profane
英 [prə'feɪn]
美 [prə'fen]
- adj. 亵渎的;世俗的;异教的
- vt. 亵渎;玷污
IELTS GRE
1、pro- "before" + fan- + -e.
2、字面意思就是:out in front of the temple.
3、也就是:not admitted into the temple (with the initiates).
4、谐音“泼了粪”。
profane 世俗的,异教的,亵渎神灵的,亵渎,亵渎神灵来自拉丁语profanus,世俗的,不敬神的,来自pro,在前面,fano,庙宇,神庙,词源同festival,theist.字面意思即在庙前面的,引申词义过庙不拜的人或不允许进庙的人。后用于动词词义亵渎神灵,亵渎等。
- profane
- profane: [15] Anything that is profane is etymologically ‘outside the temple’ – hence, ‘secular’ or ‘irreligious’. The word comes via Old French prophane from Latin profānus, a compound adjective formed from the prefix prō- ‘before’ (used here in the sense ‘outside’) and fānum ‘temple’ (source of archaic English fane [14]).
=> fane - profane (v.)
- late 14c., from Old French profaner, prophaner (13c.) and directly from Latin profanare "to desecrate, render unholy, violate," from profanus "unholy, not consecrated" (see profane (adj.)). Related: Profaned; profaning.
- profane (adj.)
- mid-15c., "un-ecclesiastical, secular," from Old French profane (12c.) and directly from Latin profanus "unholy, not consecrated," according to Barnhart from pro fano "not admitted into the temple (with the initiates)," literally "out in front of the temple," from pro- "before" (see pro-) + fano, ablative of fanum "temple" (see feast (n.)). Sense of "unholy, polluted" is recorded from c. 1500. Related: Profanely.