Forms: 13 fæder (1 -yr), feder, (3 feader), 26 fader, (3 Orm. faderr), (south. dial. 3 væder, veder, 34 vader), 34 fadre, 45 fadir(e, -ur(e, -yr, 4 faþer, 6 father. [Com. Teut. and Aryan: OE. fæder corresponds to OFris. feder, fader, OS. fadar, fader (LG., Du. vader, vaar), OHG. fater (MHG. and mod.G. vater), ON. faðer, -ir (Sw., Da. fader, far), Goth. fadar (found only Gal. iv. 6, the ordinary word being atta):OTeut. fader, ? fadēr:OAryan pətē·r (pəte·r-, pətr-). whence Skr. pitṛ, Gr. πατήρ, L. pater, OIr. athir.
The spelling in our quots. is uniformly with d until 16th c., exc. that faþer occurs sporadically in the Cotton and Göttingen MSS. of the Cursor Mundi (a. 1300); but the pronunciation (ð) may have been widely current in the 15th c. or even earlier; in 1415th c. the spelling with -der is very common in words like brother, feather, leather, though this spelling cannot in all cases be supposed to indicate that the writers pronounced the words with (d). The mod.Eng. -ther for OE. -der, -dor in father and mother is often wrongly said to be due to the analogy of brother, or to Scandinavian influence; it is really the result of a phonetic law common to the great majority of Eng. dialects: other examples in standard Eng. are gather, hither, together, weather. At present nearly all dialects pronounce father and mother with (ð) in standard Eng.; in various parts of the north of England and the north Lowlands (d), alveolar or dental, is sometimes heard. The representation of OE. æ, a by (ā) in this word is anomalous.
In OE. the genitive had the two forms fæder (cf. OS. fader, OHG. fater, ON. fǫður) and fæderes. The uninflected form survived in occasional use down to the 15th c.]
1. One by whom a child is or has been begotten, a male parent, the nearest male ancestor. Rarely applied to animals.
c. 825. Vesp. Psalter, xxvi[i]. 10. Forðon feder min & modur min forleorton mec.
c. 1000. Ælfric, Deut. xxiv. 16. Ne slea man fæderas for suna gylton.
c. 1200. Trin. Coll. Hom., 165. Ðe sune wussheð þe fader deað ar his dai cume.
c. 1290. S. Eng. Leg., I. 14/457. He liet maken him king of al is fader lond.
c. 1350. Will. Palerne, 241. A kowherde, sire is my kynde fader.
c. 1400. Rom. Rose, 4863. Whanne fader or moder arn in grave.
1473. Warkw., Chron., 10. Gaff it Herry Percy, whos fadere was slayne at Yorke felde.
1571. Lyndesay, MS. Collect. The litill birdis straikis thair fader in the face with thair wingis.
1597. Montgomerie, Answ. Ingliss Railar, 12. Brutus Quha slew his fader howping to succeid.
1670. G. H., Hist. Cardinals, II. II. 144. From him it was Ginetti learnd his Covetousness, and proved his Fathers own Son.
1753. Hanway, Trav. (1762), I. II. xiv. 62. Modern refinements, which in some countries have rendered it unpolite for a son to call his father by that endearing name, is little known among them.
1855. [John Swanson Jacobs], The Empire (Sydney), 25 April, 2/1. To be a man and not to bea father without authoritya husband and no protectoris far pleasanter to dream of than to experience.
Such is the condition of every slave throughout the United States.
1884. Tennyson, Becket, V. ii. His father gave him to my care.
b. fig. (Quots. 15972 and 1802 have given rise to proverbial phrases.)
1398. Trevisa, Barth. De P. R., XVII. i. (1495), 591. Aristotle sayth that the erthe is moder and the sonne fader of trees.
1577. B. Googe, Heresbachs Husb., II. (1586), 75 b. So shall the branch [when grafted] live, being both nourished by his olde Mother, and his newe Father.
