vain的词源
英文词源
- vain
- vain: [13] Latin vānus meant ‘empty’ (it was related to vacuus ‘empty’, source of English vacuum). It passed into English via Old French vain in the sense ‘worthless’, and the main modern meaning ‘conceited’ did not develop until the 17th century. Also from vānus come English evanescent, vanish, vanity [13], and vaunt [14], and wane, want, etc go back to the same ultimate Indo-European base.
=> evanescent, vanish, vanity, vaunt, wane, want - vain (adj.)
- c. 1300, "devoid of real value, idle, unprofitable," from Old French vain, vein "worthless, void, invalid, feeble; conceited" (12c.), from Latin vanus "empty, void," figuratively "idle, fruitless," from PIE *wa-no-, from root *eue- "to leave, abandon, give out" (cognates: Old English wanian "to lessen," wan "deficient;" Old Norse vanta "to lack;" Latin vacare "to be empty," vastus "empty, waste;" Avestan va- "lack," Persian vang "empty, poor;" Sanskrit una- "deficient," Armenian unain "empty").
Meaning "conceited, elated with a high opinion of oneself" first recorded 1690s in English; earlier "silly, idle, foolish" (late 14c.). Phrase in vain "to no effect" (c. 1300, after Latin in vanum) preserves the original sense. Related: Vainly; vainness. Compare also vainglory.
中文词源
来自拉丁语vanus,空的,虚无的,来自PIE*wa-no,分开的,遗弃的,词源同vacate,want,wane.
该词的英语词源请访问找单词词源英文版:vain 词源,vain 含义。
vain:徒劳的,徒然的;虚荣的,自负的
借用于拉丁语van.us(空的)在古法语中派生的vain。
-van-空 → vain
来自拉丁语 vanus,空的,虚无的,来自 PIE*wa-no,分开的,遗弃的,词源同 vacate,want,wane.