cavalier

英 [,kævə'lɪə] 美 [,kævə'lɪr]
  • n. 骑士;武士;对女人献殷勤
  • adj. 傲慢的;漫不经心的;无忧无虑的
  • n. (Cavalier)人名;(法)卡瓦利耶
GRE
星级词汇:
cavalier
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cavalier :日本动画片:卡哇伊——吸血鬼骑士。cavali=卡哇伊,er=者    可以google关键字:“卡哇依 骑士” 
Cavalier 骑士

来自拉丁词caballus, 马。即骑马的战士。

cavalier 漫不经心的

来自cavalier, 骑士。后用于贬义,自以人高人一等的。比较chivalrous, 彬彬有礼的。

cavalier
cavalier: [16] Etymologically, a cavalier is a ‘horseman’. The word comes via French cavalier from Italian cavaliere, which was derived from Latin caballus ‘horse’, either directly or via late Latin caballārius ‘horseman, rider’. From the beginning in English its connotations were not those of any old horserider, but of a mounted soldier or even a knight, and before the end of the 16th century the more general meaning ‘courtly gentleman’ was establishing itself.

This led in the mid-17th century to its being applied on the one hand to the supporters of Charles I, and on the other as an adjective meaning ‘disdainful’. Italian cavaliere was also the source of cavalleria ‘body of horsesoldiers’, which was borrowed into English in the 16th century, via French cavallerie, as cavalry. (The parallel form routed directly through French rather than via Italian was chivalry.)

=> cavalry, chivalry
cavalier (n.)
1580s, from Italian cavalliere "mounted soldier, knight; gentleman serving as a lady's escort," from Late Latin caballarius "horseman," from Vulgar Latin caballus, the common Vulgar Latin word for "horse" (and source of Italian cavallo, French cheval, Spanish caballo, Irish capall, Welsh ceffyl), displacing Latin equus (see equine).

Sense advanced in 17c. to "knight," then "courtly gentleman" (but also, pejoratively, "swaggerer"), which led to the adjectival senses, especially "disdainful" (1650s). Meaning "Royalist adherent of Charles I" is from 1641. Meaning "one who devotes himself solely to attendance on a lady" is from 1817, roughly translating Italian cavaliere-servente. In classical Latin caballus was "work horse, pack horse," sometimes, disdainfully, "hack, nag." "Not a native Lat. word (as the second -a- would show), though the source of the borrowing is uncertain" [Tucker]. Perhaps from some Balkan or Anatolian language, and meaning, originally, "gelding." The same source is thought to have yielded Old Church Slavonic kobyla.
cavalier (adj.)
"disdainful," 1650s, from cavalier (n.). Earlier it meant "gallant" (1640s). Related: Cavalierly.
1. The Editor takes a cavalier attitude to the concept of fact checking.
《编辑》杂志对于核对事实这一点采取无所谓的态度。

来自柯林斯例句

2. The government takes a cavalier attitude to the problems of prison overcrowding.
政府对监狱拥挤不堪的问题不闻不问。

来自《权威词典》

3. Nor was that wonderful, seeing how cavalier had been the captain's answer.
他的担心是不足为奇的,因为船长刚才的回答很不客气.

来自英汉文学 - 金银岛

4. He was a youth again in feeling -- a cavalier in action.
在情感上他又成了年轻人 -- 一个驰骋情场的骑士.

来自英汉文学 - 嘉莉妹妹

5. The cavalier defeated all the antagonists.
那位骑士打败了所有的敌手。

来自辞典例句