1597. Shaks., 2 Hen. IV., I. i. 8.
Eury minute now | |
Should be the Father of some Stratagem. | |
Ibid., IV. v. 93. | |
Thy wish was Father (Harry) to that thought. |
1604. Jas. I., Counterbl. (Arb.), 102. The foure Complexions, (whose fathers are the foure Elements).
1802. Wordsw., Rainbow. The child is father of the man.
1859. Kingsley, Misc. (1860), I. 7. He is wonderfully careless as to authorities, and too often makes the wish father to the thoughtindeed to the fact.
c. (More explicitly spiritual father.) The teacher to whom a person owes his religious life.
1382. Wyclif, 1 Cor. iv. 15. If ȝe han ten thousandis of litle maistris in Crist Jhesu, but not manye fadris.
1769. H. Venn, in Life (1835), 152. A lady said to me, You, sir, are my spiritual father.
a. 1858. Bp. D. Wilson, in Bateman, Life (1860), II. 208. As our Father Scott used to say.
d. Proverbs.
1549. Latimer, 3rd Serm. bef. Edw. VI. (Arb.), 97. Happye is the chylde, whose father goeth to the Deuyll.
1616. Surfl. & Markh., Country Farme, 400. This is it which some vtter in a prouerbe: That he that will plant his father must cut off his head.
c. 1645. Howell, Lett. (1650), II. 118. He will be a wise child that knows his right father.
e. Colloquially extended to include a father-in-law, stepfather, or one who adopts another as his child (more fully adoptive father).
1592. Shaks., Rom. & Jul., IV. i. 2.
Par. My Father Capulet will haue it so; | |
And I am nothing slow, to slacke his haste. | |
Ibid. (1599), Much Ado, IV. i. 24. | |
Clau. Stand thee by Frier, father, by your leaue, | |
Will you with free and vnconstrained soule | |
Giue me this maid your daughter? |
1798. Colebrooke, trans. Digest Hindu Law (1801), III. 147. Sons inferior to these claim the family of their adoptive father.
f. Applied transf. to the relative or friend who gives away a bride.
1599. Shaks., Much Ado, V. iv. 15.
You must be father to your brothers daughter, | |
And giue her to young Claudio. |
1719. De Foe, Crusoe (1840), II. vii. 174. I was father at the altar and gave her away.
2. A male ancestor more remote than a parent, esp. the founder of a race or family, a forefather, progenitor. In pl. ancestors, forefathers. So in Scriptural phr. To be gathered, † to be put to or sleep with ones fathers: to be dead and buried. Also loosely for a man of old, a patriarch.
c. 950. Lindisfarne Gospels, Luke i. 55. Suæ ȝesprecen wæs to fadores usra.
c. 1000. Ags. Gosp., Matt. iii. 9. & ne cweþað betwux eow we habbað abraham us to fæder.
c. 1200. Trin. Coll. Hom., 226. Vre foremes faderes gult we abugeð alle.
1377. Langl., P. Pl., B. III. 126. Ȝowre fadre she felled þorw fals biheste.
1382. Wyclif, Judg. ii. 10. Al that generacioun is gedrid to her fadris. Ibid., 1 Kings i. 21. Whanne my lord kyng shal sleep with his faders.
c. 1400. Maundev. (1839), vi. 66. The Sarazines kepen full curyously and han the place in gret reuerence for the holy fadres, the patriarkes þat lyȝn þere.
a. 1440. Found. St. Barthol., 34. He decessid, and was put to his fadres.
1538. Starkey, England, I. i. 19. Theyr cyuyle ordynance and statutys, deuysyd by theyr old fatherys in euery secte.
1611. Bible, Acts xiii. 36. For David after he had served his own generation by the will of God, fell on sleepe, and was laide unto his fathers, and saw corruption.
