
to turn overa1400
wholve14..
inverse?a1425
reverse?a1425
overwhelvec1450
overvolvea1522
transverse1557
evert1566
topsy-turn1573
topsy-turve1603
invert1610
upturn1610
whave1611
topsy-turvy1626
whemmel1684
cant1850
upend1868
flip-flop1924
?c1335 in W. Heuser Kildare-Gedichte (1904) 128 Turne him uppe, turne him doune, þi swete lemman: Ouer al þou findist him blodi oþer wan.
1629 J. Parkinson Paradisi in Sole ii. lvii. 529 Cut off the stalke, and turne it downe, that the Syrupe may drayne forth.
1763 Brit. Mag. 4 117 Sometimes she turns down my cup herself, after the first dish, because..tea is nervous.
1859 E. FitzGerald tr. Rubáiyát Omar Khayyám lxxv. 16 Turn down an empty Glass!
1890 G. M. Fenn Double Knot III. viii. 115 The played cards were solemnly turned down.
1912 Senator from Illinois (Proc. before Comm. U.S. Senate) Abstract of Hearings 9347 With that she turned the message down—face down. She turned it over.
1950 Oxf. Junior Encycl. IX. 114/1 Cards which do not make pairs are turned down again, and the players must remember where they are.
1991 P. Marshall Daughters (1992) ii. v. 173 An open-shelved larder over in a corner with a few flowered glasses turned down on top.
2. transitive. To cause (a person or thing) to descend or fall down; to throw down. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Deut. xii. 2 Torne ȝe doun alle placys in þe whiche þe gentyls..han heried here goddys opon hyȝe monteyns.
1577 M. Hanmer tr. Evagrius Scholasticus i. xvii in Aunc. Eccl. Hist. 421 Many turretts within the pallace were turned downe to the grounde.
1684 I. Mather Ess. for Recording Illustrious Providences v. 145 A great stone..was thrown upon the mans stomach, and he turning it down upon the floor, it was once more thrown upon him.
3.
a. intransitive. To incline one's course downwards while changing direction; to turn aside and go down. Cf. main sense 15.
ΚΠ
a1425 ( H. Daniel Liber Uricrisiarum (Wellcome 225) 366 (MED) When þe fumosite is of þe bath styand up to þe rof, becaus þat þai may not haf þare essew owt abovyn, þai turn doun agayn.
1483 ( tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage of Soul (Caxton) iii. iv. f. lij Thenne sawe I a wonderfull engyne of a grete whele..it roos oute of a litel dore, & torned doun at another.
1567 A. Golding tr. Ovid Metamorphosis (new ed.) xv. f. 194 My horses..beeing greatly flayghted with the monster in theyr eye, Turnd downe too sea.
c1595 Capt. Wyatt in G. F. Warner Voy. R. Dudley to W. Indies (1899) 29 Commaundinge him that they shoulde..turne downe unto the other carvell.
1833 T. Hook Parson's Daughter I. i. 15 Opposite the limekilns, as you turn down to the Duke's Head near the turnpike.
1887 P. McNeill Blawearie 88 Long before the men in general began to turn down, he had every box in the pit-bottom filled.
1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. x. [Wandering Rocks] 231 Better turn down here. Make a detour.
2002 J. McGahern That they may face Rising Sun (2003) 261 ‘That Madden is unseemly,’ he said as they turned down towards the lake.
b. intransitive. Of business or economic activity: to decline, worsen. Cf. downturn n. 2.
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the world > action or operation > adversity > be in adversity [verb (intransitive)] > fall from prosperous or thriving condition
afalleOE
wanec1000
fallOE
ebba1420
to go backward?a1425
to go down?1440
decay1483
sink?a1513
delapsea1530
reel1529
decline1530
to go backwards1562
rue1576
droop1577
ruina1600
set1607
lapse1641
to lose ground1647
to go to pigs and whistles1794
to come (also go) down in the world1819
to peg out1852
to lose hold, one's balance1877
to go under1879
toboggan1887
slip1930
to turn down1936
society > occupation and work > business affairs > [verb (intransitive)] > of business activity: fall off
slack1609
slacken1725
to turn down1936
downshift1974
1936 Daily Mail 10 Feb. 3/2 Is business activity turning down ‘for a spell’, and if so, for how long?
1960 Economist 8 Oct. 261/1 Wall Street has shown an impressive record of moving ahead of business activity. In the recession of 1957–58..it turned down in July, one month before the index of industrial production; and turned up again in December, four months before production did.
