英単語

clearの意味・使い方・発音

clear

英 [klɪə] 美 [klɪr]
  • adj.澄み切った; 明瞭さ; 明晰さ; 潔白さ
  • vt.通過する;クリアにする;クリーンにする;スキップする
  • クリアにする
  • adv.はっきりと; 完全に
  • n. clear; クリアランス
  • n. (クリアな)人名;(英)Creel

語源


クリア

PIE*keleの「叫ぶ」「叫ぶ」が語源で、語源的にはcall、claimと同じ。 この語の意味は、明瞭な音から明瞭な光にまで及ぶ。

英語の語源


clear
clear: [13] Clear comes via Old French cler from Latin clārus (source also of English claret and clarion [14]). It has been suggested that clārus is related to calāre ‘call out’ (whence English council). Latin derivatives that have come down to English are clārificāre, from which English gets clarify [14], and clāritās, whence English clarity [16]. The Middle English spelling of the adjective is preserved in clerestory ‘upper storey of a church’ [15] (so named from its being ‘bright’ or ‘lighted’ with numerous windows).
=> claim, claret, clarion, clarity, clerestory, declare, low
clear (adj.)
late 13c., "bright," from Old French cler "clear" (of sight and hearing), "light, bright, shining; sparse" (12c., Modern French clair), from Latin clarus "clear, loud," of sounds; figuratively "manifest, plain, evident," in transferred use, of sights, "bright, distinct;" also "illustrious, famous, glorious" (source of Italian chiaro, Spanish claro), from PIE *kle-ro-, from root *kele- (2) "to shout" (see claim (v.)).

The sense evolution involves an identification of the spreading of sound and the spreading of light (compare English loud, used of colors; German hell "clear, bright, shining," of pitch, "distinct, ringing, high"). Of complexion, from c. 1300; of the weather, from late 14c.; of meanings or explanations, "manifest to the mind, comprehensible," c. 1300. (An Old English word for this was sweotol "distinct, clear, evident.") Sense of "free from encumbrance," apparently nautical, developed c. 1500. Phrase in the clear attested from 1715. Clear-sighted is from 1580s (clear-eyed is from 1529s); clear-headed is from 1709.
clear (v.)
late 14c., "to fill with light," from clear (adj.). Of weather, from late 14c. Meaning "make clear in the mind" is mid-15c., as is sense of "to remove what clouds." Meaning "to prove innocent" is from late 15c. Meaning "get rid of" is from 1530s.

Meaning "to free from entanglement" is from 1590s; that of "pass without entanglement" is from 1630s. Meaning "to leap clear over" is first attested 1791. Meaning "get approval for" (a proposal, etc.) is from 1944; meaning "establish as suitable for national security work" is from 1948. Related: Cleared; clearing.

To clear (one's) throat is from 1881; earlier clear (one's) voice (1701). To clear out "depart, leave" (1825), perhaps is from the notion of ships satisfying customs, harbor regulations, etc., then setting sail. To clear up is from 1620s, of weather; 1690s as "make clear to the mind." Clear the decks is what is done on a ship before it moves.
clear (adv.)
"quite, entirely, wholly," c. 1300, from clear (adj.).

例文


1. It was clear Cohen didn 't understand what Millard was driving at.
コーエンはミラードが何を言いたいのか分からないことが分かった。

2.The rabbis try to steer clear of political questions.
ラビたちは政治問題を避けようと努力している。

3.Dig over any ground that is clear of crops and plants.
作物も植物も植えていない土地を深掘りします。

4.Stewart was trying to clear a path for the stretcher.
スチュワートは担架の開路に努力している。

5.It seems clear that he has no reasonable alternative.
他に適切な選択肢がないことが明らかになったようだ。

頭文字