英语词源词典 l.docx
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1、-latry。suffix meaning nworship of,“ in use in native formations from 19c. (e.g. bardolatry from Gk. -latreia worship, service paid to the gods, hired labor J related to latron pay, hire/1 latris servant, worshipper.-less -the suffix meaning lacking“ is from O.E. -leas, from leas nfree (from), devoid
2、 (of), false, feigned, from P.Gmc. lausaz (cf. Du. -loos, Ger, -los less/1 O.N. lauss loose, free, vacant, dissolute, M.Du. los, Ger. los loose, free/ Goth. laus “empty, vain). Related to loose and lease.-ling。dim. suffix, 1314, from O.E. -ling a nominal suffix (not originally dim.), from P.Gmc.atte
3、sted in historical Gmc. languages as a simple suffix, butprobably representing a fusion of the suffixes represented by Eng. -Ie (cf. icicle, thimble, handle), O.E. -ol, -id, -el; and -ing, suffix indicating “person or thing of a specific kind or origin; in masc. nouns also nson of (cf. farthing, ath
4、eling, O.E. horing nadulterer, fornicator). Both these suffixes had occasional dim. force, but this was only slightly evident in O.E. -ling and its equivalents in Gmc. languages except O.N., where it commonly was used as a dim, suffix, esp. in words designating the young of animals (e.g. g次slingr “g
5、osling). Thus it is possible that the dim. use that developed in M.E. is from O.N.-lite。comb, form meaning “stonej from Fr. -lite, variant of -lithe, from Gk. lithos stone.-logy a speaking, discourse, treatise, doctrine, theory, science/1 from Gk. -logia (often via Fr. -logie or M.L. -logia), from r
6、oot of legein “to speak;H thus, nthe character or department of one who speaks or treats of (a certain subject);n see lecture.describing a ship moored in harbor. Laid 吻“temporarily unemployed1* is from 1955. Laid-back relaxed is first attested 1973, perhaps in reference to the posture of highway mot
7、orcyclists.laidly .c.1300, Scottish and northern English variant of loathly hideous, repulsive.nlair。O.E. leger bed, couch, grave, act or place of lying down,“ from P.Gmc. legran (cf. O.N. legr, O.Fris. leg or, O.H.G. leg ar, Ger. Lager, Goth, ligrs nplace of lying),from *leg、the root of lie (q.v.).
8、 Meaning animaFs den is from c.1420.laird。c.1450, Scot, and northern England dialectal variant of lord, from M.E. laverd (see lord). Attested as a surname from 1257.laissez-faire O1825, from Fr., lit. nlet (people) do (as they think best) J from laissez let + faire to do” (from L. facere; see factit
9、ious). Phrase chosen to express the ideal of government non-interference in business and industry. A term from 18c. Fr. free-trade economists, usually attributed to Gournay.laity。1541, “body of people not in religious orders/1 Anglo-Fr. laite, from lay (adj.).lake 。“body of water/* c.1205, from O.Fr
10、. lack, from L. lacus pond, lake,“ also basin, tank/* related to lacuna hole, pit, from PIE lak- (cf. Gk. lakkos pit, tank, pond, O.C.S. loky “pool, puddle, cistern/* O.Ir. loch “lake, pond). The common notion is basin. There was a Gmc. form of the word, which yielded cognate O.N. logr sea flood, wa
11、ter/ O.E. lacu stream/ lagu nsea flood, water/1 leccan to moistenn (see leak). The N.Amer. Great Lakes so calledlolly the tongue.n Meaning hard candy on a stick” is from 1920s.lollygag Ondawdle, dally/1 1862, lallygag, Amer.Eng., perhaps from dial, lolly tongue + gag deceive, trick.HLombard .banker,
12、 money-changer, pawnbroker/* 1377, from O.Fr. (which also gave the word in this sense to M.Du. and Low Ger) from It. Lombardo (M.L. Lombardus), from L.L. Langobardus, proper name of a Gmc. people who conquered Italy 6c. and settled in the northern region that became known as Lombardy, from P.Gmc. La
