正面 | 1238.sun 英 [sʌn]美 [sʌn] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|---|
背面 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 释义: drink.........准渴......准备渴了喝的东西......喝,饮n. 太阳vt. 使晒vi. 晒太阳n. (Sun)人名;(中)孙(普通话·威妥玛);(柬)孙;(缅)素;(土)松 例句: 1. For added protection choose a lipstick with a sun screen.选择防晒护唇膏来增强保护。 sun 太阳,日光来自古英语 sunne,太阳,来自 Proto-Germanic*sunnon,太阳,来自 PIE*suwen,变体(鼻音化) 形式自 PIE*saewel,照耀,照射,词源同 Sol,古罗马神话中的太阳神。 sunsun: [OE] Not surprisingly, considering the central importance of the sun to human life, the word for it in the vast majority of modern European languages goes back to a common Indo-European source – *sāu- or *su-. These variants have however differentiated into several distinct camps. The *sāu- form adopted an -lsuffix, and evolved into Greek hélios (source of English heliotrope), Latin sōl (whence French soleil, Italian sole, and Spanish sol, not to mention English solar, solarium, etc), Welsh haul, and Swedish and Danish sol.The *suform with an -l- ending has given Russian solnce, Czech slunce, Serbo-Croat sunce, etc. But the modern West Germanic languages have inherited the *su- form with an -n- suffix, giving German sonne, Dutch zon, and English sun.=> heliotrope, solar, solariumsun (n.)Old English sunne "sun," from Proto-Germanic *sunnon (cognates: Old Norse, Old Saxon, Old High German sunna, Middle Dutch sonne, Dutch zon, German Sonne, Gothic sunno "the sun"), from PIE *s(u)wen- (cognates: Avestan xueng "sun," Old Irish fur-sunnud "lighting up"), alternative form of root *saewel- "to shine; sun" (see Sol). Old English sunne was feminine (as generally in Germanic), and the fem. pronoun was used in English until 16c.; since then masc. has prevailed. The empire on which the sun never sets (1630) originally was the Spanish, later the British. To have one's place in the sun (1680s) is from Pascal's "Pensées"; the German imperial foreign policy sense (1897) is from a speech by von Bülow.sun (v.)1510s, "to set something in the sun," from sun (n.). Intransitive meaning "expose oneself to the sun" is recorded from c. 1600. Sun-bathing is attested from c. 1600." |
Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.
Next card: Front meaning sense french word latin forehead facade
Previous card: Drink german english germanic trinken dutch drinken related
Up to card list: coca 1-20200 english word,Image and sound