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Исконные Непродуктивные префиксы современного английского языка
Приложение 6. Семантическое развитие слов angel – Greek angelos ‘bringer of messages’ arena – Lat ‘sand’; Coliseum was strewn with sand to absorb the blood arrive – Fr-Lat ‘to come by water’ assassin – Arabic orig. a sect of Oriental religious and military fanatics founded in Persia in 1090. They were called ‘Hashashashins’ (from ‘hashish’ they used before engaging in massacres) bachelor – Fr-Lat Lat ‘baccalaria’ – herd of cows; ‘baccalarius’ – a youth who attended cows balmy – euphemism for mentally deranged may be is a corruption of Barming Asylum (a house for the mad in Kent in 1832) barbarian – Greek Greeks described any foreign people whose speech they couldn’t understand and which sounded to them like ‘ba-ba’ bedlam – now ‘chaos’; from the name of a famous London mental hospital once situated where Liverpool St Station now stands beefeater – the Yeomen of the Guard at the Tower of London; in mediaeval England eater – servant; loaf-eater – a menial servant who waited on the superior servants; the highest class of servant – the fighting man, who ate beef – the beefeater Bible – Lat biblia, a diminutive of biblos ‘the inner bark of papyrus’; orig. meant any book made of papyrus, paper biro – now ‘a ball-point pen’ named after Laszlo Biro, its Hungarian inventor blackleg – the sporting men of low type invariably wore black leggings or top boots blackmail – Scottish mail – ‘rent’ or ‘tax’; orig. was a tribute paid by Border farmers (border between England and Scotland) to free-booters in return for protection from molestation from either side of the Border bluestocking – from a literary club formed by a Mrs. Montague in 1840. Benjamin Stillingfleet who wore blue stockings, was a regular visitor, and they became the recognized emblem of membership boor – Dutch orig. a peasant or farm worker, now ‘a rude, awkward, or ill-mannered person’ bread – orig. a fragment or a small piece bribe – Fr lumps of bread given to beggars budget – Fr-Celt orig. a sack full of money, the various sums appropriated to special purposes being sorted into little pouches butler – orig. a man in charge of the wine cab. – shortening for Fr. cabriolet (a one-horse cab) cabinet – It cabinetto ‘a little room’ (kings took their advisors into their private rooms – their cabinet) camp – Fr-It-Lat campus ‘exercising ground for the army’ candidate – Lat candidus ‘white’ (candere – ‘to shine’); in Roman empire whose who sought high office in the State vested themselves in white togas (emp. purity of character and intentions) canteen – It cantina ‘a wine cellar’ cash – Fr casse a case or box in which money was kept chap – shortening for chapman – one who sold goods in a cheap market cheap – OE ceap ‘a purchase, a bargain’; Cf. German kaufen churl – OE ceorl ‘a peasant, freeman’, now ‘a surly, ill-bred person, boor’ citizen – Fr orig. a native or inhabitant, esp. a freeman or burgess, of a town or city client – Lat in ancient Rome a client was a plebeian under the patronage of a patrician. He performed certain services for the patron who was thereby obliged to protect his life and interests clumsy – Sc too cold to feel anything corn – Lat granum ‘grain’ country – Fr-Lat contra ‘opposite, over against’ coward – Fr couard – Lat cauda ‘a tail’; to turn tail – to act as a coward damask – Arabic a rich silk brocade from Damascus dandelion – Fr dent-de-lion ‘tooth of the lion,’ from the jagged tooth-like edges of the leaves – like the teeth of a lion daughter – Skr ‘milker’ deer – OE deor ‘wild animal’ derrick – after Thos. Derrick, London hangman of the early 17th century, orig. applied to a gallows drawing-room – orig. the withdrawing room to which the ladies withdrew after dinner, leaving the men to their wine and cigars earn (one’s living) – derived from the old German word for ‘harvest’; Dutch erne; Bavarian arnen eccentric – orig. ‘to deviate from the centre’, from the Lat ex centrum ‘otherwise, not according to rule’ economy – now is used mostly for national or international politics, orig. belonged primarily to the house, being derived from the Greek oikos ‘house’ and nomos ‘a law’ enthusiast – Greek entheos ‘one who is inspired by a God’ fare – orig. a journey for which passage money was paid; it has come to mean the money paid for the passage, and the person paying the money is also called the fare farewell – an expression of goodwill to a traveler starting out on a fare (journey) – the wish that the journey would end in all well fee – OE feoh ‘cattle’, which in those days was one of the principal means of making a payment (Lat pecunia ‘money’ was derived in a similar way from pecus ‘cattle’ and capital from capita ‘head of cattle’) fellow – Sc one who lays down money in a joint undertaking field – OE feld ‘a place from which the trees had been felled, or cleared’; hence the derivational element field, feld in Sheffield, Chesterfield, Earlsfield fond – ME contr. of fonned ‘foolish’, p.p. of fonnen ‘to be foolish’ fool – Lat follis ‘a windbag’, the plural folles ‘puffed-out cheeks’ foreign – Fr-Lat foranus ‘foreign’, orig. external; from foras ‘out-of-doors’, orig. acc. pl. of OLat fora ‘a door’ forget-me-not – the ‘remembrance’ legend of the little flower is derived from a tragedy of the Danube, which may or may not be true. A German Knight to please his lady climbed down the bank of the Danube to pick the flower, fell into the swift-flowing stream and, impended by his armour, was swept away and drowned. But not before he was able to pick the flower and throw it to his lady on the bank with the words (his last) ‘Vergiß mein nicht’ (forget me not) fowl – OE fugol ‘any bird’ gentleman – in feudal days there was a strict class distinction between the labourer, the yeomen, and the man of ‘gentle birth’, though not noble birth. The gentle birth entitled him to bear arms girl – OE orig. a child of either sex (gyrel ‘a long dress’) glad – OE ‘bright, shining’ glove – OE glof ‘the palm of the hand’ good-bye – ‘God be with you’; the French say adieu (à Dieu – I commend you to God) harem – Arabic something forbidden hockey – the name is derived from the diminutive of hook, the club used in the game being hooked slightly at the end holland – a linen or cotton cloth used for clothing, window shades, first made in Holland holocaust – Greek holos ‘whole’ and kaio ‘I burn’. In its Biblical sense it was a sacrifice completely consumed by fire honeymoon – the name is derived from the custom in Northern Europe of drinking hydromel, or diluted honey (mead), a fermented liquor made from honey, for thirty days (a moon, month) after the marriage feast hospital – Fr-Lat orig. a place to receive guests or travelers journal – Fr ‘daily’ idiot – Greek idios ‘private,’ ‘one’s own’, the Greek idiotes signifying a man in private life, as distinguished from one holding an official position. The assumption was that the latter would be of higher education and intellect. Now it means one who is weak in mind or deficient in common sense imbecile – Lat in ‘on’ and bacillus ‘a staff’, thus ‘one who leans on a stick’; it would be more sensibly to say it meant ‘weak in strength’ (not in mind) infantry – Lat infans ‘an infant’; in the days of chivalry youths of good family, with their attendants, marched on foot in the rear of the mounted knights thus becoming the forerunners of the infantry of the army khaki – Hindustani khak ‘colour of the soil, dusty’ king – OE cyn ‘a people’, or ‘a nation’. The suffix –ing meant ‘of’, in the sense of ‘son of’; thus cyning ‘son of the nation, or of the people’ knave – OE ‘a boy, esp. a boy in someone’s employ’. Cf. knight ‘a man servant’. Knight has become an honour, knave – a dishonour lavender – Lat lavendula; from lavare ‘to wash’. Lavender was at one time used in the washing of linen which was too delicate to be beaten on the stones in the streams. It was accordingly rinsed well in soap and water, laid across a line, and beaten gently with long springs of lavender leaf – before the invention of paper, writing was recorded on the leaves of certain plants; the name still stands for a page of writing legend – Lat legenda, from legere ‘to read’; the Legenda was a book containing the narratives of the lives of the Saints, read in the religious houses limousine – Fr limousine ‘cloak’, the idea was a ‘cloaked’ car, cars having previously been open lumber-room – orig. Lombard room. The Lombards were the first pawn-brokers in England. Their rooms, packed with all manner of goods not wanted by their original owners, were known as Lombard rooms mac – the prefix to Scottish names is Gaelic for ‘son of’; MacGregor was the son of Gregor mackintosh – the raincoat is so called after the Scotsman who invented the waterproofing of material marshal – Fr-Lat ‘a horse servant’: marah ‘horse’+ scalh ‘servant’ mausoleum – now the name is given to any large and stately tomb; orig. the tomb of Mausolus, a large and magnificent edifice adorned with sculpture, and built at the order of his Queen, Artemisia. Erected at Halicarnassus about 350 B.C., it is ranked as one of the Seven Wonders of the World May – Romans called it magius, later Maius, from the Sanskrit mah ‘to grow’. Later, still, however, it was held sacred to Maia, mother of Mercury, and sacrifices were offered on the first day of the month meat – OE food; MnE edible flesh of killed animals melodrama – Greek melos ‘a song’ and drama ‘a play’; melodrama was originally a play in which music was used, but was of minor importance mentor – Greek ‘adviser’; Mentor was the loyal friend and adviser of Odysseus, and teacher of his son, Telemachus; now 1. a wise, loyal adviser; 2. a teacher or coach mesmerism – so called after Franz Anton Mesmer (1733 – 1815), an Austrian doctor, who introduced into Paris a theory of animal magnetism as a cure minister – Fr-Lat ‘a servant, attendant’ monger – is derived from the Mediaeval English mong ‘a mixture’, ‘an association’ and the OE mangere ‘one who trades’. Thus orig. it was one who traded, or sold, a mixture of commodities in association with one another morocco – a fine soft leather made orig. in Morocco, from goatskins tanned with sumac naughty – is composed of the OE na ‘not’ and wiht ‘thing’, and orig. meant ‘worthless, good for nothing’ nephew – Lat nepos ‘a grandson’. It meant grandchild, or descendant in Early English. Niece, from the Lat neptis ‘a granddaughter’ omnibus – Lat omnibus ‘for all’ Oxford – in Domesday Book is called Oxeneford – a ford for the passage of oxen across the River Isis pagan – now used to describe a non-believer in Christianity. It is an adaptation of the Lat paganus ‘a villager,’ ‘rustic’. It was used of rustics chiefly by the Roman soldiery, and expressed their contempt of people, who being so far removed from the cities, had little knowledge of Roman mythology panama (hat) – after Panama (city), once a main distributing center parlour – Fr parler ‘to talk’; orig. a room set apart in a monastery where conversation was allowed and visitors admitted patient – Lat patiens, the present participle of patior ‘I suffer,’ ‘I endure’ pen – Lat penna ‘a feather’; the earliest pens were quills – feathers cut into the form of pens with a pen-knife pencil – Lat penicellum ‘a paintbrush’ perfume – Lat per fumum ‘from smoke’; the original perfume was obtained from the combustion of aromatic wood and gums to counteract the offensive smell of burning flesh of old-time sacrifices person – Lat persona ‘actor’s face mask’ philander – today is a reproach of a man who always makes love to all women, but never seriously; orig. Greek philos ‘love’ and aner (Gen. andros) ‘a male’, ‘a husband’, meaning ‘lover-of-a-man’, a dutiful and loving wife pipe – orig. a musical instrument poacher – OE poke ‘a sack or bag’; orig. ‘a person who bagged or pocketed somebody else’s property’ poison – Fr-Lat potio ‘any drink’ pretty – OE ‘crafty, wily’ purchase – Fr pour-chasser ‘to hunt for’; it belongs to the days when there were no shop windows with goods on show, and goods required had to be hunted for quasi – Lat quasi ‘as if it were’ queen – OE cwen ‘a woman’ queue – Fr ‘tail’ quick – OE cwic ‘living’ quisling – after Vidkun Quisling (1887-1945), Norwegian politician who betrayed his country to the Nazis and became its puppet ruler; now – a traitor raglan – a type of overcoat, after Lord Raglan (1788-1855), British commander-in-chief in the Crimean War ransack – Danish rann ‘a house’ and saikja ‘to seek, search’; orig. ‘to search a house thoroughly’ ready – OE orig. prepared for riding reduce – orig. ‘to bring back’ Lat re ‘back’ and duco ‘I lead’ rendezvous – Fr rendez ‘betake’ and vous ‘yourself’: ‘go to …’ (the place appointed) reply – Lat replicare ‘to turn back’ rival – Lat rivalis ‘one living on the opposite bank of the river’ (from rivus ‘a stream’) room – OE rum ‘space’ sad – OE orig. firm, heavy, resolute; Cf. ‘sad bread’ salad – orig. green vegetables seasoned with salt, salad meaning ‘salted’ scenery – Greek skene ‘a covered place’; so the painted scenery of the stage was applied to the scenery of Nature school – Greek scole ‘leisure’ science – Lat scire ‘to know’; the present participle is sciens (scientis) scissors – Lat cisorum (from caedere ‘to cut’) scoundrel – OE scunner, scunean ‘to loathe, to shun’ search – Lat circare ‘to go about in a circle’ shahid – Arabic a Muslim martyr shilling – OE scyllan ‘to divide’; the original shilling was marked with a deeply indented cross, dividing it into halves or quarters, which could be broken off to the amount desired shrew, shrewd – both come from ME shrew ‘a type of mouse with a long sharp nose, whose bite was believed in those days to be poisonous’ silhouette – so named after Etienne de Silhouette, Chancellor of the Exchequer to Louis XV He was the first to have his photograph outlined, side view, on black paper sinister – Lat sinister ‘left’; from the ancient days left side has been regarded with superstitious fears. Nothing good could ever come from the left. An illegitimate child was said to have been born on the left side of the bed. A morganatic marriage (one between