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    1. sake

      英 [se?k] 美[se?k]
      • n. 目的;利益;理由;日本米酒
      • n. (Sake)人名;(羅)薩克;(日)酒(姓)

      CET4TEM4IELTS考研TOEFLCET6中頻詞核心詞匯

      詞態(tài)變化


      復數(shù):?sakes;

      中文詞源


      sake 原因,起因,目的

      來自古英語 sacu,訴訟,爭辯,來自 Proto-Germanic*sako,起訴,事件,事情,來自 PIE*sag,

      sake 日本清酒

      來自日語(可能是日式漢語)sake,酒,也可發(fā) shu 音,代指清酒 seishu,清酒。比較 shogun, 來自日式漢語將軍。

      英文詞源


      sake
      sake: English has two nouns sake. The older, now used only in the expression for the sake of, was originally an independent fully-fledged noun, with a range of meanings including ‘strife’, ‘guilt’, and ‘lawsuit’ [OE]. Its use in for the sake of, which emerged in the 13th century, probably arose out of its legal usage, and thus denoted originally ‘on behalf of a litigant’s case in a lawsuit’.

      The word itself came from a prehistoric Germanic *sakō ‘a(chǎn)ffair, thing, charge, accusation’, which also produced German sache ‘a(chǎn)ffair, subject, lawsuit’. It is also represented in English forsake [OE], which etymologically means ‘a(chǎn)ccuse, quarrel with’, hence ‘decline’, and finally ‘give up’; keepsake [18], etymologically something that is kept for the ‘sake’ of the giver; and namesake [17], which probably arose from the notion of two people being linked or associated for the ‘sake’ of their names. Seek is a distant relation. Sake, or saki, ‘rice wine’ [17] was borrowed from Japanese, where it literally means ‘a(chǎn)lcohol’.

      => forsake, keepsake, namesake, seek, seize
      sake (n.2)
      "Japanese rice liquor," 1680s, from Japanese sake, literally "alcohol."
      sake (n.1)
      "purpose," Old English sacu "a cause at law, crime, dispute, guilt," from Proto-Germanic *sako "affair, thing, charge, accusation" (cognates: Old Norse s?k "charge, lawsuit, effect, cause," Old Frisian seke "strife, dispute, matter, thing," Dutch zaak "lawsuit, cause, sake, thing," German Sache "thing, matter, affair, cause"), from PIE root *sag- "to investigate, seek out" (cognates: Old English secan, Gothic sokjan "to seek;" see seek).

      Much of the word's original meaning has been taken over by case (n.1), cause (n.), and it survives largely in phrases for the sake of (early 13c.) and for _______'s sake (c. 1300, originally for God's sake), both probably are from Norse, as these forms have not been found in Old English.

      雙語例句


      1. "For heaven's sake!" Dot expostulated. "They're cheap and they're useful."
      “拜托!”多特反駁道,“它們又便宜又管用?!?/dd>

      來自柯林斯例句

      2. Economic change for its own sake did not appeal to him.
      經(jīng)濟變化本身對他并沒有吸引力。

      來自柯林斯例句

      3. For God's sake shut up. I can't hear myself think!
      看在老天爺?shù)姆萆?,閉嘴吧。吵死我了!

      來自柯林斯例句

      4. Well, for Heaven's sake, you don't need to apologize.
      噢,看在上天的份上,你不用道歉.

      來自柯林斯例句

      5. Carol managed a few proper snivels for the sake of appearance.
      為了做做樣子,卡蘿爾適時地抽了幾下鼻子。

      來自柯林斯例句