单词 | weariful |
释义 | wearifuladj. 1. a. That causes weariness; that tires one's endurance or patience. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > feeling of weariness or tedium > [adjective] > wearisome or tedious dreicha1300 alangec1330 joylessa1400 tedious1412 wearifulc1454 weary1465 laboriousa1475 tiresome?a1513 irksome1513 wearisome1530 woodena1566 irkful1570 flat1573 leaden1593 barren1600 soaked1600 unlively1608 dulla1616 irking1629 drearisome1633 drear1645 plumbous1651 fatigable1656 dreary1667 uncurious1685 unenlivened1692 blank1726 disinteresting1737 stupid1748 stagnant1749 trist?1756 vegetable1757 borish1766 uninteresting1769 unenlivening1774 oorie1787 wearying1796 subjectless1803 yawny1805 wearing1811 stuffy1813 sloomy1820 tediousome1823 arid1827 lacklustrous1834 boring1839 featureless1839 slow1840 sodden1853 ennuying1858 dusty1860 cabbagy1861 old1864 mouldy1876 yawnful1878 drab1880 dehydrated1884 interestless1886 jay1889 boresome1895 stodgy1895 stuffy1895 yawnsome1900 sludgy1901 draggy1922 blah1937 nowhere1940 drack1945 stupefactive1970 schleppy1978 wack1986 the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > [adjective] > causing weariness or exhaustion > esp. regarding endurance or patience wearifulc1454 laboriousa1475 wearing1811 c1454 R. Pecock Folewer to Donet 15 Maters..which ellis schulde haue be to hem ouyr hard and ouer weriful to be vndirstonde. 1482 Monk of Evesham 82 Yef y schulde..declare synglerly the peynys and tormentys of euery syngler cryme..hit wulde be ouer teduse and weriful to the redder therof. 1591 R. Turnbull Expos. Epist. St. Iames f. 51 That we..with inuincible fortitude and pacience, may finish our wearifull pilgrimage in his feare, religion and seruice. a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) Weariful, tiresome; giving exercise to patience. Ex. ‘I have had a weariful bout of it.’ 1826 J. Galt Last of Lairds i. 8 O that wearyfu' jaunt to Embro' to see the King! 1846 G. S. Faber Lett. Tractarian Secession Popery 194 So proceeds the Professor through ten weariful pages. 1849 C. Brontë Shirley I. vi. 113 This foreign style of darning..was done stitch by stitch so as exactly to imitate the fabric of the stocking itself; a wearifu' process. 1886 J. A. Symonds Catholic Reaction in Renaissance in Italy (1898) VII. xiii. 210 Visions of dreary wanderings through weariful saloons. 1912 W. S. Blunt Land War in Ireland ix. 339 Twenty weariful Irish miles. b. of a person. Scottish. ΚΠ a1700 Gaberlunzie-Man vii The weirifou' Gaberlunzie-man. 1882 R. L. Stevenson Familiar Stud. Men & Bks. (1888) 299 She was a religious hypochondriac, a very weariful woman. c. of the weather. Chiefly Scottish. ΚΠ 1872 J. Payne Songs Life & Death 224 Wearyful winter is gone at last. 1874 R. St. J. Tyrwhitt Our Sketching Club 223 Spite of gray winter and weariful weather. 1894 A. Reid Sangs Heatherland 48 The wearifu' snaw, O, the wearifu' snaw! 2. Full of weariness; utterly fatigued. Of a person: Languid or affecting languor. Of a look, sigh, smile: Exhibiting or expressing weariness. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > [adjective] wearyc825 asadc1306 ateyntc1325 attaintc1325 recrayed1340 methefula1350 for-wearya1375 matea1375 taintc1380 heavy1382 fortireda1400 methefula1400 afoundered?a1425 tewedc1440 travailedc1440 wearisomec1460 fatigate1471 defatigatec1487 tired1488 recreant1490 yolden?1507 fulyeit?a1513 traiked?a1513 tavert1535 wearied1538 fatigated1552 awearya1555 forwearied1562 overtired1567 spenta1568 done1575 awearied1577 stank1579 languishinga1586 bankrupt?1589 fordone1590 spent1591 overwearied1592 overworn1592 outworn1597 half-dead1601 back-broken1603 tiry1611 defatigated1612 dog-wearya1616 overweary1617 exhaust1621 worn-out1639 embossed1651 outspent1652 exhausted1667 beaten1681 bejaded1687 harassed1693 jaded1693 lassate1694 defeata1732 beat out1758 fagged1764 dog-tired1770 fessive1773 done-up1784 forjeskit1786 ramfeezled1786 done-over1789 fatigued1791 forfoughten1794 worn-up1812 dead1813 out-burnta1821 prostrate1820 dead beat1822 told out1822 bone-tireda1825 traiky1825 overfatigued1834 outwearied1837 done like (a) dinner1838 magged1839 used up1839 tuckered outc1840 drained1855 floored1857 weariful1862 wappered1868 bushed1870 bezzled1875 dead-beaten1875 down1885 tucked up1891 ready (or fit) to drop1892 buggered-up1893 ground-down1897 played1897 veal-bled1899 stove-up1901 trachled1910 ragged1912 beat up1914 done in1917 whacked1919 washy1922 pooped1928 shattered1930 punchy1932 shagged1932 shot1939 whipped1940 buggered1942 flaked (out)1942 fucked1949 sold-out1958 wiped1958 burnt out1959 wrung out1962 juiced1965 hanging1971 zonked1972 maxed1978 raddled1978 zoned1980 cream crackered1983 1862 M. B. Betham-Edwards John & I III. xiii. 220 He lay still for some time with a weariful smile upon his lips. 1880 G. MacDonald Bk. of Strife 25 And the thought-spirit, weariful and wan,..Sinks moveless. 1880 R. Jefferies Greene Ferne Farm 209 The wearyful women came homeward from the gleaning. 1885 J. Ingelow Sleep of Sigismund 8 His weird is on him to grope in the dark with endless Weariful feet for a goal that shifteth still. 1891 G. Meredith One of our Conquerors II. xiii. 301 Colney cast a weariful look backward. 1899 S. R. Crockett Kit Kennedy 9 Lilias sighed the long, weariful sigh of hope deferred. Derivatives ˈwearifully adv. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > [adverb] wearily1481 out of breath1565 faintingly1576 languishingly1579 tiredly1659 weariedly1681 pantingly1744 exhaustedly1835 droopingly1852 languorously1858 to a frazzle1865 leadenly1879 jadedly1885 wearifully1888 the mind > emotion > suffering > feeling of weariness or tedium > [adverb] wearisomely1834 wearifully1888 1888 W. Black In Far Lochaber xxiii The long night passed, slowly and wearifully. 1907 C. G. Harper Rural Nooks 14 The blurred lights of the streets and shops going weirdly and wearifully by. ˈwearifulness n. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > [noun] > quality of being that which causes wearifulness1838 costingness1901 the mind > emotion > suffering > feeling of weariness or tedium > [noun] > extreme sickness1779 wearifulness1838 1838 Lett. fr. Madras (1843) 226 I quite dread to hear the subject mentioned, for fear of a quarrel, besides the wearifulness. 1885 G. Meredith Diana of Crossways I. iv. 92 There was a strange interjection, as to the wearifulness of constantly wandering. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1926; most recently modified version published online September 2021). < adj.c1454 |
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