soil
英 [sɒɪl]美[sɔɪl]
- n. 土地;土壤;国家;粪便;务农;温床
- vt. 弄脏;污辱
- vi. 变脏
词态变化
复数: soils;第三人称单数: soils;过去式: soiled;过去分词: soiled;现在分词: soiling;
中文词源
soil 大地,陆地,国土,领土
来自中古英语 soile,大地,陆地,来自拉丁语 solum,脚掌,地面,陆地,来自 PIE*swol,脚掌, 词源同 sole,脚掌。引申词义国土,领土。
soil 污泥,土壤,粪泥,肥料,弄脏,玷污来自古英语 sol,污泥,土壤,粪泥,来自 Proto-Germanic*sula,污泥,泥土,来自 PIE*sul,泥 浆,浓稠液体,词源同 sully,弄脏,玷污。
英文词源
- soil
- soil: Soil ‘ground’ [14] and soil ‘make dirty’ [13] are distinct words. The former comes from Anglo-Norman soil ‘land’. This was the formal descendant of Latin solium ‘seat’, but its use for ‘land’ appears to have arisen from confusion with Latin solum ‘ground’. Etymologically, to soil something virtually amounts to making a pigsty of it. The verb comes via Old French souiller from Vulgar Latin *suculāre ‘make dirty’, a derivative of Latin suculus ‘little pig’. This was a diminutive form of sūs ‘pig’, a relative of English sow. French souiller may also be the source of English sully [16].
=> sow, sully - soil (v.)
- early 13c., "to defile or pollute with sin," from Old French soillier "to splatter with mud, to foul or make dirty," originally "to wallow" (12c., Modern French souillier), from souil "tub, wild boar's wallow, pigsty," which is from either Latin solium "tub for bathing; seat," or Latin suculus "little pig," from sus "pig." Literal meaning "to make dirty, begrime" is attested from c. 1300 in English. Related: Soiled; soiling.
- soil (n.1)
- c. 1300, originally "land, area, place," from Anglo-French soil "piece of ground, place" (13c.), from an merger or confusion of Old French sol "bottom, ground, soil" (12c., from Latin solum "soil, ground;" see sole (n.1)), Old French soeul, sueil "threshold, area, place" (from Latin solium "seat"), and Old French soil, soille "a miry place," from soillier (see soil (v.)).
Meaning "place of one's nativity" is from c. 1400. Meaning "mould, earth, dirt" (especially that which plants grow in) is attested from mid-15c. - soil (n.2)
- "filth, dirt, refuse matter, sewage, liquid likely to contain excrement," c. 1600, earlier "miry or muddy place" (early 15c.), from Old French soille "miry place," from soillier (v.) "to make dirty," and in part a native formation from soil (v.). This is the sense in archaic night-soil.
双语例句
- 1. The constitution prohibits them from military engagement on foreign soil.
- 宪法禁止他们在外国采取军事行动。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. The chalky soil around Saumur produces the famous Anjou wines.
- 索米尔周围的白垩质土壤出产著名的安茹葡萄酒。
来自柯林斯例句
- 3. She gathered loose soil and let it filter slowly through her fingers.
- 她捧起疏松的泥土,任其缓缓地从指间漏下。
来自柯林斯例句
- 4. The soil washed from the hills is silting up the hydroelectric dams.
- 从山上冲刷下来的泥土就要让水电大坝淤塞了。
来自柯林斯例句
- 5. The soil must not be overwatered, especially during the first few weeks.
- 切忌土壤过涝,尤其在最初几周。
来自柯林斯例句