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单词 j
释义

Jn.

Brit. /dʒeɪ/, U.S. /dʒeɪ/
Etymology: the tenth letter of the alphabet in English and other modern languages, is, in its origin, a comparatively late modification of the letter I. In the ancient Roman alphabet, I, besides its vowel value in ibīdem , mīlitis , had the kindred consonantal value of modern English Y, as in iactus , iam , Iouem , iūstus , adiūro , maior , peior . Some time before the 6th century, this y -sound had, by compression in articulation, and consequent development of an initial ‘stop’, become a consonantal diphthong, passing through a sound /dj/, akin to that of modern English di , de , in odious , hideous , to that represented in phonetic symbolization by //. At the same time, the original guttural sound of G, when followed by a front vowel, had changed to that of palatal g (ɟ, gj), and then, by an advance of the point of closure, had passed through that of /dj/, to the same sound //; so that i consonant and the so-called g ‘soft’ came to have, in the Romanic languages, the same identical value. In Italian, this new sound is represented by g before e and i , gi before a , o , and u . Thus, Latin gestus , Iēsūs , iam , iocāre , iūdicem , are represented in Italian by gesto , Gesù , già , giocare , giudice . But in the other Romanic languages, the letter I was retained with the changed sound, so that, in these, i consonant and g ‘soft’ were equivalent symbols, distinguished only by derivation. In Old French the foregoing words were gest , Iesu , ia , ioer , iuge . In Old English, i consonant, so far as it was used, had (as still in all the continental Germanic languages) its Latin value /j/, equivalent to Old English ge , gi , or e before certain vowels; thus we find , iól , iow , , iugoð , iung , as occasional spellings of the words commonly written geá , geól , eow , geó (gió , giú ), geogoð (giogoð ), geong (giong , giung ). This was especially the case with foreign proper names and other words known through Latin, as Ianuarius , Iob , Iofes (= Jove), Iudéa , Iudéisc , iacinþ , and the ethnic name Iótas , Iútan (rarely Eotas ), now rendered ‘Jutes’. But the French orthography introduced by the Norman Conquest brought in the Old French value of i consonant = g ‘soft’ //; a sound which English has ever since retained in words derived from that source, although in French itself the sound was subsequently, by loss of its first element, simplified to /ʒ/. From the 11th to the 17th cent., then, the letter I i represented at once the vowel sound of i , and a consonant sound //, far removed from the vowel. Meanwhile, the minuteness and inconspicuousness of the small ı, and its liability, especially in cursive writing, to be confounded with one of the strokes of an adjacent letter, had led in mediæval Latin and general European writing, and thus also in English, to various scribal expedients in order to keep it distinct. (See I.) Among these, an initial ı was often prolonged above or below the line, or both; a final ı was generally prolonged below the line, and in both cases the prolonged part or ‘tail’ came at length in cursive writing to be terminated with a curve; thus arose the forms ?, ?, ?. The ‘dot’, used to individualize the minuscule i, was also used with the tailed form, and thus came the modern j, j. But this was at first merely a final form of i, used in Latin in such forms as ‘filij’, and in numerals, as j, ij, iij, vj, viij, xij. It was very little used in English, where y had previously been substituted for final i; and it was not till the 17th cent. that the device of utilizing the two forms of the letter, so that i, i, should remain as the vowel, and j, j, be used for the consonant, was established, and the capital forms of the latter, J, J, were introduced.The differentiation was made first in Spanish, where, from the very introduction of printing, we see j used for the consonant, and i only for the vowel. For the capitals, I had at first to stand for both (as it still does in German type, and in all varieties of Gothic or Black Letter); but before 1600 a capital J consonant began to appear in Spanish. (See, for example, Minsheu's Spanish Dictionary of 1599, where I and J are strictly distinguished, though the I and J words are put in one series.) In German typography, almost from the first, some printers employed a tailed form of the letter ? or j initially, to distinguish the consonant sound; but this was by no means generally established till much later. According to Watt ( Bibliotheca Britannica), Louis Elzevir, who printed at Leyden 1595–1616, is generally credited with making the modern distinction of u and