| 单词 | a-side | 
| 释义 | > as lemmasA-side   A-side  n. (the music recorded on) the more important side of a single (single n. 3p). Cf. B-side at B n. 4b(f). ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > recording or reproducing sound or visual material > sound recording and reproduction > a sound recording > 			[noun]		 > record or disc > side side1926 coupling1934 A-side1937 flip side1949 flip1960 B-side1962 1937    Down Beat Feb. 14/1  				The ‘A’ side is ‘Rockin' Chair’, which was originally coupled with ‘Barnacle Bill, the Sailor’. 1942    Billboard 28 Feb. 61  				The A side is a catchy melody. 1968    Guardian 5 Jan. 18/4  				The seven-man band arrived at the London recording studio to make the ‘A’ side of a new ‘single’. 1984    Sounds 1 Dec. 6/5  				The A-side features the inimitable talents of Jim Thirlwell on lead vocal. 2003    J. Dawson  & S. Propes 45 RPM xvii. 138  				The A-side is surf-rock's national anthem. —— a-side Phrases P1.   Prepositional phrases.  a.    by (also at) a person's side: (with reference to a person) next to or in close proximity to a person, and typically providing assistance, moral support, comfort, etc. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > nearness > near by			[phrase]		 > close to a person by a person's sidec1275 at the, one's elbow(s)1548 the world > space > relative position > quality of having sides or being a side > alongside			[phrase]		 > by a person's side by a person's sidec1275 c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 l. 12854  				Arður eode abute & his cnihtes bi his siden [c1300 Otho side]. c1300    Havelok 		(Laud)	 		(1868)	 371  				Til þat he kouþen..Speken and gangen, on horse riden, Knictes an sweynes bi here siden. a1450    Castle Perseverance 		(1969)	 l. 1085 (MED)  				I com to dwelle be þi syde. 1595    W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3  iii. iii. 16  				Sit by my side. 1655    R. Baillie Disswasive Vindic. 62  				In this unadvertency M. Marshall..has the good luck to be set at my side. 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  iv. 486  				To have thee by my side Henceforth an individual solace  dear.       View more context for this quotation 1769    T. Gray Ode at Installation Duke of Grafton 5  				With Freedom by my Side, and soft-ey'd Melancholy. 1785    W. Cowper Task  ii. 382  				Frequent in Park with lady at his side, Ambling and prattling scandal as he goes. 1848    E. Bulwer-Lytton Harold II.  viii. iv. 255  				Thou shalt stand by my side while I invoke the phantom. 1859    Ld. Tennyson Enid in  Idylls of King 46  				Not at my side! I charge you ride before. 1874    J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People viii. §3. 487  				Buckingham..stood defiantly at his master's side as he was denounced. 1928    V. Delmar Bad Girl  i. ii. 22  				A dashing, derbyed youth stood proudly at her side. 1988    Woman's Day 		(N.Y.)	 Jan. 68/3  				She is as tireless as her husband, working by his side. 2004    XXL Worldwide June 26/1  				I got a good woman by my side and I feel revitalized.  b.    by the side of.  (a)   In close proximity to; next to; beside. ΚΠ c1400						 (?c1380)						    Cleanness 		(1920)	 l. 1442 (MED)  				Þe jueles out of Jerusalem..Bi þe syde of þe sale were semely arayed. 1482    W. Caxton tr.  Higden's Prolicionycion  i. xxvii. f. xxxviiiv  				In the weste Occean acquytanicus, that is the see that is by the side of guyan. 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde  i. iii. f. 13v  				Saylinge..by the syde of Cuba..he espied..a large hauen. 1584    B. R. tr.  Herodotus Famous Hyst.  ii. f. 77v  				Fast by the side of thys city ranne a swift and violent riuer. 1638    A. Read Man. Anat. Body of Man 		(new ed.)	  iv. v. 488  				The one [sc. artery] passeth by the side of the outward part of tibia. 1725    D. Defoe New Voy. round World  i. 159  				Our Men..shot a Brace of Deer, as they were feeding by the Side of a swamp. 1824    S. E. Ferrier Inheritance I. xvii. 188  				Mr R. sat by the side of the expiring fire. 1873    A. H. Leonowens Romance of Harem xx. 165  				A magnificent new Buddhist temple is seen..close by the side of an ancient one. 1944    B. M. Bowen Strange Script. iv. 57  				She selects two of the largest [broken pieces of pottery]: one she places by the side of the well. 2004    Trail May 44/1  				This is no learned tome..—more of a compendium of brain-floss to store by the side of the loo.  (b)   In comparison with. ΚΠ 1779    E. Fay Let. 28 June in  Orig. Lett. from India 		(1817)	 44  				The Buchetta, an appenine mountain, by the side of which Mont Cenis would appear contemptible. 1832    R. Cattermole Beckett 205  				The..noble union of the meek and manly qualities..that characterised chivalry, and..displays it to so much advantage by the side of modern civilisation. 1909    Daily Graphic 26 July 10/1  				He..made a flight of twenty-five miles across country; but that..pales into insignificance by the side of the Channel flight. 2004    I. H. Birchall Sartre against Stalinism iv. 40  				Socialisme et liberté was tiny and insignificant by the side of the far more disciplined and well-organised PCF [sc. the French Communist Party] machine.  (c)   In coexistence with; at the same time as; alongside. ΚΠ 1796    G. Colman Iron Chest Pref. p. xiii  				Had I..look'd on the thing..by itself, why the thing is a good-natured thing; but I must be putting other circumstances by the side of it. 1814    J. Rodman tr.  Comm. Code France 84  				Gentlemen, The code of commerce rises by the side of the Code Napoleon. 1839    S. Laing Tour in Sweden 1838 i. 8  				The canoe exists by the side of the steam vessel, barbarism by the side of civilized appearances. 1879    Academy 27 Dec. 467  				[Wurtz] asserts that although antimony is usually regarded as a metal, it must, in a true chemical classification, find its place by the side of arsenic, phosphorus, and nitrogen. 1931    O. Jespersen in  S.P.E. Tract 		(Soc. for Pure Eng.)	 No. XXXVI. 524  				By the side of the simple tenses we have in English expanded tenses, e.g.: simple: he works, he worked, he has worked; expanded: he is working, he was working, he has been working. 1988    A. V. Subramanian Aesthetics of Wonder ii. 7  				A poet's mind remains today the least explored part of man's world, by the side of which the darkest Africa must be regarded as exhaustively explored and fully mapped. 2002    Glot Internat. 6 272/2  				The separation into pitch accents..and boundary tones..harks back to..juncture phonemes..which existed by the side of the pitch phonemes.  c.   Phrases with from and fro.  (a)    from (also fro) side to side.  (i)   From one lateral edge to another; across the entire width of something; right across. ΚΠ   tr.  Palladius De re Rustica 		(Duke Humfrey)	 		(1896)	  iv. l. 759 (MED)  				Their stallis..beth..With stonys paued wel from side to side. 1448    Will of Henry VI in  R. Willis  & J. W. Clark Archit. Hist. Univ. Cambr. 		(1886)	 I. 354  				The same Quere shal conteyne in brede from side to side within the respondes .xxxij. fete. 1556    R. Record Castle of Knowl. 18  				Euery right lyne that passeth from side to syde in a globe, and toucheth the centre, is aptely called a diameter. 1614    Orders & Bylawes Stretham in  C. L. Kingsford Two London Chrons. 		(1910)	 271  				Wee doe order and appoynt that..the now farmor..shall clense, rooke, haffe and scowre the same from side to side at the full bredth thereof. a1674    J. Milton To C. Skinner upon his Blindness in  Lett. State 		(1694)	 p. xlviii  				My noble task; Of which all Europe rings from side to side. 1736    J. Addison tr.  Petronius Wks. 285  				Within the Hut a smoaky Pole was slung, From Side to Side, 'cross which its Treasures hung. 1789    W. Wordsworth Evening Walk 165  				Some..O'erwalk the slender plank from side to side. 1832    Ld. Tennyson Lady of Shalott  iii, in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 15  				The mirror cracked from side to side. 1860    J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps  i. vii. 54  				I followed the veins several times from side to side. 1880    Brechin Advertiser 21 Sept. 3/2  				[We] ca'd the road frae side to side. 1914    H. B. Smith Sheep & Wool Industry Australasia vi. 33  				A cutter with three teeth running from side to side over a flat comb. 1977    Skateboard Special Sept. 5/1  				For a giant slalom the cones are laid out from side to side with widely varying distances between each one. 2007    L. M. Chiappe Glorified Dinosaurs i. 24/2  				The front surface of each vertebra is concave from side to side and convex from top to bottom.  (ii)   Alternately left and right from a central point. ΚΠ 1529    T. More Supplyc. Soulys  ii. f. xliii  				You walter peraduenture and tolter in syknes fro syde to syde. 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde  ii. iv. f. 68v  				Yet are they [sc. branches] tossed therewith, and swaye sumwhat from syde to syde. 1635    F. Quarles Emblemes  iii. xi. 166  				My Canvace torne, it flaps from side to side. c1645    W. Atkins Relation of Journey 		(1994)	 225  				Wee in the cabbin were tossed like balls from side to side with reciprocall and perpetuall knocks and rebounds. 