1980 Daily Tel. 23 July 19 Unemployment is rising fast in all the major economies, partly because the economic cycle is turning down.
2002 N.Y. Times 28 Apr. 41/5 Companies are slow to lay people off when the economy turns down.
4.
a. transitive. To cause (something) to be directed or point downwards; to direct (something, esp. the head or eyes) down.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > seeing or looking > see [verb (transitive)] > turn (eyes) downwards
to turn downa1425
deject1612
lower1721
the world > space > direction > specific directions > direct in specific directions [verb (transitive)] > direct or turn downwards
to turn downa1425
downturn1909
a1425 (a1400) Prick of Conscience (Galba & Harl.) (1863) l. 7214 Þe hevedes..salle be turned doune, And þe fete upward fast knytted.
c1450 ( J. Walton tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Linc. Cathedral 103) 209 (MED) If ye eftsones turne doun youre sight Into þis foule wrecched erthely dell.
1555 E. Bonner Homelies (new ed.) f. 50 Crowned with a crowne of martirdome, his heade being turned downe to the grounde.
1583 Iniunctions Dioces of Saincte Dauides sig. A.ii. All the Seruice shalbe saied by the Minister, in his owne seate or Pulpit, with his face turned downe towardes the people.
1710 W. Salmon Botanologia I. lx. 85/1 The Flowers grow in long Tufts or Spikes, small at the ends and turning down their Heads, and yielding cornered Seed.
1840 Peter Parley's Ann. 364 The grenadier turned down his bayonet, and skewered him to the ground.
1986 F. Stella Working Space 102/1 I glanced at the painting, then quickly turned my head down and away, averting my eyes.
2014 M. Watson Hotel Alpha ix. 213 In his face I saw such utter abjection that I had to turn my eyes down to the blankets in front of me.
b. transitive. To fold or double down (part of one's clothing, such as a collar or sleeve) or the covers of (a bed: see also down adv. 6c); to bend downwards, fold over (the corner of a page: see also to turn down a leaf at leaf n.1 Phrases 2a). Cf. main sense 8.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > folding or folded condition > fold [verb (transitive)] > up, down, or in
tuckc1440
to turn down1533
to turn in1721
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > providing with clothing > provide with clothing [verb (transitive)] > adjust or arrange > turn or fold over, back, up, or down
tuckc1440
tirve1482
to turn upa1586
to turn back1683
to turn down1841
1533 T. Elyot Pasquil the Playne f. 3v The tirfe of the cappe tourned downe afore lyke a pentise hathe a meruaylous good grace.
1583 J. Foxe Actes & Monuments (ed. 4) II. 1941/1 They..searched..not onely in the bed turning it downe past all honest humanitie, but also vnder the bed behynd the painted clothes.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Julius Caesar (1623) iv. ii. 324 Is not the Leafe turn'd downe Where I left reading? View more context for this quotation
1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §273 The cramps..were turned down at each end.
1828 H. D. Best Italy 128 The beds..were all, in the housewife's phrase, turned down.
1841 W. M. Thackeray Great Hoggarty Diamond vii Nothing could make him..refrain from wearing his collars turned down.
2013 Sunday Tel. (Nexis) 15 Sept. 29 The troublemakers..skulk the corridors, rolling their eyes at staff who order them to turn down their sleeves.
c. intransitive. To bend or curve downwards. Cf. sense 8c(b).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > curvature > types of curvature > [verb (intransitive)] > downwards
to turn down1584
stoop1681
1584 J. Astley Art of Riding viii. 58 Bow your fist, so as your thombe maie turne downe toward the mane of the horsse, as therby you may see the full backe of your hand.
1661 S. Morgan Sphere of Gentry ii. i. 13 That doth circumflex and turn down like a Flower de Lice.
1856 Godey's Lady's Bk. May 449/2 The Pamela hat is made of Leghorn or straw, quite flat; the brim broad, and slightly turning down over the forehead.
1885 ‘L. Malet’ Col. Enderby's Wife iii. ii The corners of his mouth began to turn down in an ominous fashion.
2002 New Yorker 3 June 101/2 Grant stares blankly, his mouth turning down in panic.
5.
a. transitive. To lower (someone or something) by turning a device (such as a compass, winch, or screw). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (transitive)] > lower or let down > by mechanical means
to turn down1551
parbuckle1768
to strike down1778
to hoist down1794
to jack down1893
to wind down1961
1551 R. Record Pathway to Knowl. i. sig. Cv Stay the one foot of the compas in one of the endes of that line, turning the other vp or doun at your will, drawyng the arche of a circle against the midle of the line.
