英単語

mustの意味・使い方・発音

must

英 [mʌst] 美 [mʌst]
  • aux.絶対に必要なもの。
  • n.絶対に必要なもの;未発酵のブドウジュース
  • n.(マスト)人名;(ハンガリー語)Musht;(ロシア語、スウェーデン語)Muster

語源


しなければならない

古英語のmotan「~する能力がある」「~する義務がある」、-st「過去分詞接尾辞」、原ゲルマン語 *mot「能力、力」、PIE *med「測定する、計る、手段を講じる」から。noblesse obligeと比較。

must ブドウジュース、ワイン、リキュール

ラテン語のvinum mustumから、新しいワイン、新鮮なワイン、mustusから、新鮮な、水のような、PIE*meusから、湿った、水のような、mistから、湿った。

英語の語源


must
must: English has three words must. By far the commonest is of course the verb, ‘have to’ [OE], which originated in Old English as the past tense of the now obsolete mūt ‘may, must’. It has relatives in German muss and Dutch moet, but its ultimate origins are not known for certain (there may be some distant link with Germanic ‘measure’-words, such as English mete, suggesting a semantic progression from an original ‘time measured out for doing something’, through ‘have time to do something’, ‘be able to do something’, and ‘be allowed to do something’ to ‘have to do something’). Must ‘unfermented grape juice for making into wine’ [OE] comes from Latin mustum ‘new wine’, a noun use of the adjective mustus ‘new’. Mustard is a derivative.

And the esoteric must ‘sexual frenzy in elephants, camels, etc’ [19] comes via Urdu from Persian mast ‘drunk’.

=> mustard
must (v.)
Old English moste, past tense of motan "have to, be able to," from Proto-Germanic *mot- "ability, leisure (to do something)" (cognates: Old Saxon motan "to be obliged to, have to," Old Frisian mota, Middle Low German moten, Dutch moeten, German müssen "to be obliged to," Gothic gamotan "to have room to, to be able to"), perhaps from PIE root *med- "to measure, to take appropriate measures" (see medical (adj.)). Used as present tense from c. 1300, from the custom of using past subjunctive as a moderate or polite form of the present.
must (n.1)
"new wine," Old English must, from Latin mustum (also source of Old High German, German most, Old French moust, Modern French mo?t, Spanish, Italian mosto), short for vinum mustum "fresh wine," neuter of mustus "fresh, new, newborn," perhaps literally "wet," and from PIE *mus-to-, from root *meus- "damp" (see moss).
must (n.2)
"mold," c. 1600, perhaps a back-formation of musty (q.v.).
must (n.3)
"male elephant frenzy," 1871, from Urdu mast "intoxicated, in rut," from Persian mast, literally "intoxicated," related to Sanskrit matta- "drunk, intoxicated," past participle of madati "boils, bubbles, gets drunk," from PIE root *mad- "wet, moist" (see mast (n.2)).
must (n.4)
"that which has to be done, seen, or experienced," 1892, from must (v.). As an adjective, "obligatory, indispensable," by 1912, from the noun; must-read is from 1959.

例文


1. You must have noticed how tired he sometimes looks.
彼がとても疲れていることに気づいているに違いありません。

2."His memory must be completely back,then?"ー"Just about."
「ということは、彼の記憶は完全に回復したに違いない?」—「差は多くない」

3.There must be any number of people in my position.
私のような状況にいる人はきっとたくさんいます。

4.I must have driven past that place thousands of times.
何千回も車でそこを通らなければなりません。

5. "You must come to Tinsley's graduation party." — "I'd be delighted.「
「ティンスリーの卒業パーティーにぜひ来てください」——「喜んでいます」

頭文字