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单词 traipse
释义

traipsetrapesn.

Brit. /treɪps/, U.S. /treɪps/
Forms: Also 1800s trapse.
Etymology: Goes with traipse v., but of later appearance.
colloquial and dialect.
1. An opprobrious name for a woman or girl slovenly in person or habits; ‘a dangling slattern’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirty person > [noun] > woman or girl
slut1402
dawa1500
drab?1518
dawkin1565
suss?1565
mab1568
drassock1573
daggle-tail1577
drossel1581
driggle-draggle1588
draggle-tail1596
soss1611
slatternc1640
slutterya1652
feague1664
traipse1676
drazel1678
mopsy1699
dab1736
slammerkin1737
rubbacrock1746
trollop1753
dratchell1755
heap1806
dolly-mop1834
sozzle1848
tat1936
scrubber1959
1676 Poor Robins Intelligence 11–18 Apr. 2/2 A lazy trapes that cares not how late she sits up, nor how long she lies in the morning.
1678 S. Butler Hudibras: Third Pt. iii. ii. 121 He found the sullen Trapes Possest with th' Devil, Worms and Claps.
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Trapes, a dangling Slattern.
1715 J. Gay What d'ye call It i. i. 8 From Door to Door I'd sooner whine and beg,..Than marry such a Trapes.
1780 H. Walpole Let. to W. Mason 31 Aug. There was a trapes of a housekeeper.
1811 A. de Beauclerc Ora & Juliet IV. 191 You and your dirty trapes.
1905 Eng. Dial. Dict. [cited from Lancashire, Yorkshire to Essex, Somerset].
2. An act or course of ‘traipsing’; a tiresome or disagreeable tramp.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > going on foot > [noun] > walking laboriously or aimlessly > an act of
march1692
tramp1787
trudge1835
trampoose1840
traipse1862
stram1869
ploda1879
foot-slog1900
1862 Mrs. H. Wood Channings (1866) 471 It's such a toil and a trapes up them two pair of stairs.
1866 E. Lynn Linton Lizzie Lorton I. xiii. 302 He..asked if the ladies would like to go down the mine?..his lass shouldn't go through such a trapse.
1887 T. Hardy Woodlanders III. xv. 308 Leading folk a twelve-mile traipse.
1893 ‘Q’ Delectable Duchy 196 A brave trapse all the way from Upper Woon.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

traipsetrapesv.

