中文字幕精品视频在线|中文字幕在线观看|亚洲v日本v欧美v在线播放|伊人网中文字幕

<nav id="3u6n6"></nav><samp id="3u6n6"><tr id="3u6n6"><track id="3u6n6"></track></tr></samp>
    <legend id="3u6n6"><fieldset id="3u6n6"></fieldset></legend>

      
      

    1. corsair

      英 [k??'se?; 'k??se?] 美[k?r's?r]
      • n. 海盜;海盜船

      暢通詞匯

      英文詞源


      corsair
      corsair: [15] Etymologically, a corsair is someone who goes on a ‘course’. Latin cursus (source of English course) was a derivative of Latin currere ‘run’, and meant originally a ‘run’. From this it developed to ‘journey’ and ‘expedition’ to ‘hostile or predatory expedition’, and eventually to the proceeds of such a raid, the ‘plunder’ or ‘booty’. In medieval Latin the term cursārius was derived from it to denote someone who took part in such raids, and this passed into English via Old Italian corsaro, Proven?al corsari, and Old French corsaire.
      => course, hussar
      corsair (n.)
      1540s, from Middle French corsaire (15c.), from Proven?al cursar, Italian corsaro, from Medieval Latin cursarius "pirate," from Latin cursus "course, a running," from currere "to run" (see current (adj.)). Meaning of the Medieval Latin verb evolved from "course" to "journey" to "expedition" to an expedition specifically for plunder.

      雙語例句


      1. Xebecs have a history of being corsair ships and they were often seen in the Mediterranean.
      歷史上它們常被作為海盜船只并且頻繁的在地中海一帶活動(dòng).

      來自互聯(lián)網(wǎng)

      2. It is said that 14,000 copies of The Corsair were sold in a day.
      據(jù)說,《海盜》一天就銷售了一萬四千冊.

      來自互聯(lián)網(wǎng)