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单词 broadcast
释义

broadcastn.adv.adj.

Brit. /ˈbrɔːdkɑːst/, /ˈbrɔːdkast/, U.S. /ˈbrɔdˌkæst/, /ˈbrɑdˌkæst/
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly formed within English, by compounding. Partly formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: broad adj.1, cast n.; broad adv., cast adj.2; broadcast v.
Etymology: As noun < broad adj.1 + cast n.; compare broadcasting n. As adverb and adjective < broad adv. + cast adj.2, and (in later use) probably partly also < broadcast, past participle of broadcast v.
A. n.
1. Agriculture. A method of sowing which involves scattering seeds over the whole surface of the soil, rather than sowing seeds in drills or rows; the action or an act of sowing seeds using this method. In early use frequently in prepositional phrases, following with, in.In quot. 1707 not as a fixed collocation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > sowing > [noun] > other systems of sowing
clovering1652
broadcast1796
plumping1844
undersowing1960
zero tillage1963
sod planting1965
1707 J. Mortimer Whole Art Husbandry 49 Some harrow their Ground over, and sow Wheat or Rye on it, with a broad cast.
1745 W. Ellis Agric. Improv'd I. June ii. 7 The rest of my Wheat-Big and Rye I sow'd in Broad-cast among my Corn where the Ground was good.
1796 C. Marshall Introd. Knowl. & Pract. Gardening xv. 324 At broad-cast hoe thin, and trample the seed in, with the feet.
1797 T. Holcroft tr. F. L. Stolberg Trav. (ed. 2) III. lxxx. 224 The corn has not been sown with broad-cast.
1866 J. E. T. Rogers Hist. Agric. & Prices I. iii. 50 The rate of seed to the acre..where broadcast is adopted.
1974 Shrubs & Vines for Northeastern Wildlife (Forest Service, U.S. Dept. Agric.) 148/2 After broadcast of seeds, the well-packed seedbed should be cultipacked.
2016 D. Franzen in A. Chatterjee & D. Clay Soil Fertility Managem. in Agroecosystems 23/2 Broadcast is only recommended if the P[hosphorus] will be incorporated into the soil.
2.
a. The action of transmitting or disseminating audio or visual material (esp. radio or television programmes) by radio, television, the internet, etc., esp. as a means of mass communication to a large audience.Recorded earliest in wireless broadcast n.
ΚΠ
1914 Indianapolis Star 30 Nov. 2/4 The spread of official news by Wireless Broadcast over the globe for whomsoever can pick it up is a new method of political propaganda.
1926 Glasgow Herald 16 Nov. 9 The ban on the broadcast of controversial topics.
1999 F. Wynne tr. M. Houellebecq Atomised (2001) 31 His reputation reached new heights in 1959 with the broadcast of a short, bilious documentary about..the yéyé phenomenon.
2013 Radio Times 9 Nov. (South/West ed.) 133/1 Five years ago we asked whether he'd mind if we sent a radio car to Stourhead to record him describing the view in the late afternoon, for broadcast later in the 5pm darkness.
b. A transmission of audio or visual material by radio, television, or the internet, esp. as a mass communication to a large audience; a radio or television programme.Recorded earliest in radio broadcast n..See also news broadcast n., outside broadcast n., etc.
ΘΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > a broadcast programme or item > [noun]
transmission1907
broadcast1922
programme1922
edition1934
prog1937
1919 Pop. Sci. Monthly Dec. The object of this radio broadcast is to maintain the interest of radio amateurs and to train them in receiving code.
1926 J. Reith Diary 8 May (1975) i. 95 Everything was in order for the broadcast... The PM..has a voice test.
1937 Life 26 July 58/1 Both Bergen and Fields write their own dialog and some of it is ad-libbed during the broadcast.
1955 Times 10 May 10/3 Whether Sir Winston Churchill will make a sound or television broadcast for the Conservative Party.
1987 P. McCabe Bad News at Black Rock vii. 126 Over the course of the two-hour broadcast, her interviews..were seamless.
2002 Vanity Fair Jan. 55/4 Lehrer has resisted tarting up his nightly broadcast for PBS, keeping The Newshour an outpost of civility and international perspective.
2022 Guardian (Nexis) 21 May Osaka logged on to Instagram for an impromptu live broadcast with the simple aim of briefly revealing her new dog, Butta, to her fans.