1671. Milton, P. R., I. 351.
God, who fed | |
Our fathers here with Manna? |
1791. Cowper, Yardley Oak, 144.
One man alone, the father of us all, | |
Drew not his life from woman. |
1848. Macaulay, Hist. Eng., I. 20. Nor were the arts of peace neglected by our fathers during that stirring period.
3. One who institutes, originates, calls into being; a constructor, contriver, designer, framer, originator. Also one who gives the first conspicuous or influential example of (an immaterial thing). The Fathers (U.S.): the framers of the constitution.
Often in designations of Biblical origin. The Father of Lights, etc.: applied to God. The father of faith, of the faithful: Abraham. The father of lies (after John viii. 44): the Devil.
1362. Langl., P. Pl., A. I. 14. He is Fader of Fei.
1382. Wyclif, Jas. i. 17. The fadir of liȝtis.
1555. Eden, Decades, The Preface to the Reader (Arb.), 51. What shulde I here speake of Abraham the father of fayth whose promyses were great, and he cauled the frend of god.
1588. Marprel. Epist. (Arb.), 31. Iohn Cant. was the first father of this horrible error in our Church.
1669. J. Worlidge, Syst. Agric. (1681), 114. In Germany no young Farmer is permitted to Marry till he hath planted, and is a father of such a stated number of Wallnut Trees.
1700. Dryden, Fables, Pref. Wks. (Globe), 499. He [Chaucer] is the father of English poetry.
1748. Richardson, Clarissa, Wks. 1883, VI. 275. Hannibal was called the father of warlike stratagems.
1795. Hull Advertiser, 14 Nov., 3/3. Dr. Hooper the father of the canal.
1825. J. Neal, Brother Jonathan, II. 45. People, who are on the look outin such a placewith a silver bulleta leaf o the Bible, for waddingand a charge of prayer-powderpowder, over every 365 grains of which, the Lords prayer has been saidmay have a pop, if they like, at the Father of Lies, himself, with impunity.
1829. Scott, Jrnl. (1890), II. 290. They contain, besides, the very words which were spoken and sung by the fathers of the Reformation, sometimes in the wilderness, sometimes in fetters, sometimes at the stake.
1844. Sir D. Gooch, Diaries (1892), 54. I may I think, claim to be the father of express trains.
1867. Smyth, Sailors Word-bk., Father, the dockyard name given to the person who constructs a ship of the navy.
1875. Jowett, Plato (ed. 2), I. p. ix., Introduction. To represent Plato as the father of Idealism.
1888. Bryce, Amer. Commw., II. xli. 105. In the days of the Fathers.
b. pl. The Fathers (of the Church): the early Christian writers; usually applied to those of the first five centuries, but by some extended further. Apostolical Fathers: see APOSTOLICAL.
1340. Ayenb., 155. Ase zayþ þe boc of collacions of holy uaderes.
1549. (Mar.) Bk. Com. Prayer, Pref. If a manne woulde searche out by the auncient fathers.
1588. Shaks., Loves Labours Lost, IV. ii. 153. As a certaine Father saith.
a. 1641. Bp. Mountagu, Acts & Mon., iii. § 54 (1642), 200. To this discourse of Basil, other Fathers agree.
1710. Prideaux, Orig. Tithes, 141. Irenæus and Origen, and other Fathers.
177681. Gibbon, Decl. & F., xlvii., note. The Greek as well as the Latin fathers.
1839. Longf., Hyperion, IV. vii. I gazed with secret rapture on the vast folios of the Christian Fathers, from which, as from an arsenal, I was to draw the weapons of holy warfare.
1887. Lowell, Democr., Prose Wks. 1890, VI. 14. A Father of the Church said that property was theft many centuries before Proudhon was born.
4. One who exercises protecting care like that of a father; one who shows paternal kindness; one to whom filial reverence and obedience are due. (In OE. applied to a feudal superior.)
[?]. O. E. Chron., an. 924. Hine ȝeces þa to fæder & to hlaforde Scotta cyning.