Brit. /treɪps/, U.S. /treɪps/
Forms: Also 1700s–1800s dialect trapse, 1800s traaps; traapess, trapas, trapass, trapess, trapez, trapus, traipass, traipess, traaypess, etc.
Etymology: Known a1600. Formerly usually trapes , and evidently related to trape v., but the nature of their relation is not clear. In literary use, the spelling traipse and Pope's metrical use show the word as a monosyllable; but many modern dialects have it as two syllables. If trappe c1400 really belongs to trape v., that would appear to be the earliest word of the group, although trapes as verb would be a derivative of unusual form; but if not, trapesing of 1593 would be the earliest form recorded. The dialect forms trapass , traipass strongly recall Old French trapasser , trapesser , trepasser (still in Cotgrave), to pass over or beyond (see trespass v.), though the senses do not exactly fit.
colloquial.
1.
a. intransitive. To walk in a trailing or untidy way; e.g. to walk or ‘trail’ through the mud; to walk with the dress trailing or bedraggled; to walk about aimlessly or needlessly. (Usually said of a woman or child.) Also in gen. use, to tramp or trudge, to go about.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > progressive motion > walking > walk, tread, or step [verb (intransitive)] > in a trailing or untidy manner
traipse1593
daggle1705
sloba1804
society > travel > aspects of travel > going on foot > go on foot [verb (intransitive)] > laboriously or aimlessly
haik?a1500
harl?a1513
trudge1547
palt1560
ploda1566
traipse1593
trash1607
truck1631
tramp1643
vamp1654
trudgea1657
daggle1681
trape1706
trampoose1794
hike1809
slog1872
taigle1886
pudge1891
sludge1908
schlep1937
schlump1957
1593 [implied in: T. Bilson Perpetual Govt. Christes Church xiv. 296 This t [r] apesing to and fro I impute rather to the rawnesse of your discipline..This it is to wander in the desert of your owne deuises without the line of Gods worde, or leuell of his Church to direct you. (at traipsing n.)].
1647 in F. P. Verney & M. M. Verney Mem. Verney Family 17th Cent. (1907) I. 368 What soever wether comes I must goe trapesing a foote to ye end of ye lane.1711 J. Swift Jrnl. to Stella 2 Mar. (1948) I. 204 I was traipsing to-day with your Mr. Sterne.1728 A. Pope Dunciad iii. 149 See next two slip-shod Muses traipse along.1732 C. Wogan Let. to Swift 27 Feb. in J. Swift Wks. (1814) XVIII. 19 Ireland is left to trapes in her old draggle-tailed weeds by her own children.1742 M. Delany Autobiogr. & Corr. (1861) II. 189 We trapesed all over Babylon garden.1824 L. L. Cameron Pink Tippet ii. 25 I would not go trapsing to school as she does.a1865 E. C. Gaskell Wives & Daughters (1866) I. ii. 14 I've been out for these three hours trapesing about the grounds till I'm as tired as can be.1869 Punch 16 Oct. 154/1 Draggletails trapseing along the street.1884 L. F. Allen New Amer. Farm Bk. 313 The frog, traipsing over the dewy fields.1892 G. H. Billington in Times 1 Jan. 11/3 I only wish the children of the members of the Board..had to traipse a mile and a half to school.1926 A. Huxley Let. 4 Mar. (1969) 268 I don't want to spend unnecessarily on traipsing round the continent.1968 V. S. Pritchett Cab at Door xii. 238 I traipsed for a year from one paint shop to the next round Paris, selling glue, shellac and, for a hungry period, ostrich feathers and theatre tickets.1976 National Observer (U.S.) 9 Oct. 5/4 I spent one day traipsing after Thomson, but his limousine disappeared at very high speed over a hill and by the time my rented sedan got to the other side he had disappeared.1978 R. V. Jones Most Secret War xix. 159 For days we had to traipse for water down six flights of stairs and hundreds of yards to a stand pipe in the road.
b. To trail along the ground; to hang untidily.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > hang or be suspended [verb (intransitive)] > hang down > trailingly
trikea1350
trilla1400
trailc1412
train1584
dragglec1594
tag1617
traipsea1777
streel1847
trape1875
a1777 S. Foote Cozeners (1778) iii. ii. 70 These..skirts of the boy's are so light and genteel..: Those we got made in the country, trapes and dangle like a parcel of petticoats.
1887 T. Darlington Folk-speech S. Cheshire Ah dait [= I doubt] it'll trapes, if yo han it made so long.
2.
a. transitive. To walk or tramp over; to tread, tramp (the fields, streets, etc.). dialect.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > going on foot > traverse on foot [verb (transitive)] > laboriously or aimlessly
trudge1635
trollopa1745
plod1751
trampa1774
traipse1885
scuff1909
1885 H. Caine Shadow of Crime xxiii It's bad weather to trapes the fells.
1901 D. C. Murray Ch. Humanity v. 80 If you're to begin trapesing the streets again without a farthing in your pocket.
1902 Monthly Rev. Aug. 181 I'll gar you trapse the stone-floor bare-fit!
b. To tread (a dance) in a trailing way. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > dancing > style or manner of dancing > [verb (transitive)]
walk1742
hobble1762
to walk through ——1824
traipse1835
1835 Clouds of Aristophanes ii, in Blackwood's Mag. Oct. 526 She's not appearing Drest out Like the rest in filthy guise..nor trapesing [printed trapering] forth a dirty minuet.
c. Causatively: to carry or take about in a trailing way.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance by drawing along > draw along or haul [verb (transitive)] > of a person
lugger1654
lurry1664
tug1710
traipse1814
traverse1814
trudge1883
schlep1911
trascine1922
1814 H. Capel Let. July (1955) i. 53 St. Francis, the tutelary Saint of Brussels who had been previously trapsed round the town with the most astonishing pomp & splendour.
a1974 R. Crossman Diaries (1976) II. 399 Suddenly I saw a picture of the tiny little woman looking upwards and seeing the soles of the feet of the statues above her as she was traipsed miles and miles around on the red carpet.

Derivatives

traipsed adj. trampled, bedraggled.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > dirtiness or soiling with specific kinds of dirt > [adjective] > muddy > dirty by trailing in mud
drabbledc1440
dagged1484
draggled1513
daggling1562
daggle-tailed1573
daggled1607
draggle-tailed1654
draggle-tail1707
daggled-tail1711
bedraggled1824
bedabbled1862
traipsed1884
1884 G. H. Boughton in Harper's Mag. Oct. 706/2 The town..looked messy and ‘traipsed’.
1887 T. Darlington Folk-speech S. Cheshire A woman with dirty garments was called ‘a poor, trapes't thing’.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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