英単語

chartの意味・使い方・発音

chart

英 [tʃɑːt] 美 [tʃɑrt]
  • n.チャート;図表;図面;図表
  • vt.図表にする;図に記す;詳細に計画する;記録する;(進歩や発展を)追跡する
  • n. (チャート)人名;(タイ)ツァー

語源


チャート

ラテン語のcharta(カード、紙)が語源で、語源的にはcard(カード)、cartel(カルテル)と同じ。

英語の語源


chart
chart: [16] English card and chart are related. Both come from Latin charta ‘paper’, but whereas card was routed via French carte, and for some reason changed its t to a d, chart was borrowed directly from the Latin word, in which the meaning ‘map’ had already developed. Latin charta originally denoted ‘leaf of the papyrus plant’, and developed the sense ‘paper’ because paper was originally made from papyrus (indeed the English word paper comes from papyrus).

It came from Greek khártēs, which is probably of Egyptian origin. It has provided the basis of a number of other English words besides card and chart, including charter [13], which comes via Old French from Latin chartula, a diminutive form of charta; carton [19], which comes from a French derivative, and was originally used in English for the ‘white disc at the centre of a target’; and, via Italian carta, cartel, cartoon, cartouche, and cartridge. Cartel [16] comes via French from the Italian diminutive form cartello, which meant literally ‘placard’.

It was used metaphorically for ‘letter of defiance’, and entered English with the sense ‘written challenge’. The modern commercial sense comes from German kartell. Cartouche [17] comes via French from Italian cartoccio. It originally signified a ‘cartridge’, made from a roll or twist of paper; the modern architectural sense of ‘ornamental tablet’ arose from its original scroll-like shape. Cartridge [16] is an English modification of cartouche; an intermediate form was cartage.

=> card, cartel, carton, cartoon, cartouche, cartridge, charter
chart (n.)
1570s, "map for the use of navigators," from Middle French charte "card, map," from Late Latin charta "paper, card, map" (see card (n.1)). Charte is the original form of the French word in all senses, but after 14c. (perhaps by influence of Italian cognate carta), carte began to supplant it. English used both carte and card 15c.-17c. for "chart, map," and in 17c. chart could mean "playing card," but the words have gone their separate ways and chart has predominated since in the "map" sense. In the music score sense from 1957.
chart (v.)
1837, "to enter onto a map or chart," from chart (n.). In the commercial recording sense, a reference to appearing on the "Billboard" magazine music popularity chart is by 1961. The chart itself was printed from c. 1942. Related: Charted; charting.

例文


1. The chart can then display the links connecting these groups.
この図はこれらのグループ間の関連を示しています。

2.The kinked line in chart 1 represents this pattern.
グラフ1の曲線がそのパターンを表している。

3.Consult the chart on page 44 for the correct cooking times.
44ページのグラフをめくって、正しい調理時間を調べてみましょう。

4.The numbers she put on the chart were 98.4,64,and 105.
彼女がグラフに書いた数字は98.4、64、105だった。

5.As the chart shows,it has failed abysmally.
グラフのように、それは惨敗した。

頭文字