英単語

cheerの意味・使い方・発音

cheer

英 [tʃɪə] 美 [tʃɪr]
  • vt.元気づける;喜ばせる;応援する
  • n.元気づける;陽気である;機嫌がよい;快活である
  • vi. 元気を出す;喜ぶ

語源


チア Cheer

語源は不明だが、歓声を模したオノマトペからきている可能性がある。

英語の語源


cheer
cheer: [13] Originally, cheer meant ‘face’. It came via Anglo-Norman chere ‘face’ and late Latin cara ‘face’ from Greek kárā ‘head’. As often happens, ‘face’ was taken as a metaphor of the mental condition causing the expression on it, so ‘be of good cheer’ came to mean ‘be in a good mood’; and gradually cheer grew to be used on its own for ‘happy frame of mind, cheerfulness’. It first appears in the sense ‘shout of applause or encouragement’ at the start of the 18th century, when Daniel Defoe identifies it as a nautical usage.
cheer (n.)
c. 1200, "the face," especially as expressing emotion, from Anglo-French chere "the face," Old French chiere "face, countenance, look, expression," from Late Latin cara "face" (source also of Spanish cara), possibly from Greek kara "head," from PIE root *ker- (1) "head, horn" (see horn (n.)). From mid-13c. as "frame of mind, state of feeling, spirit; mood, humor."

By late 14c. the meaning had extended metaphorically to "mood, mental condition," as reflected in the face. This could be in a good or bad sense ("The feend ... beguiled her with treacherye, and brought her into a dreerye cheere," "Merline," c. 1500), but a positive sense (probably short for good cheer) has predominated since c. 1400. Meaning "shout of encouragement" first recorded 1720, perhaps nautical slang (compare earlier verbal sense, "to encourage by words or deeds," early 15c.). The antique English greeting what cheer (mid-15c.) was picked up by Algonquian Indians of southern New England from the Puritans and spread in Indian languages as far as Canada.
cheer (v.)
late 14c., "to cheer up, humor, console;" c. 1400 as "entertain with food or drink," from cheer (n.). Related: Cheered; cheering. Sense of "to encourage by words or deeds" is early 15c. Which had focused to "salute with shouts of applause" by late 18c. Cheer up (intransitive) first attested 1670s.

例文


1. The colonel was rewarded with a resounding cheer from the men.
兵士は大佐に天を揺るがす歓呼の声を上げた。

2.A thousand supporters packed into the stadium to cheer them on.
1000人の支持者が体育館に割り込んで応援した。

3.I wrote that song just to cheer myself up.
私はその歌を書いて私自身を元気づけた。

4.I think he misses her terribly.You might cheer him up.
彼は彼女が恋しすぎると思う。あなたは彼を少し元気にすることができるかもしれません。

5.A timely bingo win brough some cheer to Juliet Little 's family yesterday.
昨日ビンゴで勝って、タイムリーにジュリエット?リトル一家に少しでも明るい気持ちをもたらした。

頭文字