v, i and j, ‘which was shortly after followed by the introduction of U and J among the capitals by Lazarus Zetzner of Strasburg in 1619’. In England, individual attempts to differentiate i and j were made already in the 16th cent., as by Richard Day, who printed books in London after 1578, and George Bishop, who printed the translation of La Primaudaye's French Academie in 1586, with i, j, u, v, differentiated as in modern use, but had no capital J or U. The J j types are not used in the Bible of 1611, nor in the text of the Shakespeare Folio of 1623 (but see jig n.1); these have I i for both values; but the latter has a capital Italic J in headlines in the proper names John, Juliet, Julius, and in the colophon, list of actors, etc., thus showing a tendency to use this (in its origin merely an ornamental variety of I) as a J. In Cotgrave's French-English Dictionary printed in 1611 (and in the reprint of it in 1632), the Roman type used for the French has no capital J, and uses I with both values, but it has the small j which is regularly used in the French words: thus Iustice, Ajuster. On the other hand, the italic type, in which the English is printed, has no small j, and uses i for both vowel and consonant; it has the two capitals, I and J, but uses them indiscriminately for the consonant: thus Ioyau: m. A Jewell; Ioyaulier: m. A Ieweller. Frequently J is used also for the vowel: thus Ingenieusement: Jngeniously; Ingenieux: Ingenious. Thus even when the types I and J were at hand, their use was not yet regulated. But during the decade which followed 1625, J, j, J, j, appear to have been gradually added to all founts of type, and the present usage of restricting I i to the vowel, J j to the consonant appears to have been generally established soon after 1630. (See, under U and V, the similar differentiation of U u vowel, and V v consonant, from the earlier V v initial, u medial and final.) But though the differentiation of I and J, in form and value, was thus completed before 1640, the feeling that they were, notwithstanding, merely forms of the same letter continued for many generations; a vestige of it is still seen in the practice of many persons, who in script write the I form (ℐ) for both ℐand , and in the omission by printers of J and U from the signatures of the sheets of books. In Dictionaries, the I and J words continued to be intermingled in one series down to the 19th cent. Dr. Johnson, indeed, under the letter I, says ‘I is in English considered both as a vowel and consonant; though, since the vowel and consonant differ in their form as well as sound, they may be more properly accounted two letters’. Nevertheless, he proceeds to treat them practically as one, his first word I being followed by Jabber; Jam by Iambick, and this by Jangle; while the three last words of I are Juxtaposition, Ivy, Jymold. The same practice was followed by Todd, and by Richardson 1820, and even in some later dictionaries. Jodrell in 1820, Webster in 1828, separate I and J, as independent letters. The name of the letter, now jay /dʒeɪ/, was formerly jy /dʒaɪ/, rhyming with I, and corresponding to French ji; this is still common in Scotland and elsewhere. In printing manuscripts or reprinting books produced before the differentiation of I and J, the earlier I has been treated in two different ways. The earlier editors, in most cases, introduced the modern usage into their texts, changing the I of the archetype, when it stood for the consonant, into J. Later editors more usually aim at reproducing the actual form of the original, and retain I with its twofold value. As quotations are, in the main, from printed editions of manuscripts, and in some cases from later editions of printed books, they necessarily reflect these differences of editorial practice, and often show J before the 17th cent.; it is to be remembered that this is usually due to the edition quoted, not to the original scribe or printer. But in the chronological lists of ‘Forms’, which precede the Etymology and Senses, these editorial J's have been disregarded, and the contemporary I alone given down to the date when J was actually in use.In some modern editions of MS. or Black-letter books, in which the minuscule i of the original text is reproduced, we yet find a capital J introduced. This arises probably from the circumstance that the MS. or Italic J, or Black-letter , is more like a J than an I in appearance, and is actually still used both for I and J. No word beginning with J is of Old English derivation. Many are from Latin, chiefly through French; some from Greek, and a few from Hebrew and Arabic. There are also numerous modern words from distant