释义 |
etymology /ˌɛtɪˈmɒlədʒi /noun (plural etymologies) [mass noun]1The study of the origin of words and the way in which their meanings have changed throughout history: the decline of etymology as a linguistic discipline...- Based on a rough study of etymology, these words for big numbers were popularized in 17th-century France and were based on the 14th-century coinage of ‘million.’
- From this comes new ideas on sociology, on etymology, on history, poetry, on the nature of early religion, the impact of nature and geography on society, on divine intervention and a whole host of others topics.
- His university lectures on etymology and linguistics were standing room only, and he invariably stayed late to answer a barrage of questions.
1.1 [count noun] The origin of a word and the historical development of its meaning: the etymology of the word ‘devil’...- Mark cites specific qualitative facts about the meanings and etymologies of particular Somali words, and speculates on what they mean for the view of the world you get through Somali lexicon and metaphoric imagery.
- All words have etymologies and all ideas have pedigrees.
- The card file to the left of where my father sat has definitions and etymologies of frequently used words, such as pleasure and play.
Synonyms derivation, word history, development, origin, source Derivativesetymologist /ɛtɪˈmɒlədʒɪst / noun ...- Anyway, bemused etymologists eventually tracked down the source of this confusion.
- And this is where the rules etymologists follow get rather complicated.
- While virtually every dictionary describes the origins of ‘bamboozle’ as shrouded in obscurity, a few etymologists maintain its nautical pedigree.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French ethimologie, via Latin from Greek etumologia, from etumologos 'student of etymology', from etumon, neuter singular of etumos 'true'. |