verse的词源
英文词源
- verse
- verse: [OE] Verse is one of a large family of English words that come ultimately from the Latin verb vertere or its past participial stem vers-. Others include versatile [17], version [16], versus [15], vertebra, vertical, and vertigo, as well as prefixed forms such as controversy [14], conversation, convert, perse, invert [16], pervert [14], and reverse [14].
Latin vertere itself came from the Indo-European base *wert-, which also produced English weird and the suffix -ward. Verse was borrowed from the Latin derivative versus ‘turning, turning of the plough’, hence ‘furrow’, and by further metaphorical extension ‘line, line of poetry’.
=> controversy, conversation, convert, perse, invert, pervert, reverse, subvert, versatile, version, versus, vertebra, vertical, vertigo, weird - verse (n.)
- late Old English (replacing Old English fers, an early West Germanic borrowing directly from Latin), "line or section of a psalm or canticle," later "line of poetry" (late 14c.), from Anglo-French and Old French vers "line of verse; rhyme, song," from Latin versus "a line, row, line of verse, line of writing," from PIE root *wer- (3) "to turn, bend" (see versus). The metaphor is of plowing, of "turning" from one line to another (vertere = "to turn") as a plowman does.
Verse was invented as an aid to memory. Later it was preserved to increase pleasure by the spectacle of difficulty overcome. That it should still survive in dramatic art is a vestige of barbarism. [Stendhal "de l'Amour," 1822]
The English New Testament first was pided fully into verses in the Geneva version (1550s). Meaning "metrical composition" is recorded from c. 1300; as the non-repeating part of a modern song (between repetitions of the chorus) by 1918.
The Negroes say that in form their old songs usually consist in what they call "Chorus and Verses." The "chorus," a melodic refrain sung by all, opens the song; then follows a verse sung as a solo, in free recitative; the chorus is repeated; then another verse; chorus again;--and so on until the chorus, sung for the last time, ends the song. [Natalie Curtis-Burlin, "Negro Folk-Songs," 1918]
中文词源
来自拉丁语versus,转,翻转,词源versus,toward。引申词义诗行,韵文。
该词的英语词源请访问找单词词源英文版:verse 词源,verse 含义。
我国旧进把依靠写作、抄写等谋生叫做“笔耕”,很自然地把写字同耕地联系起来。英语的verse,追溯其根源,也恰好是同耕地有联系的。它是从拉丁语词versus来的,意思是犁子翻过的“犁沟”。把写作比成“耕地”是很形象生动的,不仅其辛苦雷同,而且其动作也颇相近。
词根词缀: -vers-转 + -e
来自拉丁语 versus,转,翻转,词源 versus,toward.引申词义诗行,韵文。