languages, Eastern or Western, as jaguar, jalap, jerboa, jungle, junk. Besides these, many familiar or colloquial words of recent appearance and obscure history begin with this letter. On account of the phonetic equivalence of i consonant (i.e. j) and g ‘soft’ in words from Romanic, while in native English words, as girl, get, g was ‘hard’, there was a considerable tendency in Middle English to substitute i (= j) for g in words from French, as in gemme, iemme, gentil, ientyl, gest, iest, (and occasionally a counter tendency to use g for i (j), as in iet, jet, geat, maiestie, majesty, magestie), of which traces still remain in gest, jest, sergeant, serjeant, jelly from French gelée, etc. The regular and practically uniform sound of the letter J in English is the consonantal diphthong //. In the word hallelujah (also spelt halleluiah) it has the sound of Roman i-consonant /j/. The same sound is retained in proper names or alien terms from German and other languages in which the Roman value of j is retained, as Jena /ˈjeːna/, Jaeger, Joachim, Jungfrau, junker, Janos, Jaroslav, Jassy. In a few French words, distinctly recognized as alien, j has the French sound /ʒ/, as déjeuner, jeu d'esprit. In the transliteration of eastern names, as Jāt, Jehangir, Jenghiz, Juggernaut, Jumna, etc., j is used with its English value.
I. The letter; the shape of the letter.
1. The letter. The plural appears as Js, J's, js, j's.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > writing > written character > [noun] > letter
staffc888
bookstaffOE
Kc1000
Yc1000
Zc1000
AOE
EOE
GOE
MOE
ROE
letterc1225
print1340
tawc1400
Wc1465
J1591
stave1866
alphabet1972
X-
1574 J. Baret Aluearie I Introd. sig. Kk.i Now as concerning I consonant, which oftentimes vniustly vsurpeth the sounde and place of g: methinke it hath small reason, or rather I may say it is very absurde, & much against both art and reason.]
1591 R. Percyvall Bibliotheca Hispanica Gram. sig. Bv j somewhat like the French Desja, joieux, jouer, but best like the Hebrew ש with his point on the right horne, or sh in English, as Ojo, osho.
1599 R. Percyvall & J. Minsheu Spanish Gram. 7 There be three kindes of I in the Spanish, that is, small i, Greeke y, and j, Jota or consonant... J jota or j consonant, which this toong taketh of the Arabique, is pronounced as in French Jamais, Deja, Jehan, in English like sh, as Jardin, a gardin, shardin.
1599 R. Percyvall & J. Minsheu Spanish Gram. 8 X is..pronounced like J consonant, and the Spaniard often writeth one for another.
c1620 A. Hume Of Orthogr. Britan Tongue (1870) i. iv. §12 For distinctiones of both sound and symbol, I wald commend the symbol and name of i and u to the voual sound;..the symboles of j and v to the latin consonantes, and their names to be jod and vau; as, vain jestes.
c1620 A. Hume Of Orthogr. Britan Tongue (1870) i. v. §15 And j, for difference of the voual i, written with a long tail, I wald wish to be called jod or je.
1755 S. Johnson Dict. Eng. Lang. at I J consonant has invariably the same sound with that of g in giant; as jade, jet, jilt.
1896 A. Whyte Bible Characters 190 Esau..carved E. and J. into a true lover's knot under the handle of it.
1897 A. Lang in Longman's Mag. June 184 We carry the tails of our J's..below the line.
2. A curve or figure of the shape of the letter.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > curvature > types of curvature > [noun] > in shape of U or J
U-shape1875
J1895
1895 Outing 27 211/1 A spur..ran out toward the west and formed a large ‘J’ with the curve facing the south.
3. Short for J-pen n. a broad-pointed pen, stamped with the letter J.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > writing > writing materials > writing instrument > [noun] > pen > broad-pointed pen
stub1829
J1885
stub-pen1891
J-pen1898
1885 Sladen In Cornwall, etc. 178 The ink-pot..with an old J nib in it stiff with rust.
1898 Westm. Gaz. 19 Jan. 3/1 A Visit to the J-Pen Club... Holding conclave with a group of brand-new Jays.
a1901 Mod. colloq. What pen do you write with? Do you use a J?
II. Denoting serial order and in symbolical uses.
4. Rarely used like the preceding letters to express serial order. In the signatures of the sheets of books, etc., the old order of the Roman alphabet, H, I, K, is usually retained. In the alphabetic designations of the batteries of the Royal Artillery A, B, C, etc., J is used for the tenth.
ΚΠ
1884 Whitaker's Almanack 163 Field Artillery, 1st Brigade, A Battery, Dinapore;..I, Ahmedabad; J, Dublin; K, Aldershot.
1899 Whitaker's Almanack 195 Horse Artillery..A Battery, Umballa;..I, Mhow; J, Bangalore; K, Rawal Pindi.
