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单词 unreason
释义

unreasonn.

Brit. /(ˌ)ʌnˈriːzn/, U.S. /ˌənˈrizn/
Forms: see un- prefix1 and reason n.1
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: un- prefix1, reason n.1
Etymology: < un- prefix1 + reason n.1
1. Injustice, impropriety, or injury without due cause. Obsolete (Scottish in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > unjustness > [noun]
unrighteOE
unrightnessOE
unrightfulnessc1275
wrongousnessc1325
the wrongc1330
unequityc1380
injustice1390
unreasonc1390
wrongfulnessa1400
unskilfulnessc1410
unjustnessc1443
unevennessa1470
unjusticea1475
disreason1480
unreasonablenessc1515
inequity1556
iniquity1587
non-reason1597
unequalness1628
unfairness1713
wrongness1833
society > morality > rightness or justice > wrong or injustice > [noun]
unrightnessOE
unrightOE
wronga1100
un-i-rightc1275
injustice1390
unreasonc1390
wrongfulnessa1400
unskilfulnessc1410
unjustnessc1443
unjusticea1475
disreason1480
unreasonablenessc1515
non-reason1597
wrongness1833
unconscionability1908
c1390 MS Vernon Homilies in Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen (1877) 57 303 Wiþ muchel wrong and vn Resoun Dost þow me þis tresoun.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 3747 He has me don oft vn-resun And no me reft mi benisun.
a1500 ( Pilgrimage of Soul (Egerton) (1953) iv. ix. f. 60v (MED) It semyth me vnreason..þat he þat noght owith schal paye for the dettour him self.
1603 Thre Prestis of Peblis (Charteris) (1920) 11 And that ȝe think vnressoun or wrang, Wee al and sundrie sings the samin sang.
1609 J. Skene tr. Statutes Robert I in Regiam Majestatem 23 Sa lang as he or his preloquutour defends tort and non reason, that is, wrang and vnlach (that is to haue done na iniurie, nor vnreason agains the Law).
2.
a. The state or condition of being devoid of reason; inability to think or act rationally or reasonably.rare before the 19th cent.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > lack of reason, irrationality > [noun]
unskillc1380
unreasona1400
unreasonableness1598
reasonlessness1622
irrationability1645
alogy1646
irrationality1822
non-rationality1894
non-reason1898
stupid1948
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 6924 Þis Iuus, fild wit vn-resun, In-to þe land o promission Thoru moyses ne come þai noght.
1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Love in W. W. Skeat Chaucerian & Other Pieces (1897) 132 Who-so..unknitteth wil to be in other purpose than to the first accorde, knitteth him with contrarye of reson; and that is unreson.
1649 C. Raue Disc. Orientall Tongues (new ed.) 2 It doth rather imbrace (according to that light of Nature which God hath bestowed upon it) REASON than UNREASON.
1827 T. Carlyle State Germ. Lit. in Edinb. Rev. Oct. 313 The spectre nun..boisterous outlaws..grimmest man-haters, ghosts, and the like suspicious characters..[are] mostly relinquished as unproductive. Other forms of Unreason have taken its place.
1847 A. Helps Friends in Council I. i. vii. 115 Many a woman is brought up in unreason and self-will from these causes that he has given.
1883 M. Pattison Mem. (1885) 2 All my energy was directed..to free myself from the bondage of unreason.
1938 G. West Charles Darwin viii. 133 Clearly he was again in a state of extreme nervous tension, and in his restless unreason his plans grew ever more grandiose.
1989 C. Handy Age of Unreason 5 We are now entering an Age of Unreason..a time..for thinking the unlikely and doing the unreasonable.
2010 Independent 20 Feb. 37/3 Someone attacks you with unreason, you strike back with more unreason still.
b. The state or condition of being contrary to reason; illogicality. Also: that which is contrary to reason.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > lack of reason, irrationality > [noun] > irrational thing, action, etc.
irrationalitya1680
unreason1824
non-rational1893
arational1972
1824 Liverpool Mercury 2 July 3/2 Suppose that we admit that it is correct to say ‘unreason in religion’; why then, the contrary is correct also, namely, ‘reason in religion’.
1847 A. Helps Friends in Council I. i. vii. 114 Women may talk the greatest unreason out of doors, and nobody kindly informs them that it is unreason.
1880 Harper's Mag. July 257/1 He who would be convinced of the unreason of our educational organization, can do no better than read the able and interesting address delivered by Andrew D. White.
1950 K. A. Porter Let. 5 July (1990) vii. 385 Those little exploring notes saying merely, in the best tradition of Irish unreason, ‘if you don't receive this please let me know’.
1991 S. J. Gould Bully for Brontosaurus v. xiv. 211 It is the standard example always used by professors in introductory courses to illustrate illogic and unreason.

