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English French Latin Pale Produced Pallidus Appal Originally

正面 2953.pale
英 [peɪl]美 [pel]

背面
释义:
adj. 苍白的;无力的;暗淡的n. 前哨;栅栏;范围vt. 使失色;使变苍白;用栅栏围vi. 失色;变苍白;变得暗淡n. (Pale)人名;(塞)帕莱
例句:
1. In the background, dressed in pale green, stood Eunice.尤妮斯穿着浅绿色的衣服站在后面不起眼的地方。

1、pal- + -e.2. 谐音“怕哦”----好可怕哦,吓得脸的苍白了。
pale 苍白的,微弱的来自pallere,苍白的,发白的,来自PIE*pel,苍白的,发白的,词源同fallow,pallor.pale 栅栏,围篱,桩来自拉丁语palus,栅栏,围篱,桩,来自PIE*pag,固定,标记,词源同page,pole,palisade.拼 写比较rule,regulate.
palepale: English has two words pale. The adjective [13] comes via Old French from Latin pallidus (source also of English appal – originally ‘turn pale’ – pall ‘become wearisome’ [14] – originally a shortening of appal – and pallid [17]). This was a derivative of the verb pallēre ‘be pale’, which was descended from *pol-, *pel-, the same Indo-European base as produced English fallow.The noun pale [14] comes via Old French pal from Latin pālus ‘stake’. This was a descendant of the base *pāg- ‘fix’, which also produced English pagan, page, and pole ‘stick’. English palisade [17] comes ultimately from *pālicea, a Vulgar Latin derivative of pālus, and the closely related Latin pāla ‘spade’ produced English palette [17] and pallet [16].=> appal, fallow, pall, pallid; pagan, page, palette, palisade, pallet, pole, travelpale (adj.)early 14c., from Old French paile "pale, light-colored" (12c., Modern French pâle), from Latin pallidus "pale, pallid, wan, colorless," from pallere "be pale, grow pale," from PIE *pel- (2) "pale" (see pallor). Pale-face, supposed North American Indian word for "European," is attested from 1822.pale (n.)early 13c. (c. 1200 in Anglo-Latin), "stake, pole, stake for vines," from Old French pal and directly from Latin palus "stake, prop, wooden post," related to pangere "to fix or fasten" (see pact). From late 14c. as "fence of pointed stakes;" figurative sense of "limit, boundary, restriction" is from c. 1400. Barely surviving in beyond the pale and similar phrases. Meaning "the part of Ireland under English rule" is from 1540s, via sense of "territory held by power of a nation or people" (mid-15c.).pale (v.)late 14c., "become pale; appear pale" (also, in Middle English, "to make pale"), from Old French paleir (12c.) or from pale (adj.). Related: Paled; paling."

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