1899 Æ. J. G. Mackay in R. Lindesay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (S.T.S.) Introd. 34 MS. J..is at present in the library of Dupplin.
1900 Dundee Advertiser 12 Jan. 5 The transport Ujina sailed for Durban with J Battery Royal Horse Artillery and spare horses.
5. As a Roman numeral j was formerly used as a final form of i in j, ij, vj, and the like; this is retained in medical prescriptions.
ΚΠ
a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 179 ℞ ladani .℥ j, & resolue it in ℥ iiij of oile of mirtilles.
6.
Categories »
a. In Mathematics and Physics, J is used to denote the Jacobian; also Joule's mechanical equivalent of heat; for j in Quaternions, see I n.1 (the letter) 6.
b. In Electrical Engineering j is used (in place of the mathematical symbol i, which is used for electric current) to represent √(− 1), or an angular displacement of 90°.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > transmission of electricity, conduction > non-conduction, insulation > [noun] > symbol in formula
J1893
1893 Electrician 15 Sept. 522/2 The next Paper was by Mr. C. P. Steinmetz on ‘Complex Quantities and their Application in Electrical Engineering’. This Paper contained a novel method of the treatment of alternating currents... The device is to introduce the letter j in the expression of the sine curve, at first simply as a distinguishing index without mathematical meaning, and afterward as j = √(− 1).
1907 W. S. Franklin & W. Esty Elem. Electr. Engin. II. v. 90 It can be shown..by ordinary trigonometry that the components of a line whose length is IR² + X² and which is θ degrees ahead of I, where θ is the angle whose tangent is X/R, are e1 = Ri1Xi11 and e11 = Xi1 + Ri11. Therefore the term j²Xi11..must be equal to −Xi11, or, in other words, we must have: j² = −1.
1945 ‘Electr. Engineer’ Ref. Bk. i. 67 Considering j as a vector-operator, it is a means whereby a length in one direction is rotated anticlockwise by 90°.
1961 R. B. Angus Electr. Engin. Fund. xiii. 341 Since j2A = −A.., then j2 = −1 or j = √(−1).
1961 R. B. Angus Electr. Engin. Fund. xiii. 343 The j is always placed to the left in the product. This practice helps avoid the overlooking of a j-term when real and j-terms are being grouped.
c. In Physics J and j represent quantized angular momentum.j was first used by A. Sommerfeld (in Ann. d. Physik (1923) LXX. 33), in place of nj, which had been used by W. Heisenberg (in Zeitschr. f. Physik (1922) VIII. 274) in place of Sommerfeld's original symbol ni, which he introduced (in Atombau u. Spektrallinien (ed. 3, 1922) vi. 446 and Zeitschr. f. Physik (1922) VIII. 269) as an empirical ‘inner’ quantum number (German innere Quantenzahl) in describing the Zeeman effect. As this was interpreted in terms of later theory, j became the quantum number of the total angular momentum of an electron, corresponding to the resultant of its spin s and orbital momentum l; J is used similarly for an assemblage of electrons, and in molecular spectroscopy is the quantum number for angular momentum due to rotation of a molecule as a whole. Apart from these specific uses, j and J are often used as symbols for a general angular momentum. jj-coupling, an approximation used in the quantum theory of the atom when the spin-orbit interaction of individual electrons is large compared with the remaining electrostatic interaction between one electron and another, so that spin and orbital angular momenta may be coupled to give a resultant j for each electron, and the resultants in turn coupled to give the total angular momentum J of the electrons. Cf. LS-coupling at L n. 6b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > quantum theory > electron spin > [noun] > number of total angular momentum > symbol of
s1922
J1924
1924 London, Edinb. & Dublin Philos. Mag. 6th Ser. 48 720 The X-ray atomic levels may be conveniently classified by means of three quantum numbers—n (total), k (azimuthal), and j (inner).
1929 Physical Rev. 2nd Ser. 34 26 In the normal, Russell-Saunders, or LS coupling scheme (l1l2) (s1s2) = (LS) = J... In the jj coupling scheme (l1s1) (l2s2) = (j1j2) = J.
1930 Physical Rev. 36 613 The resultant angular momentum of the molecule (quantum number J).
1955 C. H. Townes & A. L. Schawlow Microwave Spectrosc. i. 5 As J increases and the molecule rotates faster, it stretches.
1957 M. E. Rose Elem. Theory Angular Momentum i. 11 Consider the case of two spins (or angular momenta) j1 and j2.
1970 G. K. Woodgate Elem. Atomic Struct. vii. 140 In the lower-lying configurations of neutral atoms the j-j coupling approximation is not often found, in other words the conditions for small electrostatic interaction are not often satisfied, even in heavy elements.