B. adv.
1. Agriculture. Over the whole surface of the soil rather than in drills or rows. Chiefly in to sow (also scatter, etc.) broadcast.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > sowing > sow [verb (intransitive)] > other systems of sowing
to sow, scatter, throw, etc. broadcast1832
1727 R. Bradley Compl. Body Husbandry xii. 224 In Devonshire, and other places, where they sow pease.., they sow them broad-cast, which gains a great deal of ground.
1832 J. Baxter Libr. Agric. & Hort. Knowl. (ed. 2) 35 Seed sown either broadcast or in drills.
1861 Amer. Agriculturist Jan. 11/1 Let it [sc. lime] be first mixed with peat or clay, turf or other good soils, and after lying in heaps for a while, it may be spread on the land broadcast.
1875 Encycl. Brit. III. 568/1 In May..a nursery ground is ploughed three times, and the seed scattered broadcast.
1997 K. O'Riordan Boy in Moon vii. 118 He'd said that they would sow turnip seeds broadcast, over a very fine tilth, harrowed by Cathal a couple of days ago.
2. Over a wide or broad area; widely, broadly; so as to reach or tell a large number of people. Frequently with reference to the dissemination of publications, news, information, opinion, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being scattered or dispersed > scatter [verb (transitive)] > scatter broadcast
shedc1000
sprengeOE
discatterc1330
shatterc1330
sowa1387
spilla1400
shadec1425
sparklec1440
scatter?c1450
distribute?c1510
sparse?1550
to cast seed1577
bescatter1859
to sow, scatter, throw, etc. broadcast1874
1834 L. M. Sargent Addr. Temperance Soc. Harvard Univ. 23 If their patients are scattered broadcast, like my own.
1854 Harper's Mag. Dec. 119/1 It was at evening, and the Extras, in a moment, sowed the exciting news broadcast over the town.
1884 Daily Evening Bull. (San Francisco) 30 Dec. 3/8 These circulars are to be sent broadcast by telegraph to the press of the country.
1924 H. L. Osgood Amer. Colonies in 18th Cent. iii. 425 Whitefield began..flinging broadcast the charge that most of the New England clergy did not experimentally know Christ.
1956 E. McCourt Wooden Sword (1975) x. 147 Handkerchief thrown carelessly down,..maybe a half-mended garment strewn broadcast on the chesterfield.
1974 C. S. Griffin Univ. Kansas xxix. 589 Butler wrote and spread broadcast over the state a pamphlet stating that Fine Arts would have more than thirty classrooms and studios in the new building.
2012 Amer. Jrnl. Irish Stud. 9 56 If only the immigrant Irish could be broken out of their enclaves in eastern cities, separated from the bad company of their friends and their priests, and scattered broadcast across America's vast prairies and plains.
C. adj.
1. Agriculture.
a. Employing the method of, or used for, scattering seed, fertilizer, etc., over the whole surface of the soil.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > sowing > [adjective] > sown > other systems of sowing
thick-sown1683
broadcast1767
placement-drilled1960
1744 W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman Mar. ii. 21 Many poor Farmers, who sow their Ground with any of those Corn or Grass Seeds in the random or promiscuous broad-cast Way.
1767 A. Young Farmer's Lett. 115 The sowing is either in the broad-cast mode, or by drilling.
1831 J. Sinclair Corr. II. 424 No broad-cast sowing can equal it.
1853 Catal. Royal Agric. Soc. Show 76 The best broadcast manure distributor exhibited.
1999 BBC Gardeners' World Apr. 87/4 For covering large areas, such as lawns, use broadcast sowing.
2003 Field & Stream Oct. 70/1 He was sowing the plot with a broadcast spreader.
b. Of soil, seed, etc.: sown or treated using the broadcast method ( C. 1a); scattered over the whole surface of the soil.
ΚΠ
1764 J. Randall Semi-Virgilian Husbandry 143 The broad-cast crop will, in like circumstances, always exceed the drilled crop.
1807 A. Young Gen. View Agric. Essex I. iv. 100 I do not know that a drilled acre is superior in produce, at first, to a broad-cast acre.
1842 E. J. Lance Cottage Farmer 19 On broad-cast turnips, thirty bushels of lime per acre, was the quantity used.
1941 Jrnl. Min. Agric. 48 186 A combine drill is now generally accepted as being superior to a seed drill and a broadcast fertilizer used separately.