a royal person and a woman of less station, in which the wife does not acquire her husband’s rank, and neither she, nor any of her issue, have any claims to his title or inheritance) was described as a left-handed marriage. To step over a doorway with the left foot was as ill omen. Thus, left became sinister side, and was thus looked upon all through the ages sky – Sc cloud snob – the word is invented by Thackeray to describe George IV; he is said to have coined it from the entry against the names of ‘commoners’ in the lists of colleges – ‘s.nob’ (which stood for sine nobilitate ‘not of noble blood’). In Cambridge, snob is still the college word for a townsman as distinct from a gownsman (a member of the University) soldier – Lat solidus ‘a piece of money’; orig. the Roman soldier was a hireling, or mercenary, engaged with money to fight son – Skr sunu, derived from su ‘to beget’ speculate – Lat speculari ‘to spy from a watch-tower’ spinster – OE ‘one who span’; the women of the Anglo-Saxon household span, in winter, the fleeces which had been taken from the sheep during the summer. That was their expected task. It was a recognized axiom that no woman of that period was fitted to be a wife until she had spun for herself her body, table and bed linen. Thus the task of spinning was generally delegated to the unmarried women of the house who were the spinners or the spinsters starve – OE steorfan ‘to die, perish’ stepmother, stepfather – the prefix indicating that the person referred to is not a blood relation, but a relative only marriage; OE steop, which is connected with astieped ‘bereaved’ steward – OE stigweard: stigo ‘a sty’ and weard ‘ward’. It dates back to the days when most of England was forest, and the chief wealth of the Saxon landowner was pigs. The pigs were driven home from the forest feeding grounds at night and penned in their sties, stig-weard a man being employed to keep watch and ward over them stock – OE stocc ‘a stick’ or ‘wood’, because wood had to be accumulated and stored for the winter. Thus, anything stored came to be known as stock style – Lat a pointed stick for writing suicide – Lat sui ‘of oneself’ and cidium ‘a slaying’ (caedere ‘to slay’) supercilious – Lat super ‘over’ and cilium ‘eyebrow’; literally ‘having an elevated eyebrow’ surname – Lat super (through Fr sur) ‘over, above’ and nomen ‘name’ swindle – German Schwindler ‘a cheating company promoter’ taboo – the Maori (New Zealand) tapu, tabu ‘sacred’; it was a religious ceremony which could be imposed only by a priest tailor – Lat taleare ‘to cut’ teach – OE ‘to show, demonstrate’ tête-à-tête – Fr tête ‘head’; ‘a conversation head-to-head’ thing – OE ‘that which is said’ tide – OE tid ‘time’ token – OE ‘a mark’; in ME ‘the evidence’ torment – Lat tortus, past participle of torquere ‘to twist’, from which also torture, extort are derived town – OE tun ‘an enclosure’ trousers – Fr trousser ‘to truss, to girt in’ trousseau – Fr trousse ‘a bundle’ tumbler – the name for a drinking glass, has existed from the glasses of the sixteenth century – the earliest glasses. They had a rounded or pointed base and could stand only on being emptied and inverted. Any other way they ‘tumbled over’ ugly – Sc frightening umbrella – Lat umbra ‘shade’ university – Lat universitas ‘the whole’; when the word was first coined in the twelfth century, it was done so because of the entire, and the whole, range of literature taught in the colleges – the universitas literarum utopia – Sir Thomas More, in 1516, wrote a romance of that title. Utopia was an island enjoying the utmost perfection in life, society politics and law; the name comes from the Greek ou ‘not’ and topos ‘a place’, so the meaning is ‘no place’ valet – Fr vaselet, an abbreviation of vassalet ‘vassal’ verdict – Lat vere dictum ‘a true saying’ veto – Lat ‘I forbid’ villain – orig. a serf attached to the villa of his lord volume – Lat volumen ‘a wreath’ or ‘a roll’. Historically, a volume was a roll of parchment, papyrus, etc., containing written matter. Before the days of books and poems the records of history were written on sheets of paper. These were fastened together lengthways and rolled up week – the days of the week are of Anglo-Saxon origin, as follows: Sunday (OE Sunnandaeg) ‘the day of the sun’; Monday (OE Monandaeg) ‘the day of the moon’; Tuesday (OE Tiwesdaeg) ‘the day of Tiw, God of War’; Wednesday (OE Wodnesdaeg) ‘the day of Woden, God of Storms’; Thursday (OE Thunresdaeg) ‘the day of Thor, God of Thunder’; Friday (OE Frigendaeg) ‘the day of Freya, Goddess of Marriage’; Saturday (OE Saterdaeg) ‘the day of Saturn, God of Time’ wife – OE wif ‘a woman’; now – a married woman
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