1769    W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine 		(rev. ed.)	  				Rolling, the motion by which a ship rocks from side to side like a cradle. 1798    S. T. Coleridge Anc. Marinere  iii, in  W. Wordsworth  & S. T. Coleridge Lyrical Ballads 16  				She doth not tack from side to side—..Withouten wind, withouten tide She steddies with upright keel. 1850    String of Pearls 102  				The hackney coach swung about from side to side. 1888    F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk.  				Wapper-eyed, having quick-moving restless eyes—constantly rolling from side to side, as is seen in very nervous persons. 1907    Daily Chron. 1 Feb. 8/5  				Dr Bird was sitting in my chair, pivotting from side to side. 1959    D. A. Bannerman Birds Brit. Isles VIII. 217  				The bird..waggles its head from side to side. 2012    Mail & Guardian 		(Johannesburg)	 31 Aug. 6/1  				The Xhosa women's hips sway gently from side to side as they carry bundles of firewood or buckets of water on their heads.  (b)    from (also fro) one side to the other and variants.  (i)   From one lateral edge to another; across the entire width of something; right across. ΚΠ c1450    J. Capgrave Solace of Pilgrims 		(Bodl. 423)	 		(1911)	 24 (MED)  				Þe circumferens of euery sercle is thries as mech as is þe space fro o side to an othir. 1548    Hall's Vnion: Edward IV f. ccxxxiiiv  				The grate, which extended from the one syde of the bridge, euen directly to the other. 1581    W. Borough Discours Variation Cumpas vii. sig. D.ivv  				You must regard that you force it not from one side of the Horizon to an other, but that it rest equidistant in the same. 1635    T. Heywood Hierarchie Blessed Angells  vi. 376  				The bredth of the forehead from one side to the other. 1653    R. Austen Treat. Fruit-trees 45  				Having cast up the Borders..stretch a Line from one side to the other. 1720    D. Defoe Mem. Cavalier 294  				They [sc. the Enemy] were drawn up..in one Line extended from one Side of the Field to the other. 1764    T. H. Croker et al.  Compl. Dict. Arts & Sci. I  				Crab..This machine differs from a capstern..in having the bars to go entirely through it, and reach from one side of the deck to the other. a1822    P. B. Shelley Homer's Hymn to Mercury xxxv, in  Posthumous Poems 		(1824)	 306  				He walked..From one side to the other of the road. 1889    Technic 		(Univ. Mich. Engin. Soc.)	 5 45  				These car-lines are bolted to the plates and arch over from one side to the other. 1958    C. Achebe Things fall Apart vii. 47  				There were little holes from one side to the other in the upper levels of the wall. 2004    C. H. Gilliland Voy. to Thousand Cares 157  				‘Hogging’ involved cleaning the ship's bottom by looping a line under the bottom from one side to the other.  (ii)   Alternately left and right from a central point. ΚΠ ?1530    tr.  Compost of Ptholomeus xliv. sig. q.ivv  				The persones whiche haue theyr iyen mouynge faste from one syde to another, and haue theyr syghte sharpe and quycke sygnyfyeth fraude, & thefte, and is of lytell truste. 1584    T. Bedingfield tr.  C. Corte Art of Riding 101  				An angrie horsse..that dooth wryth his head from one side to the other. 1639    G. A. Pallas Armata  i. i. v. 17  				If thine adversary shakes the point of his Rapier from one side to another,..make a halfe thrust at him. 1672    H. Chamberlen tr.  F. Mauriceau Dis. Women with Child  ii. viii. 187  				It must also be observed that the Head be not drawn forth strait, but shaking it a little from one side to the other. 1743    tr.  L. Heister Gen. Syst. Surg. I.  iii. 153  				He quickly lays hold of the Patient's Head with both his Hands, and..gently moves it from one Side to the other. 1790    tr.  F. Le Vaillant Trav. Afr. II. 371  				I walked several times round it, my eyes wandering from one side to another, as if to discover my lost way. 1827    A. Jamieson Dict. Mech. Sci. I. 160/2  				A man walking has a libratory motion from one side to the other. 1877    W. F. Gill Life Poe iii. 49  				He..stood swaying from one side to the other. 1956    Amer. Bar Assoc. Jrnl. 42 343/1  				The pendulum of the clock swings from one side to the other. 2010    South Bend 		(Indiana)	 Tribune 		(Nexis)	 2 Mar.  a1  				His parents were in a fourth-floor apartment and felt the building sway from one side to the other.  (c)    from all sides: from every direction; from everywhere or everyone. ΚΠ 1565    A. Golding tr.  Caesar Martiall Exploytes in Gallia  iv. f. 101v  				The noble men resorting to Cesar from all sydes, submitted themselues..vnto hym. 1630    R. Norton tr.  W. Camden Hist. Princesse Elizabeth  i. 12  				Scarce had he spoken the word, when all from all sides cryed..God saue Queene Elizabeth. 1799    W. Godwin St. Leon III. xi. 256  				The..press of the crowd from all sides could alone have rendered this circumstance of any magnitude. 1894    Catholic World May 247  				From all sides come the sounds of merry-making. 1908    G. H. Lorimer Jack Spurlock vi. 107  				My troubles came at me from all sides. 1972    T. Williams Let. 26 Aug. in  Five O'Clock Angel 		(1991)	 271  				Billy is catching it from all sides—but remains cool. 2006    Guardian 30 Sept. (Guide Suppl.) 91/2  				A..council official and governor of the new Kerbside Recycling scheme..is facing hostility from all sides. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > the quality of being specific > specifically			[phrase]		 > in detail > in any point or particular > in other respects in other sidesc1390 c1390    W. Hilton Mixed Life 		(Vernon)	 in  C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers 		(1895)	 I. 291  				Or elles we are not disposed be clennes of lyuyng on oþur sydes forte receyue his grace. c1449    R. Pecock Repressor 		(1860)	 515 (MED)  				He be ful profitable in goostli maner in othere sides. ?a1475						 (a1396)						    W. Hilton Scale of Perfection 		(Harl. 6579)	  i. xxxiii. f. 20v (MED)  				If he kepe heere in meknes and charite in oþer sydes, he schal haue ful mikil mede in heuene. ΚΠ 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde  iii. v. f. 116  				They make a hole in the earth, settynge twelue trunkes of these rootes..in euery of the sayd beddes conteynynge three rootes of a syde. 1589    L. Ward in  R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations  iii. 653  				The head part [sc. of a fish] I kept, in whose nose is like a sword a bone of two foote long, with 23 prickes of a side, sharpe and strange. 1608    E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 160  				The Investigators of nature doe say, that they haue fifteene teeth of a side. ?a1640    J. Day  & H. Chettle Blind-beggar 		(1659)	  ii. sig. D3v  				Old Simsons son of Showdam Thorp, that wears his great gall gaskins o'the Swash-fashion, with 8 or 10 gold laces of a side. 1701    G. Farquhar Sir Harry Wildair  i. 5  				The Pinners are double ruffled with twelve pleats of a side. 1779    T. Forrest Voy. New Guinea 83  				Six banks of paddles, three banks of a side. a1817    J. Austen Persuasion 		(1818)	 III. iii. 43  				His face..all lines and wrinkles, nine grey hairs of a side .       View more context for this quotation  f.   Phrases with on and upon. Cf. onside adv. and adj.1  (a)   ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > sideways movement or a sideways movement > to the side or aside			[phrase]		 on sideOE asiden-hand1440 asidec1460 aside-hand1471 over score1513 the world > space > relative position > quality of having sides or being a side > alongside			[phrase]		 > on one side on sideOE aside half1398 at travers?a1400 a to-side1575 aside slips1577 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > changing direction of movement			[phrase]		 > aside from course on sideOE OE    Riddle 21 13  				Fealleþ on sidan þæt ic toþum tere. c1230						 (?a1200)						    Ancrene Riwle 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 		(1962)	 102 (MED)  				Þe ealleofte hwelp is ifed..wið semblanz & wið sines, as beoren on heh þet heaued..lokin o siden [c1390 Vernon a syden; L. ex laterre], bihalden on hokere, winche mid ehe. c1400						 (c1378)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Laud 581)	 		(1869)	 B.  xvii. l. 57 (MED)  				Feith had first siȝte of hym, ac he flegh on syde. a1450    York Plays 		(1885)	 199  				This stone..Remove and sette on syde. 1487						 (a1380)						    J. Barbour Bruce 		(St. John's Cambr.)	  vii. 111  				Thai saw on syde thre men cumand. 1489						 (a1380)						    J. Barbour Bruce 		(Adv.)	  vii. 60  				He ran on sid [1487 St. John's Cambr. on fut] alwayis him by. 1508    W. Dunbar Goldyn Targe 		(Chepman & Myllar)	 in  Poems 		(1998)	 I. 191  				On syde scho lukit wyth ane fremyt fare. 1548    Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. clxxxvij  				This battayl was sore foughten, for hope of life was set on side on euery parte. 1579    L. Tomson tr.  J. Calvin Serm. Epist. S. Paule to Timothie & Titus 350/2  				What shall it auaile vs to start on side from the rule which hee hath giuen vs? 1603    Thre Prestis of Peblis 		(Charteris)	 		(1920)	 28  				Weil saw he with this king micht na man byde Bot thay that wald al sadnes set on syde. 1684    tr.  