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Native Latin English Born French Words Descendant Gene

正面 1408.native
英 ['neɪtɪv]美 ['netɪv]

背面
释义:
adj. 本国的;土著的;天然的;与生俱来的;天赋的n. 本地人;土产;当地居民
例句:
1. We were forbidden, under pain of imprisonment, to use our native language.我们被禁止使用母语,违者将被关进监狱。

move 移动——movie电影(电影通过移动画面来放映)
native 出生的,本土的,当地的来自拉丁语nativus,出生,降生,来自PIE*gen,生育,出生,词源同gene,generate.引申词义本土的,当地的。
nativenative: [14] Native is one of a large family of English words that go back ultimately to the Latin verb nāscī. This meant ‘be born’, and was a descendant of the Indo-European base *gen-, *gn- ‘produce’, which also gave English gene, general, generate, etc. From its past participial stem nāt- was formed the adjective nātīvus ‘from birth, born’, which has produced English native (and also, via Old French, naive [17], which is etymologically the equivalent of ‘born yesterday’), and also its derivative nativity [12] (applied from earliest times specifically to the birth of Christ).Other English words from the same source include cognate [17], innate [15], nascent [17], natal [14], nation, nature, noel (earlier nowel [14], from an Old French descendant of Latin nātālis ‘of birth’), pregnant, puny, and renaissance [19] (literally ‘rebirth’).=> cognate, gene, general, generate, innate, naive, nascent, nation, nature, noel, pregnant, puny, renaissancenative (adj.)late 14c., "natural, hereditary, connected with something in a natural way," from Old French natif "native, born in; raw, unspoiled" (14c.) and directly from Latin nativus "innate, produced by birth," from natus, past participle of nasci (Old Latin gnasci) "be born," related to gignere "beget," from PIE root *gene-/*gen- "to give birth, beget," with derivatives referring to familial and tribal groups (see genus). From late 15c. as "born in a particular place." From early 15c. as "of one's birth," also used from mid-15c. in sense of "bound; born in servitude or serfdom," also, as a noun "a bondsman, serf." Native American attested from 1956.native (n.)mid-15c., "person born in bondage," from native (adj.), and in some usages from Medieval Latin nativus, noun use of nativus (adj.). Compare Old French naif, also "woman born in slavery." From 1530s as "person who has always lived in a place." Applied from mid-17c. to original inhabitants of non-European nations where Europeans hold political power, for example American Indians (by 1630s); hence, used contemptuously of "the locals" from 1800. Related: Natives."

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