1382. Wyclif, Job xxix. 16. Fader I was of pore men.
1460. Earl of Marche, in Ellis, Orig. Lett., I. 5. I. 9. Oure ryght noble lorde and ffadur.
1591. Shaks., 1 Hen. VI., III. i. 98.
So kinde a Father of the Common-weale, | |
To be disgraced by an Inke-horne Mate, | |
Wee and our Wiues and Children all will fight, | |
And haue our bodyes slaughtred by thy foes. |
1627. Massinger, Gt. Dk. Florence, I. ii.
For her love I will be a father to thee, | |
For thou art my adopted son. |
1787. H. Knox, Let., 19 March, Washingtons Writ., 1891, XI. 123, note. The glorious republican epithet, The Father of your Country.
1867. Freeman, Norm. Conq. (1877), I. iii. 143. It was meant to assert that Scots owed no duty to Rome but only to their Father and Lord at Winchester.
b. with reference to patronage of literature.
1513. Douglas, Æneis, I. Prol. 85. Fader of bukis, protectour to science.
18379. Hallam, Hist. Lit., I. V. I. § 17. 339. Francis I. has obtained a glorious title, the Father of French literature.
c. Applied to a religious teacher or counsellor (cf. 6).
1393. Langl., P. Pl., C. I. 120. ȝe sholde be here fadres, and techen hem betere.
c. 1465. Eng. Chron., 28, Hen. VI. (Camden, 1856), 64. There thay slow him horribly, thair fader and thair bisshoppe.
1655. Fuller, The Church-History of Britain, IX. vii. § 13. He was commonly called Father Gilpin, and well deserved it, for his paternall affections to all.
1757. in Sidney, Life of S. Walker (1838), 281. Dr [dear] Father in the Lord.
1828. Grimshawe, Mem. of L. Richmond (1829), 132. He was regarded by them [the communicants] as a father.
1833. in Sidney, Life of R. Hill (1834), 408. The minister who read the service, substituted the word father for that of brother.
5. a. Applied to God, expressing His relation to Jesus, to mankind in general (considered either as His offspring, as the objects of His loving care, or as owing Him obedience and reverence), or to Christians (as His children by regeneration or adoption). Also applied to heathen gods.
c. 825. Vesp. Psalter, lxxxviii[i]. 27. He ȝeceð mec feder min ðu earð god min.
c. 1000. Ags. Gosp., Matt. xxiii. 9. An ys eower fædyr se þe on heofonum ys.
c. 1200. Vices & Virtues (1888), 25. And [he] steih in to heuene, and sitt on his fader swiðre.
a. 1225. Ancr. R., 10. Þe is also federleas þet haneð þurh his sunne vorlore þene Veder of heouene.
c. 1386. Chaucer, Pars. T., ¶57. He haþ agilte his fader celestial.
147085. Malory, Arthur, XVII. xv. Ioye and honour be to the fader of heuen!
1533. Gau, Richt Vay, To Rdr. (1888), 3. Grace marcie and pece of god our fader.
1562. Winȝet, Last Blast, Wks. 1888, I. 41. The lauchfull vocatioun of His Heuinlie Fader.
1775. J. Harris, Philos. Arrangem., Wks. (1841), 322. To all these relations must be added that chief, though mentioned last, that of the whole universe, and every being in it, to the first, supreme, and intelligent Cause, through which relation they are called his offspring, and he their Father.
1821. Shelley, Prometh. Unb., I. 354.
To thee unwilling, most unwillingly | |
I come, by the great Fathers will driven down, | |
To execute a doom of new revenge. |
1843. Macaulay, Lays Anc. Rome, Horatius, lix.
O Tiber! Father Tiber! | |
To whom the Romans pray. |
1865. Tennyson, En. Ard., 785.
Uphold me, Father, in my loneliness | |
A little longer! |
1871. Morley, Voltaire (1886), 2. Calvin, again, like some stern and austere step-son of the Christian God, jealous of the divine benignity and abused open-handedness of his fathers house.
† b. Applied to Christ. Obs. rare.