A. O. Exquemelin Bucaniers Amer.  iii. ix. 112  				You may all expect great Spoyl and Riches from this Enterprize, and therefore let all Fear and Cowardize be set on side. 1782    J. Price Let. to E. Burke 65  				This last was the person whom the mayors court set on side as insufficient from debility of body and mind to conduct his own affairs. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > distance or farness > a long way off			[phrase]		 > to or at a distance apart on (also by, upon) rooma1325 on side halfc1430 c1430    N. Love Mirror Blessed Life 		(Brasenose e.9)	 		(1908)	 263 (MED)  				Oure lord Jesu came and aperede to hir..gretynge hir on side half in thise wordes. c1520    M. Nisbet New Test. in Scots 		(1905)	 III. Acts xxiii. 19  				The tribune tuke his hand, and yede with him on side halue [Purvey asidis half] and askit him [etc.].  (b)    on all sides,  on each side (also  †in each side),  on every side, and variants: in or from all directions, quarters, or parties concerned; all around; everywhere. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > here, there, etc. > 			[phrase]		 > everywhere > on all sides on all sidesc1275 on all handsc1540 on every handc1540 right and left1822 left and right1824 right, left, and centre1852 c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 312  				His ferde he sette on ælchere siden[c1300 Otho echere side]. c1300						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Otho)	 		(1963)	 l. 7007  				Þo were Peutes ouer-come and swiþe hii awey floȝe on euereche side. c1330						 (?c1300)						    Guy of Warwick 		(Auch.)	 l. 969  				On euerich a side, On him was leyd al þe pride. a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	 Prol. l. 392  				Tobroke is Cristes folde, Wherof the flock..Devoured is on every side.   Promptorium Parvulorum 		(Harl. 221)	 365  				On evyrysyde, undique, circumquaque. a1450    St. Edith 		(Faust.)	 		(1883)	 l. 2896  				Wepyng & sorwyng in yche a syde. a1513    H. Bradshaw Lyfe St. Werburge 		(1521)	  ii. xiv. sig. p.iiiiv  				Counnyng surgeans were sought vpon euery syde. ?1541    R. Copland Guy de Chauliac's Questyonary Cyrurgyens ii. sig. Lj  				A synew concaued on eche syde. 1617    F. Moryson Itinerary  i. 178  				A most pleasant valley, compassed on all sides with mountaines. 1681    J. Dryden Absalom & Achitophel 22  				On each side bowing popularly low. 1684    J. Browne Adenochoiradelogia  ii. iv. 47  				In the Womb this inequality of Nutriment is much amended by an equal heat, the Womb equally in each side embracing and cherishing the Body of the Embryo. 1711    J. Addison Spectator No. 110. ¶2  				The Ruins of the Abby are scattered up and down on every Side. 1759    S. Johnson Prince of Abissinia I. vii. 44  				The clouds broke on the surrounding mountains, and the torrents streamed into the plain on every side. 1831    W. Scott Count Robert viii, in  Tales of my Landlord 4th Ser. I. 249  				Thanks to Heaven were returned on all sides. 1856    R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits xii. 202  				On every side, Oxford is redolent of age and authority. 1898    J. L. Weston tr.  Sir Gawain & Green Knight 28  				He..came into a thick forest, wild and drear; on each side were high hills, and thick woods below them. 1928    Cent. Mag. Aug. 465/2  				Radio sets flood the market, beauty parlors spring up on every side. 1992    Economist 11 July 13/1  				On every side, it seems, the cry is for action, vision and a change of course. 2007    J. Carew Flowers of Forest xii. 82  				Now it seemed as if someone had declared a public holiday; there were smiles on all sides.  (c)   on the other side and variants: see other side n. 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > in relation to			[phrase]		 > in respect of or with regard to in wise ofc1290 by (also for) reason ofa1350 as to (the) regard ofc1392 in regard of or toc1392 upon the side ofa1393 with regard toc1392 in respect of?a1425 in this (also that) behalf1458 upon the feat of1483 for (the) respect of1489 as pertains to1526 in order to1526 with respect1556 ad idem1574 on this behalf1581 in or with reference to1593 quoad hoc1601 in point of1605 with intuition to (of)1626 in the mention of1638 in terms of1704 how and about1753 as regards1797 as concerns1816 w.r.t.1956 a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  iii. l. 1503  				Mi fader, upon loue [emended in ed. to loves] side Mi conscience I woll noght hyde.  (e)    on this side of and variants. Also with noun complement without of. In later use frequently with ellipsis of on.  (i)   Before (a specified date, time, event, etc.). ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > antecedence or being earlier > 			[adverb]		 > in advance or beforehand > in advance of > that time or a specific date there-toforna1400 on this side of1436 then-tofore1629 1436    in  Hist. MSS Comm.: Rep. MSS Var. Coll. 		(1907)	 IV. 198 in  Parl. Papers 1906 (Cd. 3218) LXIV. 1  				He that calleth hym Duc of Burgeyne disposyth hym..on this side Estre nyxt to lay assege to oure toun of Caleys. 1472–3    Rolls of Parl.: Edward IV 		(Electronic ed.)	 Parl. Oct. 1472 1st Roll §8. m. 36  				The seid .x.th part to be assessed..a this syde the morn of the fest of the Purification of Oure Lady. 1530–1    Act 22 Hen. VIII c. 12  				The seales aboue rehersed, shall bee made..on this syde the feast of the Natiuitie of sayncte John Baptist nexte commynge. 1557    in  Publ. Catholic Rec. Soc. 		(1950)	 45 17  				To provid a handbell at thissyd Alhallon. 1602    in  East Anglian 		(1863)	 1 341  				As to the glasing the p'son and inh'itants..are admonished to repaire the same on this side the first daie of Januarie next. 1672    T. Manley Clerks Guide 413  				If the estate of the premisses be not effectually conveyed him..on this side the last day of, &c. next coming, [etc.]. 1771    Hist. Sir William Harrington IV. ci. 253  				But all, I fear, won't be completed on this side Christmas. 1826    Lit. Souvenir 104  				Come not within sight of Luke Malmsey, and Malmsey Manor, on this side doomsday—think upon that now! 1874    T. Hardy Far from Madding Crowd II. xxvii. 335  				He's not at home, and won't be this side of eleven o'clock. 1902    Dun's Rev. 		(N.Y.)	 4 Oct. 4/1  				Many cannot promise deliveries this side December. 1915    Chatterbox 15 July 343/1  				There is hardly time to go anywhere this side of dinner-time. 2007    Times 		(Nexis)	 9 Oct. 44  				Any deal was unlikely to be completed this side of Christmas.  (ii)   Not fully attaining or amounting to (a specified state or condition); short of. †on this side nothing: almost entirely insignificant; (in quot. 1667) not completely annihilated (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > small of quantity, amount, or degree			[phrase]		 > less than on this side ofc1449 short of or from1560 c1449    R. Pecock Repressor 		(1860)	 78  				The other is openest in suerte of likelihode or of probabilite a this side suerte. 1621    B. Jonson Masque of Augures sig. A2  				A prettie man! and a prettie man is a little o' this side nothing. 1647    H. More Philos. Poems Pref. sig. B3  				[He] hath attempted bravely, but yet methinks on this side of Mathematicall evidence. 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  ii. 101  				If our substance be indeed Divine, And cannot cease to be, we are at worst On this side nothing .       View more context for this quotation 1672    J. V. Canes Τω Kαθολικω Stillingfleeton  ii. 16  				The whole treatise in Bellarmin seems to him now at this his distance, but as..an atome, a little on this side nothing; and therefore not worth speaking of. 1833    C. Lamb Ellistoniana in  Last Ess. Elia 		(1838)	 34  				My first introduction to E., which afterwards ripened into an acquaintance a little on this side of intimacy, was over a counter in the Leamington Spa Library. 1863    A. Campbell Pop. Lect. & Addr. viii. 197  				He lived and died on this side of the science of psychomancy. He did not consult the souls of the dead, but only the souls of the living. 1916    E. V. Lucas Vermilion Box 141  				He was, as the slang phrase has it, ‘oiled’; which is a condition of alcoholic comfort well on this side of inebriety. 1963    N. Arvin Longfellow 319  				Among the younger literary generation..the prevalent attitude was well this side of idolatry. 2004    Independent 		(Compact ed.)	 7 Apr. 33/1  				Those who earn a living from writing..try to stay on this side of outright tartiness.  (f)    on (the) one side and variants. (Cf. to one side at  Phrases 1h.)  (i)   In one or other direction leaning away from the vertical or horizontal. ΚΠ 1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 585/1  				I hylde, I leane on the one syde, as a bote or shyp or any other vessell. 1606    S. Daniel Queenes Arcadia  ii. i. sig. C3  				His armes incross'd, his head downe on one side. a1616    W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale 		(1623)	  iii. iii. 19  				To me comes a creature, Sometimes her head on one side, some  another.       View more context for this quotation 1660    F. Brooke tr.  V. Le Blanc World Surveyed 335  				The vessel reeling quite down on one side..was immediately filled with water. 