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Notorious Latin Medieval Past Participle English Association Derogatory

正面 6238.notorious
英 [nə(ʊ)'tɔːrɪəs]美 [no'tɔrɪəs]

背面
释义:
adj. 声名狼藉的,臭名昭著的
例句:
1. The accident happened on a notorious black spot on the A43.事故发生在A43号公路上一个出了名的事故多发地段。

1. wool => velvet.
notorious 恶名昭著的来自拉丁语notus,知道的,词源同know,notice.即众所周知的,著名的,后来词义完全贬义化。比较egregious.
notoriousnotorious: [16] Notorious originally meant simply ‘well known’. It was borrowed from medieval Latin nōtōrius, which was a derivative of nōtus ‘known’, the past participle of Latin nōscere ‘know’ (source also of English notice, notion, etc). The English word very soon came to be used in association with derogatory nouns (as in ‘a notorious liar’), and by the early 17th century the adjective itself had taken on negative connotations. (Noble, which comes from the same ultimate source and likewise etymologically means ‘known’, has gone up in the world as far as notorious has gone down.)=> noticenotorious (adj.)1540s, "publicly known," from Medieval Latin notorius "well-known, commonly known," from Latin notus "known," past participle of noscere "come to know" (see know). Negative connotation arose 17c. from frequent association with derogatory nouns. Related: Notoriously."

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