bone的词源

英文词源

boneyoudaoicibaDictYouDict
bone: [OE] Somewhat unusually for a basic body-part term, bone is a strictly Germanic word: it has no relatives in other Indo-European languages. It comes from a presumed Germanic *bainam, which also produced for example German bein and Swedish ben. These both mean ‘leg’ as well as ‘bone’, suggesting that the original connotation of *bainam may have been ‘long bone’.
bone (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
Old English ban "bone, tusk," from Proto-Germanic *bainam (cognates: Old Frisian ben, Old Norse bein, Danish ben, German Bein). No cognates outside Germanic (the common PIE root is *os-; see osseous); the Norse, Dutch, and German cognates also mean "shank of the leg," and this is the main meaning in Modern German, but English never seems to have had this sense.
bone (v.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
especially in bone up "study," 1880s student slang, probably from "Bohn's Classical Library," a popular series in higher education published by German-born English publisher Henry George Bohn (1796-1884) as part of a broad series of "libraries" he issued from 1846, totaling 766 volumes, continued after 1864 by G. Bell & Sons.

中文词源

bone:骨头

词源不详。

该词的英语词源请访问趣词词源英文版:bone 词源,bone 含义。

bone:骨,骨骼

bone是一个纯粹日耳曼语词汇,在印欧语的其它语族中找不到其"宗亲";德语bein(腿,骨)和瑞典语ben(腿,骨)共同指向一个日耳曼语词源bainam(长骨)。