reluctant的词源
英文词源
- reluctant




- reluctant: [17] To be reluctant about doing something is etymologically to ‘struggle against’ it. The word comes from the present participle of Latin reluctārī, a compound verb formed from the prefix re- ‘against’ and luctārī ‘struggle’. Among the first English writers to employ it was John Milton, who used it in the literal Latin sense, describing the writhing Satan: ‘a monstrous serpent on his belly prone, reluctant, but in vain’, Paradise Lost 1667. ‘Unwilling, averse’, a metaphorical extension which saw the light of day in Latin, made its debut in English at the start of the 18th century.
- reluctant (adj.)




- "unwilling," 1660s, from Latin reluctantem (nominative reluctans), present participle of reluctari (see reluctance). Related: Reluctantly. The Latin word is also the source of Spanish reluchante, Italian riluttante.
中文词源
来自拉丁语 reluctari,扭打,抵抗,来自 re-,相对,对着干,luctari,缠绕,扭打,词源同 leg,ineluctable.引申词义勉强的,不情愿的。
该词的英语词源请访问找单词词源英文版:reluctant 词源,reluctant 含义。
来自拉丁语 reluctari,扭打,抵抗,来自 re-,相对,对着干,luctari,缠绕,扭打,词源同 leg,ineluctable.引申词义勉强的,不情愿的。