dizzy的词源
英文词源
- dizzy




- dizzy: [OE] Dizzy originally signified ‘foolish, stupid’, a meaning which from the 13th century retreated into dialectal use and has only comparatively recently returned to the mainstream language in the milder form ‘scatterbrained’. The now central sense ‘giddy’ is recorded from the 14th century. The word comes from a West Germanic base *dus-, which also produced Dutch duizelen ‘be giddy’. Its formal and semantic similarity to doze and tizzy are obvious, but no actual etymological link between the three seems ever to have been established.
- dizzy (adj.)




- Old English dysig "foolish, stupid," from Proto-Germanic *dusijaz (cognates: Low German düsig "dizzy," Dutch duizelen "to be dizzy," Old High German dusig "foolish," German Tor "fool," Old English dwæs, Dutch dwaas "foolish"), perhaps from PIE *dheu- (1) "dust, vapor, smoke; to rise in a cloud" (and related notions of "defective perception or wits").
Meaning "having a whirling sensation" is from mid-14c.; that of "giddy" is from c. 1500 and seems to merge the two earlier meanings. Used of the "foolish virgins" in early translations of Matthew xxv; used especially of blondes since 1870s. Related: Dizzily. - dizzy (v.)




- Old English dysigan, from source of dizzy (adj.). Related: Dizzied; dizzying.
中文词源
来自PIE*dheu, 尘土,烟雾,词源同dust,dull. 引申词义模糊的,眩晕的。
该词的英语词源请访问趣词词源英文版:dizzy 词源,dizzy 含义。
dizzy:头晕目眩的,眩晕的;(可能)使人头晕的
来源于西日耳曼语dus-