英単語

hamの意味・使い方・発音

ham

英 [hæm] 美 [hæm]
  • n. ハム; アマチュア無線愛好家; くだらない俳優
  • vi. オーバーアクトする
  • vt.オーバーアクトする
  • adj.大げさな;気取った
  • n. (ハム)人の名前;(英語、スウェーデン語、セルビア語)ハム;(ラオス語)ハン;(カンボジア語)ハン

語源


ハムハム、演技過剰の下手な役者、アマチュア放送局員。

古英語のhamm、膝の曲げ伸ばし、膝頭から、語源的にはハムストリング、ハンブルク。ハム太り俳優の語源は、1880年のアメリカのバーレスク?ショー、The Ham-fat man(ハム太り男)で、彼の退屈で大げさな演技から名付けられた。アマチュア?ラジオ(amateur radio)の語源は、自虐的な意味でハムと短縮されたアマチュア無線から。

英語の語源


ham
ham: [OE] The etymological meaning of ham is ‘bend’ – it comes from Germanic *kham- ‘be crooked’ – and up until the 16th century it denoted exclusively the ‘part of the leg at the back of the knee’ (a portion of the anatomy now without a word of its own in English). Hamstring [16] reflects this original meaning. From the mid-16th century, it gradually extended semantically to ‘back of the thigh’ and hence ‘thigh’ generally, and by the 17th century it was being used for the ‘thigh of a slaughtered animal, especially a pig, preserved and used for food’. Ham in the sense ‘performer who overacts’, first recorded in the late 19th century, apparently comes from an earlier hamfatter ‘bad actor’, which may have been inspired by the Negro minstrel song ‘The Ham-fat Man’.
ham (n.1)
"thigh of a hog used for food" (especially salted and cured or smoke-dried), 1630s, extended from earlier sense " part of the human leg behind the knee; hock of a quadruped," from Old English hamm "hollow or bend of the knee," from Proto-Germanic *hamma- (cognates: Old Norse h?m, Middle Low German, Middle Dutch hamme, Old High German hamma), from PIE *kone-mo- "shin bone" (cognates: Greek kneme "calf of the leg," Old Irish cnaim "bone"). Ham-fisted (adj.) in reference to hard-hitting characters is from 1905; ham-handed "coarse, clumsy" is by 1896. With hammen ifalden "with folded hams" was a Middle English way of saying "kneeling."
ham (n.2)
"overacting inferior performer," 1882, American English, apparently a shortening of hamfatter (1880) "actor of low grade," which is said (since at least 1889) to be from the old minstrel show song, "The Ham-fat Man" (attested by 1856). The song, a comical black-face number, has nothing to do with acting, but the connection might be with the quality of acting in minstrel shows, where the song was popular (compare the definition of hambone in the 1942 "American Thesaurus of Slang," "unconvincing blackface dialectician"). Its most popular aspect was the chorus and the performance of the line "Hoochee, kouchee, kouchee, says the ham fat man."

Ham also had a sports slang sense of "incompetent pugilist" (1888), perhaps from the notion in ham-fisted. The notion of "amateurish" led to the sense of "amateur radio operator" (1919).
ham (v.)
"over-act in performance," 1933, from ham (n.2). Related: Hammed; hamming. As an adjective in this sense by 1935.

例文


1. Vacuum-packed ham slices should be unwrapped 30 minutes before serving.
真空包装されたハム片は、食べる30分前に包装を除去しなければならない。

2.Giovanni has the best Parma ham for miles around.
数マイル以内で、ジョヴァンニのパルマハムは最高だ。

3.I became a ham radio operator at the age of eleven.
私は11歳の時にアマチュア無線オペレーターになりました。

4.Kegan 's team are now seven points clear of West Ham .
キーガン率いるチームは現在、ウェストハム?ユナイテッドを7点リードしている。

5.I was eating ham and Swiss cheese on rye.
ハムとスイスチーズを挟んだライ麦パンを食べています。

頭文字