stationer
英 ['ste??(?)n?]
美['ste??n?]
- n. 文具店;文具商
IELTS
詞態(tài)變化
復數:?stationers;
中文詞源
stationer 文具商
station,局,所,商店,-er,人。因中世紀時,相比于大多數走街串巷賣小商品的小商小販而 言,文具店和書店通常在固定場所經營。
英文詞源
- stationer
- stationer: [15] In medieval Latin a statiōnārius was originally a ‘trader who kept a permanent stall’ (as opposed to an itinerant seller). The word was derived from Latin statiō ‘standing, keeping still’ (source of English station), which in the post-classical meaning evolved in meaning to ‘shop’. Such permanent shops were comparatively rare in the Middle Ages.
Of those that did exist, the commonest were bookshops, licensed by the universities, and so when English adopted the Latin term, it was used in the sense ‘bookseller’. It has since come down in the world somewhat to ‘seller of paper, pens, etc’ (a sense first recorded in the mid 17th century), but the earlier application is preserved in the name of the Stationers’ Company, a London livery company to which booksellers and publishers belong.
The derivative stationery dates from the 18th century.
=> station - stationer (n.)
- "book-dealer, seller of books and paper," early 14c. (late 13c. as a surname), from Medieval Latin stationarius "tradesman who sells from a station or shop," noun use of Latin stationarius (see stationary). Roving peddlers were the norm in the Middle Ages; sellers with a fixed location often were bookshops licensed by universities; hence the word acquired a more specific sense than its etymological one.