147085. Malory, Arthur, XVII. xiv. Fayr fader ihesu Cryste I thanke the.
[Hence 1859. Tennyson, Guinevere, 558. Our fair father Christ.]
c. Theol. (God) the Father: the First Person of the Trinity.
c. 1000. Ags. Gosp., John xiv. 26. Se halȝe frofre gast þe se fæder sent on minum naman eow lærð ealle þing.
c. 1175. Lamb. Hom., 53. Þe feder and þe sune and þe halie gast iscilde us þer wið.
a. 1300. E. E. Psalter, i. Gloria.
Blisse to þe Fadre and to be Sone, | |
And to þe Hali Gaste. |
c. 1450. Myrc, 459. Leue on fader and sone & holy gost.
1548. trans. Luthers Chiefe Articles Chr. Faythe, A vj b. The Holy Goost from the Father and the Sonne procedynge.
1737. Pope, Hor. Epist., II. i. 102.
In Quibbles, Angel and Archangel join, | |
And God the Father turns a School-Divine. |
1851. Neale, Mediæv. Hymns, 127.
Honour, laud, and praise addressing | |
To the Father and the Son. |
6. Ecclesiastical uses.
a. The title given to a confessor or spiritual director. Also explicitly spiritual and (arch.) ghostly father (but the former, in Eng., has more usually the sense 1 c).
a. 1300. Cursor M., 27857 (Cott.).
O scrift þou do þi faders rede, | |
Sua þat þi saul mai ai be quite. | |
Ibid., 28076 (Cott.). | |
Til ouer lauerd crist and þe, | |
Mi gastli fader, yeild i me. |
1393. Gower, Conf., I. 104. Min holy fader, so I will.
1526. Pilgr. Perf. (W. de W., 1531), 9 b. Takynge penaunce of our goostly father for our transgressyon & synne.
1677. Lady Chaworth, in Hist. MSS. Comm., 12th Rep. App. v. 43. The D[uchess] of Portsmouth has promised it to her ghostly father.
1805. Scott, Last Minstr., II. vi.
Penance, father, will I none; | |
Prayer know I hardly one. |
b. A priest belonging to a religious order or congregation. Also the title given to the superior of a monastic house in relation to those subject to his rule.
1571. Hanmer, Chron. Irel. (1633), 48. He came to Poitiers, and became father of the Monkes of Saint Hilarie.
1603. Shaks., Meas. for M., III. ii. 11. Blesse you good Father Frier.
1711. Addison, Spect., No. 164, 7 Sept., ¶ 3. A Father of a Convent who was very much renowned for his piety and exemplary life.
1739. Gray, Jrnl. in France, Wks. 1884, I. 244. It [the Chartreuse] contains about 100 Fathers, and Freres together, & 200 Servants.
17567. trans. Keyslers Trav. (1760), III. 278. S. Maria di Galiera is a beautiful church, and belongs to the fathers of the oratory.
1848. Macaulay, Hist. Eng., II. 99. The skill and care with which those fathers [Jesuits] had conducted the education of youth.
c. Applied to bishops. Right Reverend, Most Reverend Father in God: the formal designation respectively of a bishop and an archbishop.
1508. Fishers Seuen Penit. Ps. This treatyse was compyled by the ryght reuerente fader in god Iohan Fyssher bysshop of Rochester.
1521. (title) The sermon of Iohan the bysshop of Rochester made by the assignement of the moost reuerend father in god the lord Thomas Cardinall of Yorke.
1594. Shaks., Rich. III., III. vii. 61.
He is within with two right reuerend Fathers, | |
Diuinely bent to Meditation. |
168[?]. S. Hollingworth, in MS. Bodl. Rawl. Lett. LIX. fol. 190. To the Right Reuerant father in God His Grac Willam Lord Arch Bishshop of Canterbery.
