grave

          英 [gre?v] 美[ɡrev]
          • adj. 重大的;嚴肅的;黯淡的
          • n. 墓穴,墳?zāi)梗凰劳?/li>
          • vt. 雕刻;銘記
          • n. (Grave)人名;(英)格雷夫;(德、瑞典)格拉弗;(法)格拉夫;(俄、葡)格拉韋

          GRECET4TEM4IELTS考研CET6中頻詞核心詞匯

          詞態(tài)變化


          復數(shù):?graves;副詞:?gravely;

          中文詞源


          grave 墳?zāi)?/span>

          來自PIE*ghrebh, 刮,挖,詞源同carve, graph. 后該詞主要指墳?zāi)埂?/p>grave 重音符

          來自PIE*gwere, 重,詞源同barometer, guru, gravity. 用于音樂術(shù)語。

          英文詞源


          grave
          grave: Modern English has essentially two words grave. Grave ‘burial place’ goes back ultimately to prehistoric Indo-European *ghrebh- ‘dig’, which also produced Latvian grebt ‘hollow out’ and Old Church Slavonic pogreti ‘bury’. Its Germanic descendant had variants *grōb- (source of groove), *grub- (whence grub), and *grab-.

          This last formed the basis of *graban, from which have come the verbs for ‘dig’ in most Germanic languages, including German graben, Dutch graven, Swedish gr?va, and Danish grave. The English member of the family, grave, is now virtually obsolete as a verb (although its derivative engrave [16] survives); but its nominal relative grave, also formed from *grab-, is still very much with us. Grave ‘serious’ [16] comes via Old French grave from Latin gravis ‘heavy, important’, source also of English gravity and grief.

          Its application to a backward-leaning accent (as in è) comes from the original use of such an accent-mark to indicate low or deep intonation.

          => engrave, groove, grub; gravity, grief
          grave (n.)
          "excavation in earth for reception of a dead body," Old English gr?f "grave; ditch, trench; cave," from Proto-Germanic *graban (cognates: Old Saxon graf, Old Frisian gref, Old High German grab "grave, tomb;" Old Norse gr?f "cave," Gothic graba "ditch"), from PIE root *ghrebh- (2) "to dig, to scratch, to scrape" (source also of Old Church Slavonic grobu "grave, tomb"); related to Old English grafan "to dig" (see grave (v.)).
          "The normal mod. representation of OE. gr?f would be graff; the ME. disyllable grave, from which the standard mod. form descends, was prob. due to the especially frequent occurrence of the word in the dat. (locative) case. [OED]
          From Middle Ages to 17c., they were temporary, crudely marked repositories from which the bones were removed to ossuaries after some years and the grave used for a fresh burial. "Perpetual graves" became common from c. 1650. Grave-side (n.) is from 1744. Grave-robber attested from 1757. To make (someone) turn in his grave "behave in some way that would have offended the dead person" is first recorded 1888.
          grave (adj.)
          1540s, "influential, respected; marked by weighty dignity," from Middle French grave (Old French greve "terrible, dreadful," 14c.), from Latin gravis, "heavy, ponderous, burdensome, loaded; pregnant;" of matters, "weighty, important;" of sounds, "deep, low, bass;" figuratively "oppressive, hard to bear, troublesome, grievous," from PIE root *gwere- (2) "heavy" (cognates: Sanskrit guruh "heavy, weighty, venerable;" Greek baros "weight," barys "heavy in weight," often with the notion of "strength, force;" Old English cweorn "quern;" Gothic kaurus "heavy;" Lettish gruts "heavy"). In English, the sense "solemn, sober" is from 1580s; of immaterial things, "important, serious" 1590s. Greek barys (opposed to kouphos) also was used figuratively, of suffering, sorrow, sobbing, and could mean "oppressive, burdensome, grave, dignified, impressive." The noun meaning "accent mark over a vowel" is c. 1600, from French.
          grave (v.)
          "to engrave," Old English grafan "to dig, dig up; engrave, carve, chisel" (medial -f- pronounced as "v" in Old English; past tense grof, past participle grafen), from Proto-Germanic *grabanan (cognates: Old Norse grafa "to dig; engrave; inquire into," Old Frisian greva, Dutch graven "to dig, delve," Old High German graban, German graben, Gothic graban "to dig, carve"), from the same source as grave (n.). Its Middle English strong past participle, graven, is the only part still active, the rest of the word supplanted by its derivative, engrave.

          雙語例句


          1. Universities are facing grave problems because of diminishing resources.
          由于資源的減少,大學正面臨嚴峻的問題。

          來自柯林斯例句

          2. Two men were standing by the freshly dug grave.
          兩名男子站在新挖的墳?zāi)惯叀?/dd>

          來自柯林斯例句

          3. He did die a pauper and is buried in an unmarked grave.
          他死的時候一文不名,葬在一處無名墓穴中。

          來自柯林斯例句

          4. I have grave doubts that the documents tell the whole story.
          我對這些文件能否說明所有的問題深表懷疑。

          來自柯林斯例句

          5. She tore the rose apart and scattered the petals over the grave.
          她掰開玫瑰花,將花瓣撒在墳?zāi)股稀?/dd>

          來自柯林斯例句

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