Initialisms

(Abbreviations given here with the full stop are frequently found without it.)
J. n. various proper names, as John, James, Joseph; Jane, Jessie, Jemima, etc.
J n. joule.
ΚΠ
1951 Symbols, Signs & Abbrev. (Royal Soc.) 14 Joule... J.
1967 W. H. Hayt Engin. Electromagn. (ed. 2) ii. 32 The volt..having the label of joules per coulomb (J/C) or newton-meters per coulomb.., we shall..measure electric field intensity in..volts per meter (V/m).
J.A. n. Judge Advocate.
ΚΠ
1881 D. Jones Notes Mil. Law p. vii J.A., Judge Advocate.
1881 D. Jones Notes Mil. Law v. 67 The J.A. and prosecutor must not be the same person.
1918 E. S. Farrow Dict. Mil. Terms p. x J.A., Judge Advocate.
J.A. n. Justice of Appeal.
ΚΠ
1883 Wharton's Law-lexicon (ed. 7) 432 J.A., Justice of Appeal.
1972 Mod. Law Rev. 35 i. 45 The dictum already referred to of Watermeyer J.A. came at the end of his judgment.
JCB n. a proprietary name for excavators and other earth-moving equipment made by the firm of J. C. Bamford (Excavators) Ltd.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > earth-moving and excavating equipment > [noun]
scraper1815
JCB1960
muck-shifter1961
1960 Trade Marks Jrnl. 29 June 778/1 (in figure) JCB..Power-operated loaders and excavators, all for handling, transporting and loading earth, minerals and similar materials, and parts and fittings therefor... J. C. Bamford (Excavators) Limited, Lakeside Works, Rocester, Uttoxeter.
1972 Police Rev. 24 Nov. 1547/1 A query has recently arisen in my traffic section regarding the necessity for a provisional licence holder to be accompanied when driving a J.C.B. excavator on a road.
1985 Financial Times 18 Nov. 17/2 Dump trucks and JCBs are already flattening the site.
J.C.R. n. Junior Common Room.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > place of education > educational buildings > [noun] > college or university buildings > common rooms
common chamber1668
combination-room1675
common room1683
senior common-room1774
J.C.R.1892
middle common room1958
common area1996
1892 Isis (Oxford) 8 June 35/2 Only the Pres. of the J.C.R. and the Captain of the Eleven retain their equanimity.
1914 C. Mackenzie Sinister St. II. iii. viii. 656 The editor rejected the frivolous attentions of his audience, and left the J.C.R.
1968 Listener 1 Aug. 147/1 The Student Council received the support..of the vast majority of JCRs.
JICTAR n. with pronunciation /ˈdʒɪktɑː(r)/ Joint Industry Committee for Television Advertising Research (replacing TAM n.2).
ΚΠ
1964 World's Press News 1 May 4/1 JICTAR—Joint Industry Committee for Television Advertising Research—embraces the Incorporated Society of British Advertisers, the Independent Television Companies Association and the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising.
1968 Guardian 28 Sept. 9/1 JICTAR has replaced TAM as the index of response.
1982 Listener 16 Dec. 27/3 Other problems include the possibility that in rejuvenating the old JICTAR sample for BARB's birth last year, some faithful heavy viewers were lost and non-addicts put in their places.
j.n.d. n. just noticeable difference.
ΚΠ
1929 Encycl. Brit. VII. 420/1 The just noticeable difference, often called the ‘j.n.d.’, between the stimuli of two sensations.
1948 Sci. News 7 14 Rubbers could be compared with one another with about three times as small a j.n.d. as that found for bitumens.
J.P. n. Justice of Peace.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > administration of justice > one who administers justice > [noun] > Justice of the peace or district magistrate
Justice of the Peace1423
justice1509
conservator of the peacea1513
Warden of the Peace1543
Guardian of the Peace1581
mittimus1630
magistrate1727
J.P.1732
beak1799
county commissioner1809
bubble and squeak1935
1732 Cal. State Papers: Amer. & W. Indies (1939) 48 A dispute arising between two of his men on shore, Francis Squib and Jacob Taverner, J.P's in that harbour, put them in the stocks.
1869 Bradshaw's Railway Man. 21 328 Directors..Sir Benjamin Morris, J.P.
1972 P. Johnson Offshore Islanders v. 291 The Local Government Act of 1888..replaced the old Quarter Sessions of JPs by democratically elected County Councils.
Jr. n. (also jr.) Junior.