1848. Macaulay, Hist. Eng., II. 354. He had yielded to the intreaties of the fathers of the Church.
1869. Freeman, Norm. Conq. (1876), III. xii. 89. The Pope and the assembled Fathers.
Mod. The most Reverend Father in God (William), by Divine Providence Lord Archbishop of Canterbury.
d. The Holy Father: the Pope.
c. 1400. Maundev. (1839), xxxi. 314. I cam to Rome and schewed my lif to oure holy fadir the Pope.
a. 1562. G. Cavendish, Life Wolsey, App. (1827), 519. They by force imprisoned our holy Father the Pope.
e. As a prefix to the name of a priest. Also abbreviated F., Fr.
Formerly, as still in Continental use, restricted to the regular clergy (see b). In the present century this has become the customary English mode of designating a Roman Catholic priest, even among those not of his own communion: but some secular priests still refuse the title as incorrect, preferring to be addressed as The Rev. A. B. The abbreviated forms are seldom used exc. by Roman Catholics.
As the prefix Father was in the 16th c. used only with the names of members of religious orders, its use was of course not continued in the reformed Church of England. Of late years the title has been applied, among a section of the High Church party, to Anglican priests, and some prominent members of that section are very commonly designated by it.
1529. More, Dyaloge, Wks. 140. The good Scottish freer father Donold.
1719. De Foe, Crusoe (1840), II. xiii. 265. Father Simon was courteous.
1741. Challoner, Missionary Priests. The same year were banished Father William Weston, S.J., Father John Roberts, O.S.B., Mr. Antony Wright and Mr. James West, priests.
1890. Dublin Rev., XXIV. 236. Our readers do not need to be told who Father Faber was.
7. At Cambridge: see quots.
1574. M. Stokys, in Peacock, Stat. Cambridge, App. A. (1841), p. vi. The Father shall enter hys commendacions of hys chyldren.
1772. Jebb, Remarks, 20. The students enter preceded by a Master of Arts who on this occasion is called the Father of the College to which he belongs.
1803. Gradus ad Cantabrigiam. Father, one of the Fellows of a College who attends all the examinations for Bachelors Degree, to see that justice is done to the men of his own College.
1884. Dickens, Dict. Cambridge, 34. Then the Senior Wrangler is presented to the Vice Chancellor by his Father (or Prælector) and receives his degree on his knees.
8. A respectful title given to an old and venerable man, and (with personification) to a river.
1559. W. Cunningham, Cosmogr. Glasse, A iv b. How often doth father Moses in his .V. bookes, make mention of Babilon.
1607. Shaks., Cor., V. i. 3. He calld me Father.
1704. Pope, Windsor Forest, 197.
In vain on Father Thames she calls for Aid, | |
Nor could Diana help her injurd Maid. |
1742. Gray, Eton Coll., 21.
Say, Father Thames | |
Who foremost now delight to cleave, | |
With pliant arm thy glassy wave? |
1815. Southey, Old Mans Comforts, 1.
You are old, Father William, the young man cried; | |
The few locks which are left you are gray. |
9. The oldest member of a society, etc. (Chiefly, with reference to duration of membership; occas. with reference to age.) Father of the City, the senior alderman of the City of London.
1705. Hearne, Collect., 13 Sept. Sr Robert Clayton Alderman, the Father of yt City.
1837. Apperley, The Road (1851), 61. Mr. Warde the father of the field, may be called the father of the road also.
1855. Dickens, Dorrit, vi. Youll be the Father of the Marshalsea.
1880. Athenæum, 18 Dec., 820/1. Sir Edward Sabine, now in his ninety-second year, is the father of the Society.
1895. Daily Tel., 8 July, 7/3. The Right Hon. C. P. Villiers, M.P., Father of the House of Commons, was robbed of his watch on Thursday.
b. Father of the Chapel: see CHAPEL 10.
1683. Moxon, Printing, xxv. 356. The Oldest Freeman is Father of the Chappel.
1888. in Jacobi, Printers Vocab.
c. Hence, The presiding member, or president; also, The leading individual of a number.