Phrases

Originally Scottish. Abbot (of) Unreason: a mock character chosen to preside over certain popular games and festivities, esp. at Christmas. Cf. Abbot of Unrest n. at unrest n. Phrases and Lord of Misrule n. at misrule n. 4. Now chiefly historical.
ΚΠ
1496 in T. Dickson Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1877) I. 270 To Gilberte Brade,..for spilling of his hous in Striuiling be the Abbot of Vnresoun, x li.
a1572 J. Knox Hist. Reformation Scotl. in Wks. (1846) I. 40 The same Frear maid ane uther sermoun of the Abbote Unreassone, unto whome..he compared the prelattis of that age.
1779 H. Arnot Hist. Edinb. i. ii. 77 The populace amused themselves with other games, which..seem not to have been unconnected with religion. Of these, the chief were the game of Robin Hood, and that of the Abbot of Unreason.
1851 Fraser's Mag. Jan. 126 We'll fetch for this festive season From Downing Street Lords of Misrule, From St. George's our Abbot Unreason.
1932 Observer 25 Dec. 8/2 Add a mask and we are one with all the Lords of Misrule, Abbots of Unreason, and Princes of Purpoole who ever turned the Winter Feast into a scramble of order and office over-turned.
2005 R. Black Gaelic Otherworld 583 More recent approaches..portray the mock abbots of the Scottish burghs—the Abbot of Unreason in Inverness..or the Abbot of Unrest in Peebles—as part of a universal custom of suspending or reversing normality during the midwinter festival.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2014; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

unreasonv.

Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: un- prefix2, reason v.
Etymology: < un- prefix2 + reason v.
Obsolete.
1. transitive. To deprive of reason.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > drive mad [verb (transitive)]
turn1372
mada1425
overthrow?a1425
to go (also fall, run) mada1450
deferc1480
craze1503
to face (a person) out ofc1530
dement1545
distemper1581
shake1594
distract1600
to go (also run, set) a-madding (or on madding)1600
unwita1616
insaniate?1623
embedlama1628
dementate1628
crack1631
unreason1643
bemad1655
ecstasya1657
overset1695
madden1720
maddle1775
insanify1809
derange1825
bemoon1866
send (someone) up the wall1951
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > drive mad [verb (reflexive)]
braidc1275
estrange1547
unreason1643
1643 J. Burroughs Glorious Name of God 46 Surely we must unreason our selves before we can think so.
a1676 M. Hale Primitive Originat. Mankind (1677) 343 We shall have such Solutions as must make us first unreason and unman our selves, before we can subscribe to them.
1755 T. Smollett tr. M. de Cervantes Don Quixote I. i. i. 2 The unreasonable usage..so unreasons my reason, that I have reason to complain of your beauty.
1829 T. Hook Bank to Barnes 40 Were I to tease on, It would nearly unreason your reason.
2. transitive. To disprove or refute.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > testing > refutation, disproof > refute, disprove [verb (transitive)]
answerOE
bitavelena1225
allayc1275
confoundc1384
concludea1400
conclusea1400
forblenda1400
gainsaya1400
rejag1402
to bear downc1405
redarguea1425
repugn?a1425
reverse?c1430
improvec1443
reprovea1513
dissolve1529
revince1529
convince1530
confute1533
refel1534
refute1545
void1570
evict1583
infringe1590
reprehend1597
revert1598
evince1608
repel1613
to take off1618
unbubblea1640
invalid1643
invalidate1649
remove1652
retund1653
effronta1657
dispute1659
unreason1661
have1680
demolish1691
to blow sky-high1819
1661 R. L'Estrange State-divinity 25 Their Reasons I have un-Reason'd already.
1672 W. Penn Spirit of Truth Vindicated 14 Its being so does not unreason it, or render it no Reason in it self.
a1716 R. South Serm. Several Occasions (1744) XI. 257 However a man may for a while..seem to himself to unreason the equity of God's proceedings; yet [etc.].
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2014; most recently modified version published online September 2018).
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n.c1390v.1643
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更新时间:2024/9/21 8:31:17