英単語

grinの意味・使い方・発音

grin

英 [grɪn] 美 [ɡrɪn]
  • v. 歯を開いて笑う;大きく笑う
  • n. 歯を見せて笑う
  • n. (グリン)人名;(仏)Grin;(露?露?英)Grimm

語源


grin 歯を見せて笑う。

PIE*ghreiの「口を開ける」から。おそらくオノマトペで、笑い声の真似をすることから。grimと比較する。

英語の語源


grin
grin: [OE] Modern English grin and groan are scarcely semantic neighbours, but a possible common ancestor may provide the link: prehistoric Indo-European *ghrei-, which seems to have meant something like ‘be open’. It has been suggested as the source of a range of verbs which started off denoting simply ‘open the mouth’, but have since differentiated along the lines ‘make noise’ and ‘grimace’. Grin has taken the latter course, but close relatives, such as Old High German grennan ‘mutter’ and Old Norse grenja ‘howl’, show that the parting of the semantic ways was not so distant in time.

Old English grennian actually meant ‘draw back the lips and bare the teeth in pain or anger’. Traces of this survive in such distinctly unfunny expressions as ‘grinning skull’, but the modern sense ‘draw back the lips in amusement’ did not begin to emerge until the 15th century. Groan [OE], on the other hand, is firmly in the ‘make noise’ camp.

=> groan
grin (n.)
1630s, from grin (v.).
grin (v.)
Old English grennian "show the teeth" (in pain or anger), common Germanic (cognates: Old Norse grenja "to howl," grina "to grin;" Dutch grienen "to whine;" German greinen "to cry"), from PIE root *ghrei- "be open." Sense of "bare the teeth in a broad smile" is late 15c., perhaps via the notion of "forced or unnatural smile." Related: Grinned; grinning.

例文


1. All at once,Mick 's serious expression softened into a grin .
ミックの真剣な表情が一気に笑顔になった。

2.He had a grin on his face like a Cheshire Cat.
彼は口をゆがめてにこにこ笑っている。

3.Bobby looked at her with a sheepish grin .
ボビーは彼女を見てはにかんで笑った。

4.His face broke into a wide grin .
彼は明るい笑顔を浮かべていた。

5.He always had this inane grin .
彼はいつもこのように愚かに口を酸っぱくして笑っている。

頭文字