erudite
英 ['erʊdaɪt]
美 ['ɛrudaɪt]
英語の語源
- erudite
- erudite: [15] To be erudite is literally to be the opposite of ‘rude’. Latin rudis (source of English rude) meant ‘rough, unpolished’, and so ērudīre, a compound verb formed with the prefix ex- ‘out of, from’, signified ‘take the roughness out of’, hence ‘polish, teach’. Its past participle formed the basis of an adjective, ērudītus ‘(well) taught’, which as borrowed into English has acquired the greater gravitas of ‘learned’.
=> rude - erudite (adj.)
- early 15c., "learned, well-instructed," from Latin eruditus "learned, accomplished, well-informed," past participle of erudire "to educate, teach, instruct, polish," literally "to bring out of the rough," from assimilated form of ex- "out" (see ex-) + rudis "unskilled, rough, unlearned" (see rude). Related: Eruditely.
例文
- 1. He was never dull,always erudite and well informed.
- 彼はこれまで愚かではなく、博学多才で見識が多い。
- 2.Through hard work,he finally made himself into an erudite man.
- 彼は絶えず勉強してやっと通人になった。
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- 3. Erudite Park ( type ): Cultural and Creative Park campus.
- 博学園(タイプ):キャンパス文化創意園.
- 4.Se was erudite from childhood,good at writing and melody.
- 幼い頃から博学で多才で、良い文章、そして音律にも精通している。
- 5.This is an erudite old man.
- この学識豊かな老先生は、まさに今に通じている!
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