1573 J. Sanford tr. L. Guicciardini Garden of Pleasure f. 13 If she [sc. Fortune] continued to make hir wonted compasse, she wold turne him downe to the bottom.
1610 A. Hopton Baculum Geodæticum i. i. 3 So that..this said screw peece B beeing turned downe hard, and wrested thereunto, may stay ye peece of brasse, that he cannot mooue any way.
1929 D. H. Lawrence Pansies 82 My father was a working man And a collier was he, At six in the morning they turned him down And they turned him up for tea.
b. transitive. To lower the output of (a lamp, gas) by turning a handle, tap, etc.; to lower the temperature of (an electrical appliance, heating system, etc., and (in extended use) that which it heats or cooks), originally by turning a knob or switch; to reduce the volume of sound from (a radio or other audio device) by operating a control; to lower (volume) in this way. Also: to operate (a control) so as to reduce the temperature, volume of sound, etc. Cf. main sense 2b, to turn up 18 at Phrasal verbs 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > light > artificial light > an artificial light > [verb (transitive)] > turn down, close, or switch off
to turn down1855
to shut off1904
the world > matter > light > darkness or absence of light > dimness or absence of brightness > make dim [verb (transitive)] > reduce the brightness of
to turn down1855
to dim out1942
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > circuit > device to open or close circuit > connect or disconnect [verb (transitive)]
to turn on1824
disconnect1826
to turn down1855
switch1881
to put on1892
to turn off1892
key1929
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electronics > electronic devices or components > operation of electronic devices > [verb (transitive)] > initiate change
to turn on1824
key1929
trip1936
trigger1937
to turn down1941
the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > coldness > make cold [verb (transitive)] > cool > lower the temperature of
to turn down1950
1855 Brooklyn Daily Eagle 5 Mar. She walked into the supper room, where the gas had been turned down and gave vent to her wearied spirit by ejaculating, ‘thank Good, they are all stuffed and gone’.
1868 M. E. Braddon Dead-Sea Fruit xix Love's torch..flames anew before we turn it down for ever.
1892 Harper's Mag. Jan. 283/2 She..turned the lamps down low.
1941 N. Marsh Death & Dancing Footman xv. 313 ‘To get back to the wireless.’.. ‘I turned it down.’.. ‘You turned it turned it down... Not off. Down.’.. ‘I turned it down, and five minutes later somebody turned it up.’
1950 B. Pym Some Tame Gazelle x. 111 The beef..would be roasted to a cinder by now, unless Emily had had the sense to turn down the oven.
1961 J. Stroud Touch & Go v. 48 ‘Excuse me if I just turn my liver down?’.. She hustled back into the kitchen.
1969 ‘D. Rutherford’ Gilt-edged Cockpit vi. 93 Could you turn that transistor down a bit?
1970 J. Porter Dover strikes Again ii. 30 Old Mr Revel..switched on the television set. Miss Kettering..turned the volume control right down.
1975 Guardian 21 Jan. 5/1 Turn down your heating a couple of degrees.
2014 Church Times 10 Jan. 15/1 Once the pan has reached the boil, turn it down and give the pudding a brisk stir.
6. transitive. To put down, send to a lower position in an order or ranking (as in a class at school, a competition, etc.; also figurative): cf. main sense 27. Now U.S.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > degrading or debasement > degrade [verb (transitive)]
vile1297
supplanta1382
to bring lowa1387
revilea1393
gradea1400
villain1412
abject?a1439
to-gradea1440
vilifyc1450
villainy1483
disparage1496
degradea1500
deject?1521
disgraduate1528
disgress1528
regrade1534
base1538
diminute1575
lessen1579
to turn down1581
to pitch (a person) over the bar?1593
disesteem1594
degender1596
unnoble1598
disrank1599
reduce1599
couch1602
disthrone1603
displume1606
unplume1621
disnoble1622
disworth?1623
villainize1623
unglory1626
ungraduate1633
disennoble1645
vilicate1646
degraduate1649
bemean1651
deplume1651
lower1653
cheapen1654
dethrone1659
diminish1667
scoundrel1701
sink1706
demean1715
abjectate1731
unglorifya1740
unmagnify1747
undignify1768
to take the shine out of (less frequently from, U.S. off)1819
dishero1838
misdemean1843
downgrade1892
demote1919
objectify1973
1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius 69 You beyng ignoraunt what difference is betwixt an affirmative, & a negative proposition, must be turned doune agayne behinde the Schoolehouse doore.
