sweat
英 [swet]
美 [swɛt]
- vt. 使出汗;流出;使干苦活;剥削;藉出汗减轻;焦急地期待
- n. 汗;水珠;焦急;苦差使
- vi. 出汗;辛苦工作;懊恼;结水珠
CET4 TEM4 考 研 CET6
1. 谐音“湿外套”------出汗过后,自然会把外套弄湿。
2. sweater (汗衫) => sweat.
sweat 汗水,汗珠,出汗,流汗来自古英语 swat,流汗,出汗,来自 Proto-Germanic*swatitaz,汗水,来自 PIE*sweid,汗水,词 源同 exude,sudorific.引申诸相关词义。
- sweat
- sweat: [OE] Sweat is part of a widespread family of ‘sweat’-words that goes back ultimately to the prehistoric Indo-European base *sweid-, *swoid-. Other members include Greek hidrós, Latin sūdor (source of English exude [16]), Welsh chwys, Latvian sviēdri, and Sanskrit svédas. Amongst its Germanic descendants was *swaitjan, which evolved into German schweissen ‘weld’, Dutch zweeten ‘sweat’, and English sweat. Swot [19] originated as a dialectal variant of sweat.
=> exude, swot - sweat (v.)
- Old English swætan "perspire," also "work hard," from Proto-Germanic *swaitjan "to sweat," from the source of sweat (n.). Compare Frisian swette, Dutch zweeten, Danish svede, German schwitzen. Meaning "to be worried, vexed" is recorded from c. 1400. Transitive sense is from late 14c. Related: Sweated; sweating. Sweating sickness was a sudden, often-fatal fever, accompanied by intense sweating, that struck England 1485 and returned periodically through mid-16c., described in the original citation (a chronicle from 1502) as "a grete deth and hasty."
- sweat (n.)
- Old English swat "perspiration, moisture exuded from the skin," also "labor, that which causes sweat," from Proto-Germanic *swaitaz "sweat" (cognates: Old Saxon, Old Frisian swet, Old Norse sveiti, Danish sved "sweat," Swedish svett, Middle Dutch sweet, Dutch zweet, Old High German sweiz, German Schweiß), from PIE *sweid- (2) "to sweat" (cognates: Sanskrit svedah "sweat," Avestan xvaeda- "sweat," Greek hidros "sweat, perspiration," Latin sudor, Lettish swiedri, Welsh chwys "sweat").
A widespread set of Slavic words (Polish, Russian pot "sweat") is from Old Church Slavonic potu, related to peku "heat," cognate with Latin coquere.
The Old English noun became Middle English swote, but later altered to the current form under the influence of the verb. Sweat of (one's) brow as a symbol of toil is from Gen. iii:19. Sweat equity is from 1968. Colloquial no sweat "no problem" attested from 1963.
- 1. Do you sweat a lot or flush a lot?
- 你常出汗或是脸上常发烫吗?
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. She looked up at me with pinpricks of sweat along her hairline.
- 她抬头看了我一眼,发际渗出细密的汗珠。
来自柯林斯例句
- 3. He awoke from his sleep in a cold sweat.
- 他从睡梦中醒来,浑身冒着冷汗。
来自柯林斯例句
- 4. Both horse and rider were dripping with sweat within five minutes.
- 没过五分钟,马和骑手都大汗淋漓。
来自柯林斯例句
- 5. He wiped away the beads of sweat on his forehead.
- 他擦去了额头上的汗珠。
来自柯林斯例句