1600. J. Pory, trans. Leos Africa, I. 13. They call Abagni the father of rivers.
1704. Pope, Windsor Forest, 219.
Thou too, great Father of the British Floods! | |
With joyfull Pride surveyst our lofty Woods. |
1759. Johnson, Rasselas, i. 1. The mighty emperour, in whose dominions the Father of Waters begins his course.
1771. Smollett, Humph. Cl. (1846), 251. I will take your place and think myself happy to be hailed Father of the Feast.
10. pl. (rarely sing.) The leading men or elders of a city or an assembly.
1590. T. Fenne, Frutes, 57. Their was a graue Father of Carthage who boldlie stood foorth.
1697. Dryden, Virg. Æneid, I. 9. From whence the Race of Alban Fathers come.
177681. Gibbon, Decl. & F., xlvii. ¶ 13. The fathers, and even the guards, of the council were awed by this martial array. Ibid., II. 93. A council of senators, emphatically styled the Fathers of the City.
1828. Scott, F. M. Perth, vii. They were, indeed, the fathers of the city; and there were bailies and deacons in the honoured number.
1837. Hawthorne, Twice Told T. (1851), II. ii. 34. The Selectmen of Boston, plain, patriarchal fathers of the people, excellent representatives of the old puritanical founders, whose sombre strength had stamped so deep an impress upon the New England character.
b. esp. The senators of ancient Rome. Sometimes Conscript Fathers, see CONSCRIPT a. 1. Also used for: The Patricians.
1533. Bellenden, Livy, II. (1822), 158. The samin yere deceissit Meninius Agrippa, quhilk wes lufit baith with the Faderis and small pepill.
1588. Shaks., Tit. A., III. iii. 1. Heare me graue fathers.
1741. C. Middleton, Cicero, I. V. 382. Metellus declared, with much seeming candor, that though Cicero and he had been enemies, on account of their different sentiments in politics, yet he would give up his resentments to the authority of the Fathers, and the interests of the Republic.
1843. Macaulay, Lays, The Battle of the Lake Regillus, viii.
The Fathers of the City | |
Are met in high debate. | |
Ibid., Horatius, xxxiii. | |
The Tribunes beard the high, | |
And the Fathers grind the low. |
11. attrib. and Comb. a. appositive (sense 1), as father-bird, -dog, -fool, -widower; (sense 1 b) as father-cause, -fount, -grape, -stock, -tree; (sense 5) as Father-God; (sense 6) as father-abbot, -confessor, -director, -jesuit, -preacher, -saint; (sense 9) as father-poet, -ruffian; b. attrib., as father-strength; c. objective, as father-slayer; also father-sick adj.
1797. Mrs. Radcliffe, Italian, xi. The ceremony began with the exhortation of the *Father-Abbot.
1795. Cowper, Pairing Time, 56.
Soon every *father bird and mother | |
Grew quarrelsome, and peckd each other. |
1646. Sir T. Browne, Pseud. Ep., I. i. 1. The first and *father cause of Common Error.
17567. trans. Keyslers Trav. (1760), I. 295. The admonitions of his *father-confessor.
1797. Mrs. Radcliffe, Italian, x. He who appeared to be the *Father-director of the pilgrimage.
1862. H. Marryat, Year in Sweden, I. 459. One specimen preserved was littered by a red bitch, who with the *father-dog was kept tame in the neighbourhood of Stockholm.
1864. Tennyson, Aylmers F., 390. One of these old *father-fools.
1884. Schiller, in J. Hall, A Chr. Home, iii. 62.
Love, only love, can guide the creature | |
Up to the *Father-fount of Nature: | |
What were the soul did love forsake her? | |
Love guides the mortal to the Maker. |
1869. W. P. Mackay, Grace & Truth (1875), 213. We [Christians] have been made sons of such a *Father-God, in that blessed, holy, separated walk, linked in eternal union with His own beloved Son: shall we not walk like sons?
1842. Tennyson, Will Waterproofs Lyrical Monologue, 7.
But such [port] whose *father-grape grew fat | |
On Lusitanian summers. |
1630. Wadsworth, Sp. Pilgr., iii. 14. Obedience the Students are bound to bestow vpon *Father Iesuites, & Lay Brothers.
1711. Shaftesb., Charac. (1737), I. 243. Before the Age of Homer; or till such time as this *Father-Poet came into Repute, who deposd that spurious Race, and gave rise to a legitimate and genuine Kind.