1709    R. Steele Tatler No. 77. ⁋1  				Alexander the Great had a wry neck, which made it the fashion in his court to carry their heads on one side. 1766    Museum Rusticum 6 374  				As to the width of the gates,..the men..could..easily incline the roller on one side, and..wriggle it in. 1834    Republican Compiler 		(Gettysburg, Pa.)	 18 Nov. 4/4  				It rose at once half a mile in a perpendicular direction, the car leaning so much on one side, that his ballast and a bottle of wine and his hat were thrown out. 1868    C. J. Lever Bramleighs I. x. 137  				His lordship now placed his hat on his head, slightly on one side. 1949    W. Havighurst Signature of Time 9  				Jimmy with his rabbity white hair, his head cocked on one side, his toothy grin. 1984    W. Diehl Hooligans 		(1985)	 63  				The calliope music started, but the merry-go-round was destroyed, tilted on one side like a bloody beret. 2003    R. Liddle Too Beautiful for You 		(2004)	 188  				He just smiles at me slightly, his head on one side.  (ii)   Used to introduce a point of view, fact, case, etc., followed by another which contrasts with it, usually introduced by on the other (side); = on (the) one hand at hand n. Phrases 1i(e). Cf. on the other side at other side n. 1. ΚΠ a1538    T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset 		(1989)	 47  				We may..a the one syde to stretly juge..the hole mater..orels of the other syde [etc.]. 1668    W. Charleton Ephesian Matron 		(new ed.)	 3 in  Ephesian & Cimmerian Matrons  				Notwithstanding the importunities of her Parents and Friends on one side, and the necessities of Nature on the other, urging her to commiserate and relieve her self. 1725    D. Cotes tr.  L. E. Du Pin New Eccl. Hist. 17th Cent. II. 67  				As on the one side, Reason discovers it to be fit, that Man should be Immortal; so on the other side [etc.]. 1773    S. Neville Diary 3 Apr. 		(1950)	 ix. 200  				On one side the advantage..of increasing my knowledge in Medicine. 1818    S. T. Coleridge Coll. Lett. 		(1959)	 IV. 901  				For myself, I cannot agree wholly either with Sir S. Romilly on the one side, or with the Paleyians on the other. 1887    T. Fowler Princ. Morals  ii. v. 189  				The conflict is between a feeling of sociality..on the one side, and a man's self-respect..on the other. 1901    Times 30 Aug. 5/2  				She is as far, on the one side, from being cryptogrammatical as she is, on the other, from a bald insistence upon her points. 1996    W. A. Kort Take, Read 120  				Calvin opposed both the subjection of Bible reading to the church, on the one side, and the rejection of the ‘dead letter’ of texts for an immediate relation to God claimed by spiritualists, on the other.  (iii)   Out of the way; aside; spec. in a separate place, to be dealt with or considered later; out of account or consideration. Cf. to one side at  Phrases 1h(b). ΚΠ 1585    R. P. tr.  D. Ortúñez de Calahorra Second Pt. First Bk. Myrrour of Knighthood i. f. 3v  				The Emperour foreseeing that perillous blowe, with great lightnesse cleered himselfe from the furie thereof by leaping on the one side, so that the Boars Speare stroke in the grounde. 1699    tr.  de La Vauguion Compl. Body Chirurg. Operations xxiv. 205  				If the Membranes are not broken, the Artist must put a little on one side that part of the Burthen which presents, and break the Membranes with his Fingers. 1776    London Mag. Feb. 87/2  				The king..pushed it [sc. a petition] on one side. 1820    P. B. Shelley Œdipus Tyrannus  ii. 42  				Your Majesty In such a filthy business had better Stand on one side. 1880    Bp. Fraser in  Manch. Guardian 25 Nov.  				The Agnostic neither denied nor affirmed God. He simply put Him on one side. 1912    A. W. Hodson Trekking Great Thirst 39  				There were a few makatane amongst them, which we put carefully on one side for ourselves. 1960    Times 9 Dec. 14/5  				All the detailed arguments..could be put on one side. 2008    U. McGovern Lost Crafts 		(2009)	 131  				Carefully tip the buttermilk out of the jar, keeping it on one side if you wish to use it in another recipe.  (iv)    to take (a person) on one side and variants: to engage (a person) in a private conversation, esp. in order to warn or admonish him or her. Cf. to take (a person) to one side at  Phrases 1h(c). ΚΠ 1585    R. P. tr.  D. Ortúñez de Calahorra Second Pt. First Bk. Myrrour of Knighthood lviii. f. 229v  				Fidelia..went vnto the king, and taking him on the one side somwhat a part, she sayd: Soueraigne Lord, [etc.]. 1639    H. Peacham Merry Disc. Meum & Tuum 13  				Tuum..calls her on the one side, and tells her in private, that he..could not chuse but informe against the smalnesse of his Bread. 1791    Scots Mag. July 342/1  				M. de Damas went to the man who rode first, drew him on one side, and conversed with him in a very low voice. 1892    Catholic World Aug. 684  				‘At last, Dolores!’ he exclaimed. And leading me on one side he poured forth into my ear the tale I so longed to hear. 1918    Lake Park 		(Iowa)	 News 2 May  				‘What's the matter with you, Mazerouz?’ asked the deputy chief, taking him on one side. 2013    D. Pendleton Rebel Blast vii. 72  				Keep your voice down or else those goons will take you on one side and give you shit now.  (g)   With modifying adjective.  on the —— side of (a specified age): older, or younger, than (a specified age).See also right side n. 7b, on the wrong side of at wrong adj. 10e, on the sunny side of at sunny side n. and adj. Phrases 1, on the shady side of at shady adj. 2b. ΚΠ 1654    E. Gayton Pleasant Notes Don Quixot  i. i. 2  				I attribute this Costivenesse..to his yeares, being on the worse side of forty. 1664    T. Killigrew Parsons Wedding  v. ii, in  Comedies & Trag. 140  				She is smitten in years o'th wrong side of forty. 1738    J. Swift Compl. Coll. Genteel Conversat. 42  				She's on the wrong Side of Thirty, if she be a Day. 1777    P. Thicknesse Year's Journey France & Spain  ii. 228  				Get it [sc. information] from a French officer, or a priest, provided they are on the wrong side of forty... Avoid all acquaintance with either, on the right side of thirty. 1794    J. Collard Life James Molesworth Hobart I. 12  				A gentleman, who, though on the worst side of sixty, had..become enamoured of a beautiful young damsel of twenty years of age. 1807    Salmagundi 20 Mar. 108  				The younger being somewhat on the shady side of thirty. 1861    W. G. Clark in  F. Galton Vac. Tourists & Trav. 1860 24  				A priest on the podgy side of forty. 1891    E. Peacock Narcissa Brendon I. 8  				She was on the less enviable side of fifty. 1917    R. Cullum Triumph John Kars i. 10  				He was a young man, a shade on the better side of thirty-five. 1989    O. S. Card Prentice Alvin xv. 199  				Miss Larner seemed to be on the greying side of forty. 2012    N.Y. Times 		(National ed.)	 9 Mar.  c3/1  				Ms. Shepard and Mr. Wetherall,..it is safe to say, are both on the northern side of 50.  (h)   With modifying adjective.  on the —— side: with a tendency towards the specified quality, condition, or aspect (originally one of two opposing qualities, conditions, etc.). Now esp. in  to be on the —— side: to tend towards being ——; to be rather ——.Recorded earliest in to err on the —— side at err v. Additions. See also on the safe side at safe adj. Phrases 13, on the sure side at sure adj., adv., and int. Phrases 5c, right side n. 6. ΚΠ 1657    W. London Catal. Most Vendible Bks. Eng. Introd. sig. C4  				If I doe err, sure it's on the better side, for that it's a Rule given in Politicks, rather to speak well, then ill, of things or persons. 1719    J. Leng Nat. Obligations x. 317  				I cannot see how we could reasonably advise a wise man to act otherwise than on the safe side. 1803    G. Colman John Bull  i. i. 7  				Its prophecying on the sure side for to tell a thing when it has happened. 1811    J. Austen Sense & Sensibility III. iv. 78  				Determining to be on the safe side, he made his apology in form as soon as he could say  anything.       View more context for this quotation 1864    A. Trollope Can you forgive Her? I. xi. 90  				He is just a shade too good... But it's a fault on the right side. 1896    W. Park Game of Golf ii. 37  				The grip..should not be too thick, neither should it be too thin, but of the two it is better to be on the thin side. 1913    E. M. Forster Let. 1 Jan. in  Hill of Devi 		(1953)	 24  				Her dress was on the negligée side, but she had not been intending to receive. 1932    News Chron. 28 May 4/4  				It must be pointed out that prices are on the high side. 1974    A. Morice Killing with Kindness ii. 14  				He was a bit on the tired side, but..he's accustomed to long hours. 2004    Essentials Dec. 123 		(advt.)	  				To find out if the meat is cooked, insert a skewer—if the juices are red or pink it is on the rare side.  (i)   Originally U.S. to get (also be, keep, etc.) on the good side of a person: to gain a person's favour; (also) to be, remain, etc., in a person's favour; = to get (also stay, etc.) (on) the right side of someone at right side n. 7a. Similarly  to get (also be, etc.) on the wrong (also bad) side of a person: to fall or be out of favour with a person. ΚΠ 1843    ‘M. Tensas’ Odd Leaves from Louisiana ‘Swamp Doctor’ 71  				I had letters of introduction for the old chap; and I thought I'd deliver them early, and get on his good side. 1888    Lowell 		(Mass.)	 