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Chant Latin French English Canere Derived Chanter Originally

正面 6983.chant
英 [tʃɑːnt]美 [tʃænt]

背面
释义:
n. 圣歌;赞美诗vt. 唱;诵扬vi. 唱歌;反覆地唱歌n. (Chant)人名;(英)钱特
例句:
1. He was greeted by the chant of "Judas! Judas!".人们看见他就反复不停地喊:“犹大!犹大!”

demise “地埋尸”→死亡2. dismiss => demise.3. Demise:底埋之。埋在地底----死亡;低卖之,折价卖出----财产转让。
chant 反复吟唱来自PIE*kan, 唱,吟,拟声词,词源同cantor, incantation.
chantchant: [14] The Latin verb for ‘sing’ was canere (possibly related to English hen). A form derived from it to denote repeated action was cantāre ‘keep on singing’, a rich source of English words. From its French descendant chanter we have chant and the derived chantry [14]; from Italian, cantata [18], originally a past participle; and from the Latin noun cantus ‘song’ the derivatives accent, descant, and canticle [13], as well as (via Italian) canto [16]. Cant ‘hypocritical talk’ is probably from the same source, and shanty or chanty ‘sailor’s song’ is also related.=> accent, cant, cantata, canto, chanty, descant, hen, incantation, recantchant (v.)late 14c., from Old French chanter "to sing, celebrate" (12c.), from Latin cantare "to sing," originally frequentative of canere "sing" (which it replaced), from PIE root *kan- "to sing" (cognates: Greek eikanos "cock," Old English hana "cock," both literally "bird who sings for sunrise;" Old Irish caniaid "sings," Welsh canu "sing"). The frequentative quality of the word was no longer felt in Latin, and by the time French emerged the word had entirely displaced canere. Related: Chanted; chanting.chant (n.)1670s, from chant (v.), or else from French chant (12c.), from Latin cantus "song, a singing; bird-song," from past participle stem of canere."

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