单词 | unpainful |
释义 | unpainfuladj. 1. Not causing or involving pain, distress, trouble, or discomfort. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > easiness > [adjective] > doing effortlessly > involving little effort lightOE easyc1380 softc1390 unpainful?c1425 unconstrained1541 toilless1606 facile1607 labourlessa1613 cheapa1616 unforced1642 unlaborious1644 slight1667 sweatless1893 pussyfoot1899 lite1929 light-touch1935 ?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 338 (MED) Who þat schal..bynde oon and do of, he schal chese after þe moste vnpeynefull [L. indolorosissimam] maner and schappe. 1583 P. Barrough Methode of Phisicke v. xx. 245 Oedema..is a certaine loose and vnpainefull tumour, or it is a certaine thinne swelling without paine. 1628 O. Felltham Resolves: 2nd Cent. lxxxii. sig. Y6v If we owe a Retribution for vnpainefull Courtesies. 1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding ii. iv. 49 That being generally call'd..soft, which changes the Situation of its parts upon an easie and unpainful touch. 1739 J. Sparrow tr. H. F. Le Dran Observ. Surg. xxx. 102 The small Remainder of the Tumour was unpainful. 1762 A. Portal Innocence 50 Thence He, by Toil unpainful, can procure For all his real Wants Supplies. 1814 Q. Visitor Mar. 205 Having done its office, it is useless; nay it is an inconvenience not unpainful. 1853 Boston Med. & Surg. Jrnl. 9 Mar. 121 The speculum—a means of diagnosis in uterine disease, chaste in its application, unpainful, and correct in delineating pathological facts. 1902 Idler Feb. 96/1 If empty, her life now was placid, unpainful. 1919 N. Amer. Rev. Oct. 507 If a man refuses to accept reasonably undangerous and unpainful treatment by which his disability may be reduced or removed, he should receive no pension. 2003 M. Anderson in S. Petrilli Transl., Transl. 410 Transition from the closed group of the institute into the world is not always smooth and unpainful. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > absence of emotion > [adjective] > lacking emotional sensibility unfeelingc1000 mis-feelinga1382 stonishc1450 unpainfulc1450 obtuse1509 sprightlessa1522 insensate1553 senseless1560 soulless1568 dull-esprited1591 impassible1592 bluntie1598 impenetrable1600 stockish1600 stolidc1600 incapable1601 stupid1605 tasteless1605 unsensitive1610 unexalted1611 insensible1617 unsensible1619 languid1622 immovable1639 dead-hearted1642 sterile1642 resupine1643 unaffectionate1645 iron-bound1648 resentlessa1649 torpid1656 torpulent1657 impassive1699 unreceptive1722 hebete1743 apathetic1744 stubbed1744 gustless1766 unresponsive1768 unsusceptible1779 tideless-blooded1786 unaffectioned1788 inaccessible1796 hebetudinous1820 unimpressible1828 insensitive1834 apathetical1835 non-sensitive1836 blunt-hearted1845 irreceptive1846 unreceptant1846 unimpressionable1847 anaesthetic1860 insentient1860 hard (also tough, sharp) as nails1862 unsqueamish1893 tone-deaf1894 unget-at-able1897 facty1901 zombie1937 pegamoid1957 the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > [adjective] > incapable of physical suffering unthrowlyc1225 impassiblea1340 unpassiblec1390 unpainfulc1450 impatible?1541 passiveless1602 unpassive1602 impassive1667 c1450 (?c1400) tr. Honorius Augustodunensis Elucidarium (1909) 21 (MED) Aftir his owne kynde he [sc. Christ] was unpayneful & vndeedly. 1550 R. Hutchinson Image of God xxv. f. cxxiiiv We are vnpainfull in doynge our duties, he was scourged, and whypped of hys owne wyll for vs. 1582 R. Parsons Def. Censure 35 With what modestie, or conscience can he, sitting in England, gyue sentence of all the monkes and friars in Christendome abroade, that they are vnlearned, vnpainfull, and vnholye? 3. Of a feeling, emotion, condition, etc.: marked or characterized by the absence of pain or distress; not accompanied by pain or distress. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > freedom from trouble, care, or sorrow > [adjective] > specifically of circumstances, events, or emotions swinklessOE secure1558 cloudlessa1596 unpainful1733 passionless1859 strainless1907 stressless1910 1733 A. Baxter Enq. Nature Human Soul iv. 142 The soul would always chuse to act by itself, retiring from the body while it were indisposed, that it might enjoy a separate and unpainful state of existence. 1752 J. Parsons Philos. Observ. Propagation Animals & Veg. v. 184 Creatures, whose Sensations are as delicate, and whose natural Right to an unpainful Enjoyment of Life is as great as that of Man. 1823 J. Wilson Trials Margaret Lyndsay xxv. 134 She lay awake great part of the night—and thought, with almost unpainful tears, of those whom she had survived. 1861 H. C. Jenkin Who breaks—Pays II. 261 The first unpainful feeling I have had for three quarters of a year. 1956 S. Gibbons Here be Dragons xxi. 304 It was delicious to feel unhappiness receding gradually to a distance: remote: unpainful. 2004 in B. Burton & A. Graham Never threaten to eat your Co-workers 249 You must believe me that this particular regret will not be unpainful. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2014; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < adj.?c1425 |
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