英単語

laceの意味・使い方・発音

lace

英 [leɪs] 美 [les]
  • n. レース; 縁飾り; 少量の蒸留酒
  • vt.レースで飾る;紐を結ぶ
  • vi.結ぶ
  • n. (レースで)人の名前;(イタリア語で)レイチェル

語源


レース、レース、レース。

ラテン語のlacereから、誘う、誘惑する、語源的にはdelicious, illicitと同じ。 派生語源:網、罠、後に網を編むのに使われるロープや紐を指し、後にレース、紐などを指すのに使われる。

英語の語源


lace
lace: [13] Lace originally meant ‘noose’ or ‘snare’, and its underlying semantic connections are not with ‘string’ or ‘thread’ but with ‘entrapment’ or ‘enticement’. Its ultimate source was Latin laqueus ‘noose’, which was related to the verb lacere ‘lure, deceive’ (source of English delicious and elicit). This passed into Vulgar Latin as *lacium, which in due course diversified into Italian laccio, Spanish lazo (source of English lasso [19]), and French lacs.

It was the latter’s Old French predecessor, laz or las, that gave English lace. The sense ‘noose’ had died out by the early 17th century, but by then it had already developed via ‘string, cord’ to ‘cord used for fastening clothes’. ‘Open fabric made of threads’ emerged in the mid-16th century. Latch [14] is thought to be distantly related.

=> delicious, elicit, lasso, latch
lace (n.)
early 13c., laz, "cord made of braided or interwoven strands of silk, etc.," from Old French laz "a net, noose, string, cord, snare" (Modern French lacs), from Vulgar Latin *lacium, from Latin laqueum (nominative laqueus) "noose, snare" (source also of Italian laccio, Spanish lazo), a trapping and hunting term, probably from Italic base *laq- "to ensnare" (compare Latin lacere "to entice"). Later also "net, noose, snare" (c. 1300); and "piece of cord used to draw together the edges of slits or openings in an article of clothing" (late 14c., as in shoelace). The "ornamental net pattern" meaning is first recorded 1550s. As an adjective, lace-curtain "middle class" (or lower-class with middle-class pretensions), usually is used in reference to Irish-Americans, is attested by 1928.
lace (v.)
c. 1200, "fasten (clothing, etc.) with laces and ties," from Old French lacier, from laz (see lace (n.)). Also "tighten (a garment) by pulling its laces" (early 14c.). To lace coffee, etc., with a dash of liquor (1670s) originally was used of sugar, and comes via the notion of "to ornament or trim." Related: Laced; lacing. Laced mutton was "an old word for a whore" [Johnson].

例文


1. I am wearing a plaid nightgown trimed with white lace .
私は白いレースのついたチェックのパジャマを着ています。

2.The nightdress has handmade lace round the armholes and neckline.
この女性用パジャマの袖口と襟元には手編みレースがはめ込まれている。

3.Slip-on shoes are easier to put on than lace -ups.
足踏みはストラップ靴よりも履きやすい。

4.She finally found the perfect gown,a beautiful creation trimmed with lace .
彼女はついに理想的なドレスを見つけた——レースをあしらった美しいロングドレス。

5.Fred liked to lace his conversation with military terms.
フレッドは会話の中で時々軍事用語をいくつか飛び跳ねるのが好きだ。

頭文字