Sun 13 Oct. 4/5  				No boy who wants to keep on her good side should ever speak disrespectfully of the tariff. 1896    ‘M. Twain’ in  Harper's Mag. Aug. 345/1  				I reckon he's somebody they think they better be on the good side of. 1935    W. S. Maugham Don Fernando xi. 233  				He got on the wrong side of most of the people he had to do with and was forced to resign. 1971    B. Head Maru i. 92  				They were on his bad side and..life was not worth living if you were on the bad side of Maru. 1994    J. Welter Night of Avenging Blowfish 182  				‘Don't get on my bad side, Doyle.’ ‘It's too late to avoid that side.’ 1995    E. Toman Dancing in Limbo i. 16  				‘Little Plum, your Redskin Chum,’ a corner boy might quip as herself and the butcher passed on the street, but sotto voce, for you didn't get on the wrong side of Magee. 2003    G. Joseph Big Smoke x. 103  				He's..looking for a leg-up. He'll do anything to get on my good side.  (j)    on the side of the angels.  (i)   Supporting the theory of the divine creation of humankind as opposed to the theory of evolution.In later use with reference to quot. 1864. ΚΠ 1864    B. Disraeli Church Policy 26  				Is man an ape or an angel?.. I am on the side of the angels. 1979    ‘C. Aird’ Some die Eloquent vii. 99  				He had always in any case been on the side of the angels anyway. Apes were less appealing. 2002    M. Shermer In Darwin's Shadow ix. 233  				Mivart firmly placed himself ‘on the side of the angels’ when it came to the human soul and intellect, which he felt could only be accounted for by supernatural infusion.  (ii)   Supporting, or acting in accordance with, principles regarded as good or right (sometimes spec. at the risk of unpopularity); on the right side; morally upright, virtuous. ΘΚΠ society > morality > virtue > righteousness or rectitude > on the side of right			[phrase]		 on the side of the angels1894 1894    Musical Times 1 Mar. 169/2  				Even when his [sc. Von Bülow's] humour was most outrageous it was nine times out of ten on the side of the angels. 1926    Punch 22 Dec. 700/1  				Miss Marguerite Williams..is so firmly posted on the side of the angels that I can forgive her if she occasionally seems rather to force the note. 1956    G. H. Vallins Pattern of Eng. vii. 171  				‘Different from’ reminds the reader that whatever other men have done.., Fowler himself is on the side of the angels. 2001    F. Popcorn  & A. Hanft Dict. Future 134  				Some [corporations]..exaggerate their green credentials to mislead consumers into thinking they are on the side of the angels.  (k)   Originally U.S. on the side.  (i)   In addition to and served separately from the main part of a meal or course; as a side dish. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > serving food > 			[adverb]		 > served in specific way hot and hot1710 on the side1883 1883    Denver Republican 14 Dec. 5/5  				‘Gimme that snake rare—milk gravy on the side,’ was hallooed to the cook. 1916    Literary Digest 18 Mar. 766/3  				‘Beef stew and a cup of tea for me,’ the new arrival said. ‘Bossy in a bowl—boiled leaves on the side,’ sang the waiter. 1975    D. Lodge Changing Places ii. 95  				A club sandwich with french fries on the side. 1988    S. H. Loomis Great Amer. Seafood Cookbk. vi. 159  				Serve the remaining stuffing on the side. 2012    Church Times 23 Nov. (Books for Christmas Suppl.) p. xvi/2  				Beef meatballs with broad beans and lemon,..and potato latkes on the side.  (ii)   In addition to one's main job or business activity; as a supplementary source of income; as a sideline.Occasionally with implication of irregularity; cf.  Phrases 1f(k)(iii). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > 			[adverb]		 > as a subsidiary occupation on the side1891 society > trade and finance > management of money > income, revenue, or profit > getting or making money > 			[adverb]		 > as subsidiary source of income on the side1891 1891    Winnipeg Free Press 21 Feb.  				Then there is the Major, who sometime ago was willing to become a scullion in the governor's kitchen—a nice job on the side for a newspaper man. 1898    N.Y. Jrnl. 26 Aug. 9/3  				Samuel..started an ice cream parlor, with cigars, tobacco and delicatessen on the side. 1915    P. G. Wodehouse Something Fresh iv. 107  				‘I'm not asking you to be a valet and nothing else.’ ‘You would want me to do some cooking and plain sewing on the side, perhaps?’ 1977    Navy News Dec. 1/3  				We do not have information about how many people do jobs on the side, but I suspect that that practice is not confined to the Armed Forces. 2010    New Yorker 15 Mar. 24/3  				A thirty-year-old attorney who constructs puzzles on the side.  (iii)   In addition to a main activity, course of action, etc.; spec. in a clandestine or surreptitious way; secretly; illicitly. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > 			[adverb]		 softlyc1225 by stalea1240 privilya1250 slylyc1275 thieflyc1290 stealingly13.. by stealth1390 stalworthlya1400 theftfullyc1400 theftlyc1400 theftuouslyc1400 under veilc1425 thievishly?c1450 by theft1488 quietly1488 furtively1490 by surreption1526 hugger-muggera1529 in hugger-mugger1529 underhand1538 insidiously1545 creepingly1548 surreptiously1573 underboard1582 filchingly1583 sneakingly1598 underwater1600 slipperily1603 thief-likea1625 clandestinely1632 surreptitiously1643 thievously1658 clancularly1699 stownlins1786 stealthily1806 underhandedly1806 stolen-wise1813 on (upon, under, or by) the sly1818 round-the-corner1820 underhanded1823 stealthfully1828 slinkingly1830 slippingly1830 on the sneak?1863 sneakishly1867 behind backs1874 stalkingly1891 on the side1893 under the counter1926 underground1935 under the table1938 down and dirty1959 sneakily1966 1893    Congress. Rec. 18 Dec. 360/1  				He will have no pension attorney, for a silent partner, no relative doing business ‘on the side’ with that bureau. 1904    N.Y. Times 22 June 3  				To attend the big fair and receive the entertainment of St. Louis on the side. 1937    D. L. Sayers Zeal of thy House  ii. 44  				Pocketing commissions and that sort of thing? Doing little deals on the side? 1995    J. Cameron Vinnie got blown Away 108  				Anyone you know bought a new video? Course not, too dear. Everyone knew some geezer get one on the side. 2010    Observer 17 Jan. (Escape section) 7/4  				A holiday with a bit of volunteering on the side.  (iv)   With reference to a sexual partner or relationship: in addition to one's spouse or partner; outside of one's marriage or romantic relationship.bit on the side: see bit on the side n. b at bit n.2 and adj.2 Phrases 1h. ΚΠ 1926    A. H. Frederick You've never lived in Hollywood 20  				Now B.F. was well satisfied His wife should be thus occupied With the young man from France, For it gave him a chance To play round a bit on the side—Yes, more than a bit on the side. 1927    P. MacDonald Patrol xiii. 140  				Queer 'ow folks looks at this goin' on the side. I wouldn't do it at 'ome, o' course. 1968    R. L. Hudson Grace is not Blue-eyed Blond xi. 145  				What would some of you say if I told you that I, as a married man, have had three women on the side? 1977    Gay News 24 Mar. 14/4  				They may..gear their expectations to include sexual contacts on the side. 1993    J. Green It: Sex since Sixties 32  				We'd sneak into public lavatories—this was on the side, I was married—jack up our heroin and then screw up against the wall. 2013    Daily Tel. 27 Nov. 28/7  				The realisation your other half has been selfishly having some on the side is a shocking betrayal.  (l)    on the wrong side of history: at variance with the (likely) thought, practice, or judgement of the future; at odds with how commentators view (or are likely to view) an issue or action retrospectively. Similarly  on the (right) side of history: in line with (likely) thought, practice or judgement of the future; coincident with the way in which commentators view (or are likely to view) an issue or action retrospectively. ΚΠ 1912    Evening Democrat 		(Fort Madison, Iowa)	 17 Oct. 8/3  				Slanderers of Roosevelt and progressiveism will find themselves later on the wrong side of history. 1946    Amendm. Social Security Act: Hearings before Comm. Ways & Means 		(U.S. House of Representatives, 79th Congr., 2nd Sess.)	 1  vii. 822  				Perhaps the greatest satisfaction, as we look back upon our lives would be to know that we were on the right side and not on the wrong side of history. 1961    S. Monas in  tr.  M. Zoshchenko Scenes from Bathhouse 		(1962)	 p. ix  				When an employee..has her hand burned by the poker, the old peasant shows himself surprisingly on the side of history and suggests to the manager of the establishment a rationalization of his work. 2013    Globe & Mail 		(Toronto)	 		(Nexis)	 9 Apr.  a15  				When she denounced Nelson Mandela's liberation movement as a ‘typical terrorist organization’ and rejected calls for sanctions.., Margaret Thatcher found herself on the wrong side of history. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > keeping from knowledge > indirect action or process > 			[adverb]		 sidelya1425 through the sides of?1560 collaterally1610 by the waya1616 sidewise1654 secretly1656 slantinglya1677 ambagiously1678 circuitously1797 sideways1876 in-circle1883 ?1560    T. Norton Orations of Arsanes sig. C.iij  				He woundeth our common weale indirectly through the sides of our neyghbours. 1601    Bp. W. Barlow Def. Protestants Relig. iv. 164  				Bellarmine thinkes that master Caluin (whom this pamphleter woundeth through the Puritans sides) is wrongfully challenged in this point. 1684    J. Bunyan Holy Life in  Wks. 		(1855)	 II. 527  				There are many that..watch for an opportunity to speak against him, even through the sides of those that profess him. 1699    M. Henry Life P. Henry in  C. Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. 		(1818)	 VI. 268  				That the name of God..be not blasphemed, nor religion wounded through their sides. 1742    Politicks in Miniature 4  				Witness ye Gods! that through my Sides they strike at You. 1791    J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1768 I. 305  				About this time Dr. Kenrick attacked him, through my sides, in a pamphlet. 1801    J. Strutt Glig-gamena Angel-ðeod Introd. §33  				The other party, who..were not sparing in their severity, but wounded the ordinance itself through the sides of its defender. 1840    Rev. Managem. Affairs China 5  				They had inflicted many a wound upon us through the sides of the Company, which served as a breakwater between our wrath and their insolence.  h.    to one (also the, †a) side. Cf. on (the) one side at  Phrases 1f(f).  (a)   In one or other direction leaning away from the vertical or horizontal. Also in figurative contexts. ΚΠ 1559    P. Morwyng tr.  C. Gesner Treasure of Euonymus 316  				Inclining it now to one side, now to an other, gather all the drops together that cleue vnto the sides. ?1574    T. Hill Contempl. Myst. f. 66v  				Seneca nameth it an inclynation, in that the earth leaneth to one side, like a ship. 1601    P. Holland tr.  Pliny Hist. World I. 159  				He..shall live in this world uprightly and in even ballance, without enclining more to one side, than unto another. 1650    tr.  J. A. Comenius Janua Linguarum Reserata §538  				Beginning to totter and reel (swerve and lean to a side) it [sc. a house] must needs be shored up with some arch. 1701    Candidates Try'd 4  				Them who are against having the Constitution alter'd, and the Balance incline so much to one side. 1769    W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine  				Parliament-heel, the situation of a ship, when she is made to stoop a little to one side. 1782    Monro's Anat. Human Bones 		(new ed.)	 126  				From each side..a bony bridge is produced backwards, and to a side. 1874    W. B. Carpenter Princ. Mental Physiol. 		(1879)	 App. 715  				An immediate pleurosthotonos, or bending of the body to one side. 1894    S. R. Crockett Raiders 55  				May Mischief seemed to incline her ear, tipping it a little to the side to listen. 1955    A. Atkinson Exit Charlie 		(1957)	 iv. 136  				His black hat was very slightly tilted to one side. 2010    D. Hewson Blue Demon  ii. v. 145  				He adopted a pose—fingers tented, head to one side—that appeared very much that of an indignant academic.  (b)   Out of the way; aside; spec. in a separate place, to be dealt with or considered later; out of account or consideration. ΚΠ 1601    tr.  M. Martínez 9th Pt. Mirrour of Knight-hood xvi. sig. X4v  				For leaping a little to one side, the horse mist to runne vpon him, hee giuing a gallant blow. a1688    J. Bunyan Israel's Hope Encouraged in  Wks. 		(1855)	 I. 600  				It would be too great a step to a side to treat of all those mercies. 1750    G. Neale tr.  Mem. Royal Acad. Surg. Paris II. xxi. 541/1  				If it [sc. the stone] is small, we push it to one side with the fingers, while we extract it from the other. 1786    C. Varlo Essence Agric. xxxi. 143  				The boards being loose are quickly thrown to one side. 1828    D. M. Moir Life Mansie Wauch xxii. 333  				‘Keep to a side,’ cried Tommy Staytape, ‘for..Moosey'll maybe hae a pistol.’ 1887    Contemp. Rev. Jan. 64  				It must..be understood that I place his private character entirely to one side. 1963    Negro Digest Jan. 73/2  				Russell came out then and stood over to the side while the others crowded around to shake my hands. 1988    B. W. Aldiss Forgotten Life iv. 101  				George pushed his plate to one side and sipped his wine. 2004    D. Dalton Rough Guide Philippines 50/2  				A place where class differences are temporarily put to one side and everyone wears flip-flops and vest.  (c)    to take (a person) to one side and variants: to engage (a person) in a private conversation, esp. in order to warn or admonish him or her. Cf. to take (a person) on one side at  Phrases 1f(f)(iv). ΚΠ 1634    G. Baker tr.  A. Paré Apol. in  T. Johnson tr.  A. Paré Chirurg. Wks.  xxix. 1166  				The Prince.., drew me to one side, and askt me if the wound was mortall. 1668    F. Kirkman Eng. Rogue II. xxxvii. 356  				He took me to one side, and privately told me all his design. 1799    W. Wennington tr.  A. H. J. Lafontaine Man of Nature xlvii. 434  				Russell took him to one side. ‘Hear me, my dearest William!’ 1880    Testimony relating to Election 1st & 2nd Districts Ohio 154 in  U.S. Congress. Serial Set (46th Congr., 2nd Sess.: House of Representatives Misc. Doc. 23) II  				He was called to one side and informed that there was a lot of Kentucky fellows about the polls. 1917    Blacksmiths Jrnl. Mar. 26/2  				It was with a sad and sorryful heart that I led Van to one side and explained things. 2010    A. J. Mackinnon Well at World's End  i. 88  				Maggie took me to one side and gave me another of her stern sisterly talkings-to.  P2.   Noun phrases.   side of bone  n. either of the two series of baleen sheets in the mouth of a (baleen) whale. ΚΠ 1820    W. Scoresby Acct. Arctic Regions I. 456  				Each series, or ‘side of bone’, as the whalefishers term it, consists of upwards of 300 laminæ. 1866    J. E. Gray Catal. Seals & Whales Brit. Mus. 		(ed. 2)	 75  				The fins or whalebones of each series together are called a ‘side of bone’; the largest are in the middle, whence they gradually diminish away to nothing at each extremity. 1918    Chambers's Jrnl. 8 552/2  				One ‘side’ of bone is brought up at a time, and the heaving on board of this enormous mass evokes the keenest interest. 2001    H. Rossiter Lady Spy, Gentleman Explorer ii. 49  				The two sides of bone were removed from the mouth and hung in the rigging. 2005    Jrnl. Mammol. 86 343/1  				A rack or side of baleen consists of all the baleen laminae from either the right or left side of the mouth still embedded in the gum.]			 ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > 			[noun]		 > compartment of coal-mine side of work1820 panel1839 1820    Edinb. Encycl. 		(1830)	 XIV. 355/2  				As the sides of work were extended, a certain degree of pressure came upon the work. 1854    Mining Mag. 2 7  				From the thickness of the seam, and the height of the stalls in the sides of work, or chambers, in which this coal is wrought, fire-damp accumulates near the roof. 1867    W. W. Smyth Treat. Coal & Coal-mining 136  				From this latter the main workings, called sides of work, are opened in the form of a square or parallelogram. 1906    T. H. Cockin Elem. Class-bk. Pract. Coal-mining 		(ed. 2)	 xiv. 172  				Each side of work is enclosed by a barrier of coal 10 yards thick. The inside dimensions of a side of work are about 46 yards by 64 yards. 1921    F. H. Wilson Coal vii. 29  				The seam is cut out into sides of work.  P3.   Phrases with this, other, both, etc.Prepositional phrases with this, other, both, etc., are treated at  Phrases 1.  a.   colloquial.  (on) this (also the other, etc.) side of the water (also pond, puddle , etc.): in one of two countries or regions divided by a sea or ocean. Later esp.: (with reference to the Atlantic Ocean) North America as regarded by Western Europe, esp. Britain, and vice versa. Also elliptical, as  this side (see also other side n. 4b). ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > sea or ocean > specific seas > 			[adverb]		 > on one or other side of Atlantic (on) this (also the other, etc.) side of the water (also pond, puddle , etc.)1529 1529    in  J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. 		(1871)	 II. 20  				Ther is now ane fair to be hald on that vther syd of the walter, that is to say in Sanct Monanis. 1689    in  Harl. Misc. 		(1746)	 VIII. 603/1  				My sometime Friends and Allies on the other Side of the Herring-pond. 1720    Mrs. Bradshaw in  Countess of Suffolk Lett. 		(1824)	 I. 69  				You..do not give one the least account how things go on your side of the water. 1784    J. Read Let. 6 Aug. in  G. Washington Papers 		(1992)	 Confederation Ser. II. 25  				The Inclosed Copy of a Letter..will perhaps give you some..Curious information..on the subject of Pollitics on the other side of the Water. 1841    Kendall's Expositor 1 199/2  				As soon as he reached the other side of the pond, Uncle Sam compelled him to measure off and give him one-fifth or twenty per cent. of the balance. 