scathe
英 [ske?e]
美
- vt. 損傷;損害
- n. 損傷;危害;損害
GRE暢通詞匯
詞態(tài)變化
第三人稱單數(shù):?scathes;過去式:?scathed;過去分詞:?scathed;現(xiàn)在分詞:?scathing;
助記提示
1. 諧音“死烤死、死砍死、使烤死、使砍死”。
2. scythe => scathe.
2. scythe => scathe.
中文詞源
scathe 傷害,損傷
來自古諾斯語 skatha,傷害,來自 Proto-Germanic*skath,傷害,來自 PIE*sket,傷害,可能進(jìn)一 步來自 PIE*sek,砍,切,詞源同 segment,sharp.常見于復(fù)合詞 unscathed,未受傷害的。
英文詞源
- scathe
- scathe: [12] Scathe is now encountered virtually only in the negative form unscathed (first recorded in the 14th century), but originally it was a verb in its own right, meaning ‘harm’. It was borrowed from Old Norse skatha, which was descended from a prehistoric Germanic *skathōjan (source also of German and Dutch schaden ‘harm’). This was formed from a base *skath-, which has links with Irish scathaim ‘mutilate, lame’ and Greek askēthés ‘unhurt’.
- scathe (v.)
- c. 1200, from Old Norse skaea "to hurt, harm, damage, injure," from Proto-Germanic *skath- (cognates: Old English sceatian "to hurt, injure," Old Saxon skathon, Old Frisian skethia, Middle Dutch scaden, Dutch schaden, Old High German scadon, German schaden, Gothic scatjan "to injure, damage"), from PIE root *sket- "to injure." Only cognate outside Germanic seems to be in Greek a-skethes "unharmed, unscathed."
It survives mostly in its negative form, unscathed, and in figurative meaning "sear with invective or satire" (1852, usually as scathing) which developed from the sense of "scar, scorch" used by Milton in "Paradise Lost" i.613 (1667).
雙語例句
- 1. The child scathe its fingers while playing with a match.
- 那孩子玩火柴時(shí)把手指燒傷了。
來自辭典例句
- 2. Results CRP very important and meaningful to bacteria inflammation and scathe. It also has significant rule.
- 結(jié)果:C- 反應(yīng)蛋白對于細(xì)菌引起的炎癥,損傷有著重要的臨床意義且有確切的規(guī)律.
來自互聯(lián)網(wǎng)