1995 N. Hudson Soil Conservation (ed. 3) xi. 267 In the case of row crops only part of the soil is covered, and in the case of broadcast crops such as small grains, the cover may be uniform but is not dense.
2. figurative.
a. As if scattering seed broadcast. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1785 E. Burke Speech Nabob of Arcot's Private Debts 8 With a broad-cast swing of his arm, he squanders over his Indian field a sum, far greater than the clear produce of the whole hereditary revenue of the kingdom of Ireland.
b. Scattered or spread widely; extensively or publicly disseminated.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > extension in space > spreading or diffusion > [adjective] > spread or diffused > widely
wideOE
rampanta1540
widespread1582
cheverel1583
worldwide1602
broada1616
ubiquitary1652
wide-spreading1655
broadcast1785
country-wide1845
statewide1848
nationwide1891
planetwide1920
society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > [adjective] > published or spread abroad
publisheda1400
divulgatea1440
well-sunga1450
vulgate1513
promulgate1526
blazed1590
divulged1607
frequent1623
promulgated1657
announced1769
publicized1822
divulgated1842
outblown1851
vulgateda1861
circulated1867
broadcast1878
well-publicized1917
1825 J. Bentham Indications Respecting Ld. Eldon 78 Of this broadcast dissemination of uncertainty, one obvious cause may naturally be found in the profit made in the two great shops.
1843 J. B. Aycrigg Rep. Coast Surv. 77 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (27th Congr., 3rd Sess.: House of Representatives Doc. 170) It has pleased Mr. Aycrigg..to throw out the broadcast accusation, that I was mentally and physically incompetent to that task.
1878 W. Stubbs Constit. Hist. III. xviii. 135 The obscure story of the arrest and death of Gloucester will, it may be safely assumed, never be cleared up; and the depth of the darkness that covers it has inevitably been made the occasion of broadcast accusations and suspicions of every sort.
1909 Waterloo (Iowa) Daily Courier 7 Jan. 5/2 There was a manifest desire..to inaugurate definite measures for the broadcast advertising of the advantages of Waterloo as a manufacturing, investment and residential center.
2009 Courier Mail (Austral.) (Nexis) 7 Feb. 100 At least one broadcast rumour has suggested that Ponting, too, has dressingroom issues.
3.
a. Transmitted or disseminated by radio, television, etc., esp. as a mass communication to a large audience.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > [adjective]
broadcast1922
broadcasted1923
transmissional1930
1922 Sandusky (Ohio) Star-Jrnl. 8 June 2/3 Rice..sees that the broadcast reports are received properly by farmers with radio receiving sets.
1936 Discovery Apr. 124/2 Mr Thornton's broadcast talks on exotic music are widely known.
1989 J. Honey Does Accent Matter? iii. 44 In a broadcast interview in 1981 he discussed the work of particular novelists.
2013 Oldie Apr. 10/1 The ASA says it can only look at the content of individual published or broadcast ads.
2017 Reason Mar. 56/1 Over the last few decades, as media markets segmented, the ratings for the three traditional broadcast news programs have declined.
b. That transmits or broadcasts audio or visual material (esp. radio or television programmes) by radio, television, etc., esp. as a mass communication to a large audience. Also designating a person who works in radio or television broadcasting.
Π
1922 Pop. Sci. Monthly Sept. 70/1 He has given us the ideal radio broadcast receiver.
1924 Washington Post 19 July 17/5 ‘The Radio Telescope or Directional Receiving’ by Dr Alfred N. Goldsmith, chief broadcast engineer.
1944 Proc. IRE 32 668/1 Design of directional antennas for broadcast stations to prevent skywave interference to another station.
1993 Paragraph Summer 40/2 Hay, a former broadcast journalist, loosely chronicles her experiences travelling in Latin America.
2012 N.Y. Mag. 21 May 60/1 Comedy, particularly on the broadcast networks, is..attracting the kind of younger audiences that advertisers lust after.
2018 W. Davies Nerv. States (2019) vii. 200 Mass democracy in the age of broadcast media involved grand public messages.

