orient: English has two separate words orient, but they come ultimately from the same source: Latin orīrī ‘rise’ (from which English also gets abort and origin). Its present participle, oriēns ‘rising’, was used for the direction of the ‘rising sun’, and hence for the ‘east’, and passed into English via Old French as the adjective and noun orient [14].
The verb orient [18] was borrowed from French orienter, a derivative of the adjective orient. It originally meant ‘turn to face the east’, and was not used for ‘ascertain or fix the direction of’ until the 19th century. Orientate emerged in the mid-19th century, probably as a back-formation from orientation [19], itself a derivative of orient. => abort, origin
Orient (n.)
c. 1300, "the East" (originally usually meaning what is now called the Middle East), from Old French orient "east" (11c.), from Latin orientem (nominative oriens) "the rising sun, the east, part of the sky where the sun rises," originally "rising" (adj.), present participle of oriri "to rise" (see orchestra). The Orient Express was a train that ran from Paris to Istanbul via Vienna 1883-1961, from the start associated with espionage and intrigue.
orient (v.)
c. 1727, originally "to arrange facing east," from French s'orienter "to take one's bearings," literally "to face the east" (also the source of German orientierung), from Old French orient "east," from Latin orientum (see Orient (n.)). Extended meaning "determine bearings" first attested 1842; figurative sense is from 1850. Related: Oriented; orienting.
例文
1. The climbers stopped to orient themselves before descending the mountain.
登山者は一旦立ち止まって位置を特定し、それから山を下りる。
2.The people in the Orient are mainly yellow or brown.
東洋諸国の人種は主に黄色または茶色である。
3.They carried on trade in tea and spices with the orient .
彼らは東方諸国と茶葉と香料の商売をしている。
4.You can orient yourself by remembering that the hill is due north.
この丘が真北に位置していることを覚えておけば、あなたの位置を特定することができます。
5.We must orient our work to the needs of the people.