wood的词源
英文词源
- wood
- wood: [OE] The ancestral meaning of wood is probably ‘collection of trees, forest’; ‘tree’ (now obsolete) and ‘substance from which trees are made’ are secondary developments. The word goes back to prehistoric Germanic *widuz, which also produced Swedish and Danish ved ‘firewood’, and it has Celtic relatives in Gaelic fiodh ‘wood, woods’, Welsh gwydd ‘trees’, and Breton gwez ‘trees’.
Its ultimate source is not known for certain, although it has been suggested that it may go back to the Indo- European base *weidh- ‘separate’ (source also of English pide and widow). According to this theory, it would originally have denoted a ‘separated’ or ‘remote’ piece of territory, near the outer edge or borders of known land; and since such remote, uninhabited areas were usually wooded, it came to denote ‘forest’ (forest itself may mean etymologically ‘outside area’, and the Old Norse word for ‘forest’, mork, originally signified ‘border area’).
- wood (n.)
- Old English wudu, earlier widu "tree, trees collectively, forest, grove; the substance of which trees are made," from Proto-Germanic *widu- (cognates: Old Norse viðr, Danish and Swedish ved "tree, wood," Old High German witu "wood"), from PIE *widhu- "tree, wood" (cognates: Welsh gwydd "trees," Gaelic fiodh- "wood, timber," Old Irish fid "tree, wood"). Out of the woods "safe" is from 1792.
- wood (adj.)
- "violently insane" (now obsolete), from Old English wod "mad, frenzied," from Proto-Germanic *woda- (cognates: Gothic woþs "possessed, mad," Old High German wuot "mad, madness," German wut "rage, fury"), from PIE *wet- (1) "to blow; inspire, spiritually arouse;" source of Latin vates "seer, poet," Old Irish faith "poet;" "with a common element of mental excitement" [Buck]. Compare Old English woþ "sound, melody, song," Old Norse oðr "poetry," and the god-name Odin.
中文词源
来自PIE*widhu,树,木柱,来自PIE*wi的扩大格,分开,词源同wide,with。可能来自其原义劈开的木材,柴火,或者来自树林在古代隔开文明与野蛮的比喻义。参考forest词源。
该词的英语词源请访问找单词词源英文版:wood 词源,wood 含义。
来自古英语wod,发狂的,来自PIE*wet,吹,启迪,唤醒灵魂,词源同vatic,Woden。引申义着魔的,发狂的,失去理智的。
来源于日耳曼语、古英语。
来自 PIE*widhu,树,木柱,来自 PIE*wi 的扩大格,分开,词源同 wide,with.可能来自其原义 劈开的木材,柴火,或者来自树林在古代隔开文明与野蛮的比喻义。参考 forest 词源。
来自古英语 wod,发狂的,来自 PIE*wet,吹,启迪,唤醒灵魂,词源同 vatic,Woden.引申词义 着魔的,发狂的,失去理智的。