英単語

fruitの意味・使い方・発音

fruit

英 [fruːt] 美 [frut]
  • n. 実を結ぶ。
  • vi.実を結ぶ
  • vt......を実らせる
  • n. (果物)人の名前;(フランス語)フリュー;(英語)フルート

語源


果実

fructus「果実」、PIE*bhrug「農作物の収穫、収穫」、さらにPIE*bher「壊す」から派生し、語源的にはbore「壊す」と同じ。もともとは土地の様々な収穫を指していたが、後に果実に固定されるようになった。

英語の語源


fruit
fruit: [12] English acquired fruit via Old French fruit from Latin frūctus, a source more clearly on display in fructify [14], fructose [19], etc. The underlying meaning of the Latin noun seems to have been ‘enjoyment of that which is produced’, for it came, like frūx (source of English frugal), from a base which also produced the verb fruī ‘enjoy’.

By classical times, however, it had passed from ‘enjoyment’ to the ‘product’ itself – the ‘rewards’ of an enterprise, the ‘return’ on an investment, or the ‘produce’ obtained from the soil or from farm animals. When it reached English this latter meaning had narrowed down somewhat, but it was still capable of being used far more broadly, for any ‘edible vegetable’, than we would do today, except in certain archaic expressions such as ‘fruits of the earth’.

The modern restriction to the edible reproductive body of a tree, bush, etc dates from the 13th century. English retains, of course, the more general sense ‘product, result’, although this is now usually expressed by the plural fruits.

=> fructify, frugal
fruit (n.)
late 12c., "any vegetable product useful to humans or animals," from Old French fruit "fruit, fruit eaten as dessert; harvest; virtuous action" (12c.), from Latin fructus "an enjoyment, delight, satisfaction; proceeds, produce, fruit, crops," from frug-, stem of frui "to use, enjoy," from suffixed form of PIE *bhrug- "agricultural produce," also "to enjoy" (see brook (v.)). The Latin word also is the source of Spanish fruto, Italian frutto, German Frucht, Swedish frukt-.

Originally in English meaning all products of the soil (vegetables, nuts, grain, acorns); modern narrower sense is from early 13c. Also "income from agricultural produce, revenue or profits from the soil" (mid-14c.), hence, "profit," the classical sense preserved in fruits of (one's) labor. Meaning "offspring, progeny, child" is from mid-13c.; that of "any consequence, outcome, or result" is from late 14c. Meaning "odd person, eccentric" is from 1910; that of "male homosexual" is from 1935, underworld slang. The term also is noted in 1931 as tramp slang for "a girl or woman willing to oblige," probably from the fact of being "easy picking." Fruit salad recorded from 1861; fruit-cocktail from 1900; fruit-bat by 1869.

例文


1. I tend to stick to fresh fruit for pudding.
私はいつも新鮮な果物でデザートを作ることにこだわっています。

2.The following summer the peach tree was laden with fruit .
翌年の夏には桃の木がいっぱいになった。

3.Eleanor 's work among the women will,I trust,bear fruit .
エレノアの仕事は女性に効果があると信じています。

4.When the fruit is mushy and cooked,remove from the heat.
果物が柔らかくなって煮あがると、火からおろす。

5.His room was jam-packed with fruit ,flowers,gifts etc.
彼の部屋には果物、花、贈り物などが山積みになっている。

頭文字