释义 |
an·glo-saxon \| ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷|saksən\ noun Usage: capitalized A&S Etymology: New Latin Anglo-Saxones, plural, alteration of Medieval Latin Angli Saxones, from Latin Angli Angles + Late Latin Saxones Saxons — more at angle, saxon 1. a. : an Angle, Saxon, or Jute who came to England in the 5th century A.D. b. : a descendant of one of these Anglo-Saxons 2. : englishman; broadly : a person of English ancestry descended from the Anglo-Saxons : a white gentile whose native tongue is English 3. : the language of the Anglo-Saxon people : old english — see indo-european languages table 4. : the Germanic element present in the English language since the emergence of the latter as a separate entity 5. a. : forthright direct plain English b. : English employing words considered crude or vulgar < the word-of-mouth version, which has come through generations of army men, is more bluntly Anglo-Saxon — Roger Butterfield > |