ball

      英[b??l] 美[b?l]
      • n. 球;舞會
      • vi. 成團塊
      • vt. 捏成球形
      • n. (Ball)人名;(土)巴勒;(英、西)鮑爾;(法、德、俄、羅、捷)巴爾

      詞態變化


      復數:?balls;第三人稱單數:?balls;過去式:?balled;過去分詞:?balled;現在分詞:?balling;

      中文詞源


      ball 球,跳舞

      1.球,來自PIE *bhel(2), 膨脹,鼓,詞源同bawl, 碗。

      2.跳舞,來自PIE *gwele, 扔,投,見ballistics. 最早的舞蹈通常與狂熱的宗教儀式相關,因而詞義由扔,投過渡到舞蹈。

      英文詞源


      ball
      ball: There are two distinct words ball in English. The ‘round object’ [13] comes via Old Norse b?llr from a prehistoric Germanic *balluz (source also of bollock [OE], originally a diminutive form). A related form was Germanic *ballōn, which was borrowed into Italian to give palla ‘ball’, from which French probably acquired balle.

      Derivatives of this branch of the family to have reached English are balloon [16], from French ballon or Italian ballone, and ballot [16], from the Italian diminutive form ballotta (originally from the use of small balls as counters in secret voting). The Germanic stem form *bal-, *bul- was also the ultimate source of English bowl ‘receptacle’.

      The ‘dancing’ ball [17] comes from French bal, a derivative of the now obsolete verb bal(l)er ‘dance’, which was descended via late Latin ballāre from Greek ballízein ‘dance’. Related words in English include ballad(e) [14], which came via Old French from Proven?al balada ‘song or poem to dance to’, and ballet.

      => ballon, ballot, bollock; ballad, ballet
      ball (n.1)
      "round object," Old English *beal, from or corresponding to Old Norse bollr "ball," from Proto-Germanic *balluz (cognates: Old High German ballo, German Ball), from PIE root *bhel- (2) "to blow, inflate, swell" (see bole).

      Meaning "testicle" is from early 14c. Ball of the foot is from mid-14c. A ball as an object in a sports game is recorded from c. 1200; To have the ball "hold the advantage" is from c. 1400. To be on the ball is 1912, from sports. Ball-point pen first recorded 1946. Ball of fire when first recorded in 1821 referred to "a glass of brandy;" as "spectacularly successful striver" it is c. 1900.
      ball (n.2)
      "dancing party," 1630s, from French, from Old French baller "to dance," from Late Latin ballare "to dance," from Greek ballizein "to dance, jump about" (see ballistics). Hence, "very enjoyable time," 1945, American English slang, perhaps back to 1930s in black slang.
      ball (v.)
      1650s, "make into a ball," from ball (n.1). Sense of "to become like a ball" is 1713; that of "to copulate" is first recorded 1940s in jazz slang, either from the noun sense of "testicle" or "enjoyable time" (from ball (n.2)). Related: Balled; balling.

      雙語例句


      1. The ball fell straight to the feet of Klinsmann.
      球直接落到了克林斯曼的腳上。

      來自柯林斯例句

      2. This little ball of gold weighs a quarter of an ounce.
      這個小金球重0.25盎司。

      來自柯林斯例句

      3. Dave pulled a back muscle and could barely kick the ball.
      戴夫背部拉傷,幾乎沒法踢球。

      來自柯林斯例句

      4. Your partner should then pass the ball back to you.
      然后你的搭檔應該將球回傳給你。

      來自柯林斯例句

      5. The ball is made of rattan — a natural fibre.
      這個球是由一種天然纖維——省藤制成的。

      來自柯林斯例句


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