1870    Centennial Celebration of Rutgers College 22  				Many people on this side, of conservative turn, thought a man could not preach the gospel properly unless he came with the imprimatur of the Classis of Amsterdam. 1914    Rotarian Dec. 10  				Many of the ‘stunts’ that appeal to an American will simply bring the movement into ridicule on this side. 1978    SLR Camera Aug. 21/1  				For many years the American company..have made fine enlarging frames (masking frames this side of the puddle). 1993    Irish Times 		(Nexis)	 10 June 13  				Its account of Irish women's experience in London has been ignored and dismissed on both sides of the water as anecdotal. 2010    Financial Times 5 June 14 		(headline)	  				US earnings good news for this side of the pond.  b.    the other side of the hill and variants.  (a)   The latter part of life; old or middle age. Cf. over the hill at hill n. 1e. ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > age > old age > 			[noun]		 eld971 old agec1330 agec1380 last agea1382 oldc1385 aldereldea1400 winterc1425 vilessec1430 annosityc1450 senectute1481 the black ox1546 golden years1559 years1561 great1587 afterlife1589 setting sun1597 antiquity1600 chair-daysa1616 the vale of yearsa1616 grandevity1623 green old age1634 eldship1647 senioritya1688 the other side of the hill1691 the decline of life1711 senectude1756 senility1791 senectitude1796 post-climacteric1826 Anno Domini1885 senium1911 golden age1946 1691    T. Shadwell Scowrers 17  				Tho she is declining, she is but a little on the other side of the Hill, and looks well and lusty. 1898    J. Paton Castlebraes iii. 68  				The tender and true affection that leads them on and on, down the other side of Life's Hill. 1957    C. Smith Case of Torches i. 5  				I had to go through a lot of badinage..about..how old I was getting and what it was like on the other side of the hill. 2005    Independent 17 Aug. (Features section) 34  				At 54 years old, Seymour shows that the other side of the hill need not be so bad.  (b)   Those aspects of a situation which are unknown at present; (Military) the enemy position or activities. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > want of knowledge, ignorance > that which is unknown > 			[noun]		 > instance of terra incognita1616 indeterminable1646 X1808 unknown1829 incognita1846 the other side of the hill1852 terra ignotaa1925 another country1952 society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > 			[noun]		 > enemy position or activities the other side of the hill1960 1852    Duke of Wellington in  Croker Papers 		(1884)	 III. xxviii. 275  				We amused ourselves by guessing what sort of a country we should find at the other side of the hills we drove up... When I expressed surprise at some extraordinary good guesses he [sc. Croker] had made, he said, ‘Why, I have spent all my life in trying to guess what was at the other side of the hill.’ 1888    Chambers's Jrnl. 3 Nov. 690/2  				When that trustee made the kindly mistake of becoming a trustee at all, could he have conjectured what was on ‘the other side of the hill?’ 1926    C. B. Waterlow in  H. Golding Wonder Bk. of Motors 12  				It is not only what is on the other side of the hill that matters, but everything along the road. 1960    G. Martelli Agent Extraordinary 15  				I..wish..to express my gratitude..to [the]..technical director of the flying bomb sites..for allowing me a glimpse of the ‘other side of the hill’. 1978    Times 30 Jan. 13/2  				Mr Peyton..began to argue for a revalued green pound... He..correctly read what was on the other side of the hill (that is, the Government itself would soon have to revalue). 1981    Ld. Chalfont in  B. Netanyāhû Internat. Terrorism 		(1989)	 81  				In any military operation, accurate intelligence—the ability to see what is ‘on the other side of the hill’—is of crucial importance. Without it commanders are blind. 2006    Contra Costa 		(Calif.)	 Times 		(Nexis)	 5 Apr.  				I've always been attracted by the unknown. I've always wanted to see what lies on the other side of that hill.  c.   With reference to a coin.  (a)    two sides of the same coin and variants: two things, processes, etc., which are closely related or interdependent even though they seem different; two different aspects of the same situation or phenomenon. ΚΠ 1879    Puck 		(N.Y.)	 13 Aug. 363/1  				Laughter and tears are but the reverse sides of the same coin. 1923    Amer. Hist. Rev. 28 455  				It was necessary to be knighted to be a chevalier, to be a noble. Nobility and knighthood were two sides of the same coin. 1966    Listener 19 May 713/1  				The social and psychological pressures are not different things but often just different sides of the same penny. 2005    Time Out N.Y. 25 Apr. 167/2  				Book of Love poignantly reminds us that tragedy and personal growth are two sides of the same coin. ΚΠ 1899    W. Raymond No Soul above Money  i. iii. 58  				He knew both sides of a penny, for all he looked so daft.  (c)    the other side of the coin (also penny, etc.): a thing or person which provides a contrast with another; esp. a contrasting aspect of a situation; an alternative account, point of view, etc.; cf. the reverse of the medal at medal n. 4.See also the other side of the shield at shield n. 1d. ΚΠ 1904    W. B. Yeats Let. 20 Jan. 		(1994)	 III. 528  				‘The Shadowy Waters’..[is] more a ritual than a human story... ‘Cuchullain’ or ‘The King's Threshold’ are the other side of the halfpenny. 1904    W. B. Yeats Let. Apr. 		(1994)	 III. 576  				I am reckless in mere speach that is not written. You are the other side of the penny for you are admirably careful in speach. 1920    Times Lit. Suppl. 24 June 398/4  				The other side of the coin is, of course, the doubt whether Linda could indeed be happy..to return to her Alps. 1975    M. Russell Murder by Mile ix. 92  				Angus Hamilton's..to address members and answer questions. He thought it might present an opportunity to put across the other side of the coin. 2005    Publican 27 June 20/2  				The other side of the coin is that the closeness of the relationship can also bring out the parties' differences.  P4.    to take (also †hold) sides,  to take a side, and variants: to support one person, group, cause, etc., against another in a conflict or debate. Frequently with with. Also  to take a person's side,  to take the side of: to support (a particular person, group, etc.) in a conflict or debate. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > party or faction > side with			[verb (transitive)]		 to take (a) part witha1470 to hold sides1490 to take the part ofc1500 partake1546 follow1548 side1585 party1587 part1669 the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > support or encouragement > support or encourage			[verb (transitive)]		 > take someone's side or side with favoura1375 to stand with ——1384 takec1400 to take (a) part witha1470 to hold sides1490 to take the part ofc1500 to stick with ——1523 partake1546 follow1548 to join issue1551 to make with ——1559 favourize1585 side1585 party1587 to take in1597 part1669 to fall in1709 to take for ——1770 to take up for1824 range1874 society > society and the community > social relations > party or faction > join or form a party or take sides			[verb (intransitive)]		 to stand in1555 to fall ina1568 partialize1592 side1609 party1656 to take (also hold) sides1700 (to be) on a person's, the other side of the fence1852 the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > support or encouragement > support or encourage			[verb (intransitive)]		 > take someone's part party1586 seconda1609 to take sides1719 (to be) on a person's, the other side of the fence1852 1490    W. Caxton tr.  Foure Sonnes of Aymon 		(1885)	 ix. 238  				Nevertheles he came, and helde syde wyth his broder. 1570    J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes 		(rev. ed.)	 I. 829/2  				Through the discord of the messengers and captaines, taking sides one against ye other, they made their enemies stronge & infeabled themselues. 1628    J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xli. sig. G11  				Hee loues not deeper mutualities, because he would not take sides. 1649    J. Ricraft Civill Warres 		(new ed.)	 v. 29  				Upon the eruption of the civil war, he took the side of the parliament, but afterward attached himself to the king. 1663    Crimes & Treasons A. Johnston 9  				Warreston was the only fit man resolved on to prosecute the Cabel, and to hold sides with the Remonstrants. 1700    J. Dryden Chaucer's Palamon & Arcite  iii, in  Fables 70  				The nicest Eye cou'd no Distinction make, Where lay the Advantage, or what Side to take. 1719    D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 290  				He would take my Side to the last Drop of his Blood. 1751    F. Coventry Hist. Pompey the Little  ii. xvi. 258  				The Beaux, and Belles, and Witlings..soon began to take Sides in the Dispute, 'till at length it became one universal Scene of Wrangle. 1823    J. Keble Serm. 		(1848)	 ii. 38  				Careful always to take the safe side in practice. 1877    C. H. Spurgeon Serm. XXIII. 398  				Weak-minded people who cannot take sides with a persecuted truth. 