Draft additions 1997

JIT n. (also JiT) Commerce. = just-in-time adv., n., and adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > business affairs > management methods or systems > [adjective] > other methods or systems
functional1903
functionalized1908
Taylor1911
incentive1943
Taylorized1957
managerialist1965
divisionalized1976
kanban system1977
Taylorizing1979
JIT1984
just-in-time1984
1984 E. P. DeGarmo et al. Materials & Processes in Manuf. (ed. 6) i. 9 They have a Just-in-Time (JIT) production objective, in which they try to operate their production in very small batches.
1991 Professional Engin. July 34/1 One of the fundamental principles of JIT manufacturing is the use of daily rates to regulate the flow of material through the factory.

Draft additions 1993

Jy n. Astronomy jansky.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the universe > cosmology > astronomy > [noun] > radio astronomy > unit used in
jansky1966
Jy1974
1974 Nature 6 Sept. 36/1 The receiver..was also calibrated at five hour intervals by observing 3C147 (assumed flux density 9.3 Jy).
1987 P. Moore Astron. Encycl. 216/3 One jansky,..Jy, is equal to 10−26 watts per square metre per hertz.

Draft additions March 2006

J-pop n. (also with capital initial in the second element) Japanese pop music.
ΚΠ
1989 soc.culture.japan (Usenet newsgroup) 11 Dec. There's a newsletter devoted to contemporary Japanese music called J-POP.
1994 Billboard 6 Aug. 54 Another thing I've been working on is different styles of vocal-oriented music... I want to market this internationally as ‘J-Pop’.
2003 Wired May 76/1 What does it take to be the queen of the J-pop scene?

Draft additions June 2016

JK adv. (also jk) colloquial (originally and chiefly in electronic communications) just kidding.
ΚΠ
1990 Re: World Cup 2090 in rec.sport.soccer (Usenet newsgroup) 24 Mar. You mean another frog to swallow ?! (:-) :-) J.K., of course..).
2015 Evening Standard (Nexis) 29 Oct. (Mag.) 11 I always start my day with an acai bowl topped with fresh fruit, locally sourced bee pollen and chia seeds. LOLOLOLOL JK JK JK, I start it with a cigarette and an ice-cold Diet Coke, because I don't want to live past 70.

Draft additions September 2018

J-horror n. short for Japanese horror, chiefly with reference to a group of films made in Japan from the late 1990s and characterized by supernatural themes, folkloric elements, and a focus on psychological horror.
ΚΠ
2002 Film Comment Jan. 38/1 J-horror has an unexpected pop gleam, updating the ghost story genre with visual polish.
2004 Time Out N.Y. 16 Dec. 134/3 So you love J-horror but have already seen the canon of Japanese stories?
2017 Baltimore Sun (Nexis) 12 Feb. 18 Hollywood adapted ‘Ringu’ into the Verbinski-helmed ‘The Ring’ and sparked its own J-horror craze.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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