英単語

drillの意味・使い方・発音

drill

英 [drɪl] 美 [drɪl]
  • n. 訓練;ドリル;播種機
  • vi. 穴をあける;訓練する
  • vt.ドリルを使う;訓練する;播種する
  • n. (ドリル)人の名前;(ドイツ語、英語)ドリル

語源


訓練

PIE*tereの「回す」「挽く」が語源で、語源的にはturnと同じ。 訓練の意味は、軍事訓練、前方への旋回、後方への旋回などに由来すると思われる。

英語の語源


drill
drill: English has no fewer than four separate words drill, all of them comparatively recent acquisitions. Drill ‘make a hole’ [16] was borrowed from Middle Dutch drillen, but beyond that is history is obscure. The word’s military application, to ‘repetitive training’, dates from earliest times, and also existed in the Dutch verb in the 16th century; it seems to have originated as a metaphorical extension of the notion of ‘turning round’ – that is, of troops marching around in circles. Drill ‘small furrow for sowing seeds’ [18] may come from the now obsolete noun drill ‘rivulet’, but the origins of this are purely conjectural: some have linked it with the obsolete verb drill ‘trickle’. Drill ‘strong fabric’ [18] gets its name from originally being woven from three threads.

An earlier form of the word was drilling, an adaptation of German drillich; this in turn was descended from Latin trilix, a compound formed from tri- ‘three’ and līcium ‘thread’ (trellis is a doublet, coming ultimately from the same Latin source). (Cloth woven from two threads, incidentally, is twill [14], or alternatively – from Greek dímitos – dimity [15].) Drill ‘African baboon’ [17] comes from a West African word.

It occurs also in the compound mondrill [18], the name of a related baboon, which appears to have been formed with English man.

=> trellis; mandrill
drill (n.1)
"tool for making holes," 1610s, from Dutch dril, drille "a hole, instrument for boring holes," from drillen "to bore (a hole), turn around, whirl" (see drill (v.)).
drill (n.2)
"small furrow," 1727; also "machine for sowing seeds" (1731), from obsolete drill "rill, trickling stream" (1640s), which is of unknown origin; perhaps connected to drill (n.1).
drill (n.4)
"West African baboon species," 1640s, perhaps from a native word (compare mandrill).
drill (n.3)
kind of coarse, twilled cloth, 1743, from French drill, from German drillich "heavy, coarse cotton or linen fabric," from Old High German adjective drilich "threefold," from Latin trilix (genitive trilicis) "triply twilled" (see trellis). So called in reference to the method of weaving it.
drill (v.)
c. 1600 (implied in drilling), from Dutch drillen "to bore (a hole), turn around, whirl," from Proto-Germanic *thr- (cognates: Middle High German drillen "to turn, round off, bore," Old Engish tyrel "hole"), from PIE *tere- (1) "to turn, rub" (see throw (v.)). Sense of "to instruct in military exercise" is 1620s (also in Dutch drillen and in the Danish and German cognates), probably from the notion of troops "turning" in maneuvers. Extended noun sense of "the agreed-upon procedure" is from 1940. Related: Drilled.

例文


1. A plug had been inserted in the drill hole.
ドリル穴に栓が入っている。

2.The drill should be slowly rotated to ensure a clean hole.
ドリルは、ドリル穴の平らさと滑らかさを保証するためにゆっくりと回転しなければならない。

3.It took five years to drill down to bedrock.
基岩にドリルするのに5年かかった。

4.The dentist commenced to dig, drill and finally fill the offending tooth.
歯科医は、問題のある歯に穴を掘って、最後にそれを補うまで穴をあけ始めた。

5.His hands were clasped behind him like a drill sergeant.
彼は両手を後ろに背負って教官のようにしている。

頭文字