important
- Liquor letter. contains a compounds section with the heading ‘Instrumental’. Examples given include alcohol-fuelled (‘fuelled by alcohol’) and alcohol-laced (‘laced with alcohol’).
- Ruled adj., ‘that is or has been governed’, is used both attributively and ‘as the second element in instrumental compounds’. The quotation paragraph includes examples of such compounds, such as throttle-governed (‘controlled by means of a throttle’) and hell-governed (‘ruled by hell’).
[So it sense of important is employed from inside the unrevised OED records and you will within the entries revised before 2019. C3: “Because a good modifier, for the experience ‘by the or that have anger’, since rage-consuming, anger-distended, an such like., adjs.”]
intensifier
An intensifier is a word, phrase, or prefix which gives force or emphasis. Intensifiers are often adverbs (e.g. very, extremely, utterly) or adjectives (e.gplete in ‘He’s a complete fool’).
- MURDEROUSLY adv. is defined as ‘As an intensifier: to a great or overpowering extent; extremely’, with examples such as ‘Cash money was still murderously scarce.’
- FRIGHTSOME adj. is defined as ‘Causing fright; frightening, frightful. Also in weakened use as an intensifier.’ For example, in ‘The eery black an’ frightsome night’, frightsome means ‘frightening’, but in ‘If we could work it we’d get frightsome big bags o’ game’, frightsome is an intensifier meaning ‘very’, ‘extremely’.
interjection
An interjection is actually a keyword and that qualities on their own away from other conditions and generally speaking stands for a keen exclamation otherwise demand. Examples in English include sadly, eureka, hush, and you can oops.
- Entries for interjections have the part-of-speech label int. For example, the use of Mamma mia as an interjection, as in ‘Mamma mia! The cost of it!’, is treated at MAMMA MIA int. (and you can n.). The use of hard cheese as an interjection, as in ‘ “Tough parmesan cheese!” condoled Mr. Davenant’, is treated at Tough Mozzarella cheese n. (and you will int.) 2, with the wording ‘also as int’.
- Lol n. 2 describes the use of the noun to mean ‘an instance of the written interjection “LOL”’.
- WHOA v. 1a describes the sense ‘to call out “whoa” as a general interjection expressing surprise, delight, etc.’
[Unrevised OED entries possibly define conditions just like the ‘made use of interjectionally’, definition ‘made use of once the an enthusiastic interjection’, in modified entries interjections are provided the newest region-of-message name int.]
interrogative
An interrogative is a word, condition, or sentence used to ask or express a question. For example, the question ‘Who is responsible?’ is an interrogative sentence. In ‘I asked who was responsible’, who was responsible is an interrogative clause. Interrogative words include who, what, when, where, which, and how: for example, in ‘Who is responsible?’, who is an interrogative pronoun.
- Judge v. 1d is defined as ‘With interrogative clause as object. To determine, tell.’ For example, in the sentence ‘I leave yourselves to judge which kind of a farmer you are’, the clause which kind of a farmer you are is an interrogative clause, expressing the question ‘Which kind of farmer are you?’
- The phrase to have the center planned letter. P3e(a) is described as ‘In later use chiefly in negative and interrogative contexts.’ An example of the phrase in an interrogative context is the question ‘Did I really have the heart to deny them a grandfather?’
intransitive
A verb is intransitive when it does not take a head object. An intransitive verb may stand alone, or it ple, a prepositional statement, adverb, or adjective).
In the OED, transitivity labels are applied to senses of verbs and phrasal verbs. The following are examples with the label intransitive.
- ‘Take a minute to drift off and daydream‘ (at DAYDREAM v. step 1): daydream stands alone without a complement.