Compounds

broadcast storm n. Computing (in a network) an excess of automated transmissions and responses that leads to degradation of performance.
Π
1988 AUUGN Oct. 155/1 A classic broadcast storm occurs when a large number of hosts respond almost simultaneously to a broadcast packet.
2012 MX (Melbourne) (Nexis) 30 Oct. (News section) 2 Our investigation has identified a network switch failure that caused a broadcast storm (that) creates countless transmissions, which, in the case of CityLink, utilised all the available computer capacity within the IT network.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2022).

broadcastv.

Etymology: Formed as broad adj. + cast v.Previous versions of the OED give the stress as: ˈbroadcast.
1. To scatter (seed, etc.) abroad with the hand.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > sowing > sow seed [verb (transitive)]
sowc1000
besowc1175
inseminate1623
to put in1657
sprain1744
shed1770
to get in1771
seminate1796
broadcast1807
seed1814
1807 A. Young Gen. View Agric. Essex I. vii. 333 They sow..the barley..spraining the first [half]; and broad-casting the second.
1836 Montgomery Poet's Portfolio 248 Sow in the morn thy seed..Broad-cast it o'er the land.
1846 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 7 ii. 591 It is preferable to broadcast the guano.
2. figurative. To scatter or disseminate widely.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > publish or spread abroad [verb (transitive)]
sowc888
blowc1275
dispeple1297
to do abroadc1300
fame1303
publyc1350
defamea1382
publisha1382
open?1387
proclaima1393
slandera1400
spreada1400
abroachc1400
throwc1400
to give outa1425
promote?a1425
noisec1425
publicc1430
noisec1440
divulgea1464
to put outc1475
skail1487
to come out witha1500
bruit1525
bruita1529
to bear out1530
divulgate1530
promulgate1530
propale?1530
ventilate1530
provulgate1535
sparple1536
sparse1536
promulge1539
disperse1548
publicate1548
forthtell1549
hurly-burly?1550
propagate1554
to set abroada1555
utter1561
to set forth1567
blaze1570
evulgate1570
scatter1576
rear?1577
to carry about1585
pervulgate1586
celebrate?1596
propalate1598
vent1602
evulge1611
to give forth1611
impublic1628
ventilate1637
disseminate1643
expose1644
emit1650
to put about1664
to send abroad1681
to get abroad1688
to take out1697
advertise1710
forward1713
to set abouta1715
circulate1780
broadcast1829
vent1832
vulgate1851
debit1879
float1883
1829 I. Taylor Nat. Hist. Enthusiasm iv. 270 The doctrine of missionary zeal..has been broad-cast over Christendom.
1880 J. Ruskin Lett. to Clergy 369 Showing his detestation of the sale of indulgences by broadcasting these gratis from his pulpit.
3. To disseminate (a message, news, a musical or dramatic performance, or any audible or visible matter) from a radio or television transmitting station to the receiving sets of listeners and viewers; said also of a speaker or performer. Also absol.Inflected past tense and past participle broadcast (cf. broadcast adj. 3); occasionally broadcasted.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > [verb (transitive)]
broadcast1921
programme1930
air1933
1921 Discovery Apr. 92/1 The [wireless] station at Poldhu is used partly for broadcasting Press and other messages to ships, that is, sending out messages without receiving replies.
1922 Daily Mail 8 Aug. 7/3 The largest and most powerful wireless station that can broadcast to the world.
1922 Daily Mail 11 Nov. 7 Government arrangements for broadcasting.
1924 Daily News 13 Dec. 6/7 The speech broadcast to our homes to-day.
1956 M. W. Stearns Story of Jazz (1957) xvi. 188 Coon-Sanders..and Henry Halstead broadcasted over the radio.

Derivatives

ˈbroadcasted adj. = broadcast adj. 3. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > [adjective]
broadcast1922
broadcasted1923
transmissional1930
1923 Glasgow Herald 3 Feb. 8 In cities the ‘broadcasted’ entertainment can never prove a serious rival to the theatre and concert hall.
1924 Glasgow Herald 28 Aug. 7 The crowning event was the broadcasted evening service at Spurgeon's Tabernacle on Sunday.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1888; most recently modified version published online March 2021).
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n.adv.adj.1707v.1807
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