1693 J. Dryden Examen Poeticum Ded. sig. A5 Julius Scaliger, wou'd needs turn down Homer, and Abdicate him.
1876 ‘M. Twain’ Adventures Tom Sawyer vi. 71 He took his place..in the spelling class, and got ‘turned down’, by a succession of mere baby words.
1946 G. Wilson Fidelity Folks 136 We had regular places in the line and turned down those who could not spell a word.
1999 L. S. DeRosier Creeker 55 While I did not win the spelling bee, I turned down about two dozen of Oil Springs' and Flat Gap's finest spellers.
7.
a. transitive. colloquial. To drink down, ‘toss off’. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > drinking > [verb (transitive)] > drink up or off
swap?1507
swingea1529
drink1535
uphalec1540
toss1568
trill off?1589
snapa1592
to toss offa1592
to turn down1593
to top off1598
drain1604
to take off1613
outdrinka1631
whip1639
swoop1648
epote1657
to fetch off1657
ebibe1689
fetch1691
to tip off1699
to sweep off1707
tip1784
to turn over1796
1593 ‘P. Foulface’ Bacchus Bountie sig. C After these came young Cicero, who, for the large loose that he had in turning downe his liquor, was called Bicongius.
a1625 J. Fletcher Womans Prize iii. ii, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Ooooo3/2 Out upon her, How she turn'd down the Bragget [printed Bagget]?
1769 H. Brooke Fool of Quality IV. xvii. 239 Asking for a flask of champaign, [he] turned it down without taking it once from his head.
1844 W. H. Maxwell Wanderings in Highlands & Islands II. xix. 270 We turned down a second tumbler.
b. transitive. Brewing. To put (liquor) into a vat to ferment. Cf. main sense 27b. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1826 D. Booth Art of Brewing (ed. 2) 109 Turned down 28 barrels of liquor, at 158 deg.
8.
a. transitive. Originally U.S. slang. Originally: †to rebuke, snub, put down (a person) (obsolete). Now: to refuse to grant (a person) his or her request; to reject (an applicant, aspirant, candidate, etc.).
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
1870 Daily Atlanta Intelligencer 27 Feb. Eighteen months ago his political enemies thought they had turned him down, and sealed his fate.
1897 Boston (Mass.) Jrnl. 14 Jan. 7/6 Secretary Olney was turned down by the Senate..in his effort to have the vote on the extradition treaties..reconsidered.
1905 R. E. Beach Pardners 82 We were liable to get turned down cold if we didn't have some story.
1913 E. Wharton Custom of Country ii. xvi The Ararat investigation had been..quashed,..and Elmer Moffatt ‘turned down’.
1979 R. Jaffe Class Reunion i. vii. 70 A lot of attractive, eligible men kept asking Annabel for dates, and she didn't like having to turn them down.
2013 Observer 24 Nov. 17/2 We live in an era of hyper-branding, where..job applicants are turned down for not having enough Twitter followers.
b. transitive. Originally North American. To reject, refuse, decline (an offer, request, suggestion, etc.); to ignore, fail to take (an opportunity).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > statement > refusal > [verb (transitive)] > decline to receive or accept
forsakea800
refusec1400
renayc1400
repelc1443
reject1532
disavow1579
balk1587
deny1590
disaccept1647
to pass up1896
to turn down1900
1900 Gazette (Montreal) 3 Mar. 2/7 [Denmark] turns down America's offer.
1927 A. Conan Doyle Case-bk. Sherlock Holmes x. 261 A quarter's rent..in advance and no arguing about terms. In these times a poor woman like me can't afford to turn down a chance like that.
1951 Sport 7 Jan. 17/1 Many of our suggestions are turned down.
1958 P. Gibbs Curtains of Yesterday xxvii. 214 Many nations..put forward plans for a gradual process of disarmament, and each plan was turned down by the other delegations.
2015 New Yorker 2 Nov. 29/2 The charge that Clinton had personally turned down requests from Ambassador Stevens for more security.
9. transitive. Shooting and Hunting. To put (game, etc.) in a place to stock it. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > provide or supply (something) [verb (transitive)] > lay in a supply of
to fet ina1556
to lay in1662
store1719
to get in1869
to turn down1891
1891 Field 26 Dec. 963/3 Foxes..are turned down in order that the supply may be kept up.
1892 Field 19 Nov. 793/3 I would urge all farmers to turn down some Indian game cocks in their yards.
1936 Manch. Guardian 26 Sept. 9/4 Pheasants are reared in large numbers for turning down in coverts.
extracted from turnv.
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更新时间:2024/9/21 5:28:49