1888    J. W. Burgon Lives Twelve Good Men II. xi. 317  				Every resident of mark found himself in a measure compelled to take a side. 1942    National Geographic Mag. June 696/2  				Sandalwood drew many adventurous ship captains to the island; whites took sides with native chiefs in fierce internecine warfare. 1985    D. Lucie Hard Feelings  ii. iii, in  Progress & Hard Feelings 80/1  				You sat on the fence when you could have taken my side. 1997    R. Bennett Catastrophist 		(1999)	 177  				How can you be from Ireland and not take a side? 2013    N.Y. Rev. Bks. 7 Nov. 55/1  				I had to take sides about this deep issue of moral theory.  P5.   Scottish.  side for side: close together and facing or moving in the same direction; also figurative; = side by side adv. 1. Now rare. ΚΠ 1529    in  Hist. Berwickshire Naturalists' Club 		(1849)	 2 63 		(note)	  				Their plouche is drawen be foure beastis going syde for syde. 1637    S. Rutherford Lett. 		(1863)	 I. clxxxviii. 463  				That proud thing, myself, will not play, except it ride up side for side with Christ. 1663						 (?a1500)						    Pleasant Hist. Roswall & Lillian sig. A4v  				Side for side, hand for hand rode they. a1688    J. Wallace Descr. Orkney 		(1693)	 iv. 78  				In the year 1680 the Lightning enter'd a Gentlemans Cow-stall, where were twelve Cows standing side for side, as they used to be, and killed every other one. 1825    J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. III. 427/2  				To keep one's foot side for side with that of another. 1832    A. Cunningham Let. 27 Oct. in  W. Chambers Mem. R. Chambers 		(1872)	 x. 219  				Scottish tastes and feelings seemed to go side for side with my own. 1987    B. Holton tr.  S. Nai'an Men o the Mossflow ii, in  Sc. Corpus Texts & Speech  				Side for side the twa gaed doun on their knees.  P6.    to split (also break, burst, etc.) one's sides and variants: to be convulsed with laughter; to laugh heartily or uncontrollably. Also  to split a person's sides and variants: to cause a person to go into convulsions of laughter.In quot. 1598   perhaps with allusion to sense  4. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > types of laughter > laugh in specific manner			[verb (intransitive)]		 > laugh convulsively or immoderately chuckle1598 to split (also break, burst, etc.) one's sides1598 to die with, or of laughing1609 to hold one's sides1609 to laugh till (also until) one cries1611 split1688 to burst one's sides1712 shake1729 to shake one's sides1736 to laugh oneself sick (also silly)1773 roll1819 to laugh one's head off1871 to break up1895 to fall about1918 pee1946 1598    J. Marston Scourge of Villanie  iii. x. sig. H3  				O I am great with mirth, some midwifrie, Or I shall breake my sides at vanitie. 1615    R. Brathwait Strappado 108  				Laugh & spare not So't be in priuate, burst thy sides with laughter. 1660    J. Bellamy tr.  Origen Against Celsus  ii. xxxi. 150  				The pretended Jew goes on, and is ready to split his Sides with Laughing, at the Earth-quake. 1704    T. Brown Cal. Reform'd in  Duke of Buckingham et al.  Misc. Wks. 230  				You'd break a Man's sides with Laughing. 1705    C. Cibber Careless Husband  iii. 35  				Seeing us ready to split our sides in laughing at nothing, ha! ha! 1712    J. Arbuthnot John Bull Still in Senses iii. 13  				You would have burst your sides to hear him talk Politicks. 1821    W. Hazlitt Table-talk I. xvi. 379  				A fashionable Miss titters till she is ready to burst her sides at the uncouth shape of a bonnet. 1841    C. Dickens Old Curiosity Shop  ii. li. 83  				Tom Scott..bade fair to split his sides with laughing. 1922    J. Joyce Ulysses  ii. iv. [Calypso] 62  				Break your neck and we'll break our sides. 1925    Princeton Alumni Weekly 18 Feb. 450/1  				Unbelievable and original surprises are being prepared to delight your hearts and split your sides. 1953    J. M. Brewer Word on Brazos 66  				Dey gonna..crack dey sides laffin' when..de ghostes staa'ts to comin' in. 2014    Daily Mirror 		(Nexis)	 27 June 11  				The viewing millions..who simply want to split their sides at the sight of a man in drag falling over and showing his knickers.  P7.   Sport (chiefly British).  —— a-side (with preceding numeral, as  eleven-a-side,  fifteen-a-side, etc.).See also five-a-side adv., seven-a-side adv.  a.   As an adverb: with the specified number of players on each team. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > match or competition > 			[adjective]		 > types of maiden1598 well-run1601 unequal1654 well contested1722 returned1758 friendly1780 close-run1813 foursome1814 lightweight1823 tight1828 side1829 one-sided1839 scratch1851 international1859 all-comers1860 scrub1867 pointless1876 scoreless1885 replayed1886 peg-down1887 all-star1889 stiff1890 varsity1891 postseason1893 knock-out1896 best-of-(a specified odd number)1897 seeded1901 junior varsity1902 Simon Pure1905 pegged-down1908 JV1923 zero-sum1944 tie-breaking1970 1829    Sheffield Independent 24 Oct.  				To make a full match, eleven a-side, for any sum which may be proposed. 1918    G. M. Knocker Let. 15 Feb. in  Diary & Lett. World War I Fighter Pilot 		(2008)	 149  				This afternoon there are going to be inter-flight soccer games, 6-a-side, 10 minutes each way. 1932    Times Lit. Suppl. 30 June 484/2  				It is now over a century since it [sc. shinty] was played, seventy-five or so a-side. 2001    T. Melville Early Baseball & Rise of National League i. 12  				This club insisting on only playing ‘old style’ baseball, eleven-a-side, with only two innings per game.  b.   As an adjective: designating a match, type of sport, etc., played with the specified number of players on each team. Cf five-a-side adj. ΚΠ 1865    Bell's Life in London 2 Dec. 7/6  				Sixth Form V the School—This the great eleven a side match of the season came off on Nov 10. 1900    Sc. Sport 13 Apr. 6/1  				Melrose..will tomorrow resound with a Babel of tongues..eager and excited over the first of the Border seven-a-side tournaments. 1901    R. H. Lyttelton Out-door Games ii. 52  				The playground where I first learned the elements of eleven-a-side cricket was more like a hayfield than a cricket ground. 1973    J. M. White Garden Game 104  				We do sanction two-a-side encounters from time to time, or even three-a-side. 1992    Rugby World & Post Mar. 60/3  				The Australians have decided to concentrate on sevens with the same singlemindedness that won them the 15-a-side title last year.  c.   As a noun: a game or match with the specified number of players on each team.See also five-a-side n., seven-a-side n. ΚΠ 1883    Evening News 28 Apr. 1/6  				Barnes is behind Mr. G. P. Studd in all matches, but he did manage to occasionally make 20 in the eleven-a-sides. 1933    Scotsman 3 Apr. 14/5  				The Berwick High School Girls Six-a-Sides. 1968    M. MacPherson New Tenants i/ 8  				Sandy came puffing back exclaiming, ‘We could play four-a-sides.’ 1996    J. Murray Reiver Blues 80  				Frequently their family three-a-sides lasted ten hours or more. 2015    Herald 		(Glasgow)	 		(Nexis)	 29 Sept. 20  				There are little four-a-side kickabouts for tots, seven-a-sides for up to 11-year-olds, then full 11-a-sides for all the teenage years.  P8.   Originally and chiefly British.  to play for the side and variants: to play a sport in such a way as to help one's team win, without aiming at personal distinction; (in extended use) to put the interests of one's team or group above one's personal interests.Chiefly associated with British public schools. ΚΠ 1882    Marlburian 1 Mar. 30/2  				The School play though individually good was far too selfish; we must remember to play for our side not for ourselves. 1898    E. W. Howson  & G. T. Warner Harrow School xxii. 239  				That golden maxim, ‘Cricketers should play for their side, and not always be thinking about their averages, and individual performances.’ 1916    Times 9 June 11/3  				They played for the side; they gave up their own amusements for the good of the regiment. 1925    E. F. Norton in  E. F. Norton et al.  Fight for Everest: 1924 102  				A year, when, to a conspicuous degree, all played for the side. 1933    G. Heyer Why shoot Butler? vi. 86  				The Public School Spirit, and Playing for the Side, and all that wash. 2005    Hindustan Times 		(Nexis)	 21 Dec.  				The theme within the Indian team is to play for the side and not worry about individual performances.  P9.   on the wrong side of the blanket, on the right side of the blanket: see blanket n. and adj. Phrases 2. to know on which side one's bread is buttered, bread buttered on both sides: see bread n. Phrases 4. on the other side of the fence: see fence n. 5c. to laugh on the other side of one's face: see laugh v. Phrases 1g. to have the laugh on one's side: see laugh n. Phrases 2a. to let the side down: see to let down 2 at let v.1 Phrasal verbs. the other side of the shield: see shield n. 1d. short back and sides: see short adj., n., and adv. Compounds 6a. to play both sides of the street, to work both sides of the street: see street n. and adj. Phrases 9. sunny side up: see sunny side n. and adj.. a thorn in the side: see thorn n. 2. a walk on the wild side: see walk n.1 Phrases 6. to get out of bed on the wrong side: see wrong adj. 10g. < as lemmas | 
| 随便看 | 
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。