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Faint French Feindre Variant Imitate Feint Pretend Avoid

正面 4150.faint
英 [feɪnt]美 [fent]

背面
释义:
adj. 模糊的;头晕的;虚弱的;[医] 衰弱的vi. 昏倒;变得微弱;变得没气力n. [中医] 昏厥,昏倒
例句:
1. It's a film about a serial killer and not for the faint-hearted.这部电影是讲一个连环杀手的,不适合胆小的人看。

1. fingere (form root fig-) => Old French variant form feindre (pp. feint) "pretend, imitate, feign".2. => feint: pretend, imitate, feign.3. feint => faint (元音音变) "show weakness to avoid one's duty by pretending".4. 该词的本意是假装虚弱、脆弱来逃避责任、逃避各种事情,后来的词义演变却因假变真,变成了真正的“虚弱、脆弱,微弱,懦弱”,甚至是“昏厥,昏倒”。5. 谐音“昏(方言化拼音: fen)特、昏倒”。6. 区分:faint, feint: pain => faint => 因为太痛了,以至于痛昏过去了。
faint 微弱的,虚弱的来自古法语feint, 来自feign, 假装,虚构,欺骗。引申词义底气不足的,微弱的,虚弱的。
faintfaint: [13] Faint comes from Old French faint, which was originally the past participle of the verb faindre, feindre ‘pretend, shirk’ (whence English feign). This meant ‘pretended, simulated’, ‘lazy, shirking’, and ‘cowardly’, and all these senses were originally taken over by English. None now survives except the last, in the phrase faint heart, but in their place the underlying notion of ‘feebleness’ has produced ‘not bright, dim’ and ‘weak and dizzy’. The verb, based on the second of these, developed in the late 14th century. The variant spelling feint, used of printed lines, was introduced in the mid 19th century.=> feignfaint (adj.)c. 1300, "enfeebled; wearied, exhausted," from Old French faint, feint "false, deceitful; sham, artificial; weak, faint, lazy, indolent, cowardly," past participle of feindre "hesitate, falter, be indolent, show weakness, avoid one's duty by pretending" (see feign). Also from c. 1300 as "deceitful; unreliable; false." Meaning "wanting in spirit or courage, cowardly" (a sense now mostly encountered in faint-hearted) is from early 14c. From early 15c. of actions, functions, colors, etc., "weak, feeble, poor." Meaning "producing a feeble impression upon the senses" is from 1650s.faint (v.)c. 1300, "grow weak, become enfeebled," also "lack courage or spirit, be faint-hearted," and "to pretend, feign;" from faint (adj.). Sense of "swoon, lose consciousness" is from c. 1400. Also used in Middle English of the fading of colors, flowers, etc. Related: Fainted; fainting. For Chaucer and Shakespeare, also a transitive verb ("It faints me").faint (n.)c. 1300, "faintness, faint-heartedness," from faint (adj.). From 1808 as "a swoon.""

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