13、nggobardoz, often said to mean lit.nLong-beards,n but perhaps rather from lang- !ftall, long + the proper name of the people (L. Bardi). Their name in O.E. was Langbeardas (pl.), but also Headobeardan, from heado war/ Lombards in Middle Ages were notable throughout Western Europe as bankers and mone
14、y-lenders, also pawn-brokers; Londons Lombard Street (1598) originally was occupied by Lombard bankers. Lombardy poplar, originally from Italy but planted in N.Amer. colonies as an ornamental tree, is attested from 1766.Londonchief city and capital of England, L. Londinium (c.115), often explained a
15、s place belonging to a man named LondinosJ a supposed Celtic personal name meaning the wild one J but this etymology is rejected in an emphatic footnote in Jackson 1953 (p.3o8), and we have as yet nothing to put in its place/ Margaret Gelling, Signposts to the Past: Place-Names and the History of En
16、gland; Chichester, 1978 London Bridge the childrens singing game is attested from 1827. London broil “large flank steak broiled then cut in thin slices” is 1969, Amer.Eng.; London fog first attested 1830.lone。1377, aphetic shortening of alone (q.v.) by misdivision of what is properly al(l) one. The
17、Lone Star in ref. to Texas is first recorded 1843, from its flag. First record of lonely is from 1607; lonesome from 1647. Loner “one who avoids company11 first recorded 1947. Lone wolf in the fig. sense is 1909, Amer.Eng.long (adj.) O.E. lang, long, from P.Gmc. Hanggaz (cf. O.H.G., Ger. lang, O.N.
18、langr, M.Du. lane, Goth, laggs long), perhaps from PIE dlonghos- (cf. L. longus, O.Pers. darga-, Pers, dirang, Skt. dirghah, Gk. dolikhos long, Gk. endelekhes perpetual, L. indulgere nto indulge). The adv. is from O.E. lange, longe, from the adjective. The word illustrates the O.E. tendency for shor
19、t a to become short non before -n- (also retained in bond/band and W. Midlands dial. lond from land and hond from hand). Long vowels (c.iooo) originally were pronounced for an extended time. Long-playing (phonograph record) is from 1929; abbreviation LP is from 1948. Long-bow, the characteristic med
20、ieval Eng. weapon, is attested from c.1500. Longhair is 1920 in the sense of intellectual, especially in musical tastes, devotee of classical music;n sense of “hippie took over 1969. Long-distance in ref. to telephoning is from 1884. Long in the tooth (1852) is from horses showing age by recession o
21、f gums. Long shot in the fig. sense of something unlikely is from 1867. Long-term (adj.) is from 1908. Long run “ultimate outcome0 is attested from 1627. Long time no see, imitative of Amer.Indian speech, is first recorded 1900. Long-winded given to lengthy speeches“ is from 1589.long (v.)。O.E. lang
22、ian Hto yearn, to seem long, lit. nto grow long/* from P.Gmc. langojanan (see long (adj.), Related to O.N. lang a, M.Du. langhen, O.H.G. langen, Ger. verlangen nto desire.11longevity1615, from L.L. long次vitas great age, long life/1 from L. longasvus “long-lived, from longus long” (adj.) + ssvum life
23、time, age.”longitude ,c.1391, from L. longitudo length, from longus long (adj.) (see long (adj.). For origins, see latitude.longshoreman1811, from alongshore + man.loo (1)。“lavatory,” 1940, but perhaps 1922, probably from Fr. lieux daisances, lavatory,n lit. place of ease, picked up by British servi
24、cemen in France during World War I. Or possibly a pun on Waterloo, based on water closet.loo (2) ,“type of card game, 1675, short for lanterloo, from Fr. lanturelau, originally the refrain of a song.loofah。1887, from Egyptian Arabic lufah, the name of the plant (Luffa ssgyptiaca) with fibrous pods f
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