1691. trans. Emiliannes Frauds Romish Monkes, 277. The one half of the Alms that are gathered in the Church, as well as at the Church-Door, during the Sermon, belongs to the *Father-Preacher.
1814. Scott, Ld. of Isles, III. xxix. The *Father-ruffian of the band.
1842. Sir A. de Vere, A Song of Faith, 108.
Hear holy lessons from the *Father-Saints; | |
Submit our thoughts to heavenly influences. |
1748. Richardson, Clarissa, III. lix. 281. So *father-sick! so family-fond!
1483. Cath. Angl., 120. A *Fader slaer, patricida.
1598. Sylvester, Du Bartas, II. ii. III., The Colonies, 526.
From fruitfull loyns of one old *Father-stock, | |
So many branches of man-kinde to flock. |
1871. B. Taylor, Faust (1875), II. iii. 206.
And thus the child in that bright season gaineth | |
The *father-strength, as in a dream: | |
We wonder; yet the question still remaineth, | |
If they are men, when Gods they seem. |
1605. Sylvester, Da Bartas, II. iii. I., Vocation, 139.
Fruits that (like Load-stones) have a vertue given | |
(Through faith) to draw their *father-tree to heavn. |
1845. Mrs. Norton, The Child of the Islands (1846), 132.
The *Father-Widower, on his Christmas Eve, | |
Strokes down his youngest childs long silken hair. |
12. Special combinations: father-better a. Sc., better than ones father [cf. ON. fǫður-betringr sb.]; † father-breeder = father-forger; father-dust, the fructifying powder in the anther of flowers; = POLLEN; father-forger, one who counterfeits writings of the Fathers; father-general, the head or chief of the Society of Jesus; † father-queller, a parricide; father-waur a. Sc., worse than ones father (Jam.). Cf. father-better, and ON. fǫður-verringr sb. Also in syntactical combinations of the uninflected genitive, father-brother, -sister, Sc., a paternal uncle, paternal aunt; FATHER-KIN.
1645. R. Baillie, Lett. (1841), II. 295. Her glowming sonne, whom I pray God to bless, and make *father-better.
1624. Gataker, A Discussion of the Popish Doctrine of Transubstantiation, 103. Vnder his name our Popish *Father-breeders haue of late set out a many of Sermons and Treatises, that haue no testimonie at all from antiquity the most of them.
1513. Douglas, Æneis, VI. vi. 37.
We stand content, it sufficis ws alsua, | |
That ay remane the chaist Proserpyna | |
Within hir *faderis broderis boundis and ring. |
1609. Skene, Reg. Maj., 33. The father brother of the fathers side.
172846. Thomson, Spring, 538.
From Family diffusd | |
To family, as flies the *Father Dust, | |
The varied Colours run. |
1624. Gataker, A Discussion of the Popish Doctrine of Transubstantiation, 64. Vnder his name our Popish *Father-forgers have set out diuers things.
1587. Fleming, Contn. Holinshed, III. 1326/1. Their *father generall deliuering them what he hath in office.
1679. Oates, Myst. Iniq., 16. All these do serve as Intelligencers to the Father General.
c. 1440. Promp. Parv., 145. *Fader Qwellare, patricida.
1561. Daus, trans. Bullinger on Apoc. (1573), 292 b. I thinke the world had neuer a more notable, more cruell, and more shameles murderer, yea or rather a most arrant father queller.
a. 1641. Bp. Mountagu, Acts & Mon., iv. § 52 (1642), 280. Such is the affection of his subjects unto him, such the discipline of our Law and Religion, they would never endure Father-quellers to rule over them, or enter into that sacred Temple built from the foundation, by the murthered.
1597. Skene, De Verb. Sign., s.v. Eneya, The *father sister and her bairnes suld succeede.