英単語

pageの意味・使い方・発音

page

英 [peɪdʒ]
  • n. ページ;記録;大きな出来事、時代;付き人
  • vi. 本のページをめくる。
  • vi. 本のページをめくる;拾い読みする
  • n. (ページ)人名;(S. )Pach; (E. )Page; (I. )Paige; (F. )Pajer; (F. )Paree

語源


ページ ページ

ラテン語の pagina, ページ, ページを本に固定する, PIE*pag, 固定する, から, 語源的には fang, 盟約と同じ.

ページポーター、使用人、騎士見習い、呼び出し、召喚。

ラテン語のpagus, 村, 村人, PIE*pag, 固定する, 印を付ける, から来ており、語源的にはfang, 盟約と同じである。 後に貴族の家庭で、少年やポーターボーイとして仕える田舎の若い少年や、訓練中の若い騎士に使われるようになった。call, summon, summonsなどの語源。

英語の語源


page
page: English has two nouns page. The one that now denotes ‘boy servant’ originally meant simply ‘boy’ [13]. It was borrowed from Old French page, itself an adaptation of Italian paggio. This is generally assumed to have come from Greek paidíon, a diminutive form of pais ‘boy, child’ (source of English encyclopedia, paediatric [19], paedophilia [20], pedagogue [14], pederast [18], etc). Page of a book [15] depends ultimately on the notion of ‘fastening’.

It comes via Old French page from Latin pāgina, a derivative of the base *pāg- ‘fix’ (source also of English pagan, pale ‘stake’, etc). This was used for ‘vine-stakes fastened together into a trellis’, which perhaps inspired its metaphorical application to a ‘column of writing’ in a scroll. When books replaced scrolls, pāgina was transferred to ‘page’.

=> encyclopedia, paediatric, pedagogue; pagan, pale, pole
page (n.1)
"sheet of paper," 1580s, from Middle French page, from Old French pagene "page, text" (12c.), from Latin pagina "page, leaf of paper, strip of papyrus fastened to others," related to pagella "small page," from pangere "to fasten," from PIE root *pag- "to fix" (see pact).

Earlier pagne (12c.), directly from Old French. Usually said to be from the notion of individual sheets of paper "fastened" into a book. Ayto and Watkins offer an alternative theory: vines fastened by stakes and formed into a trellis, which led to sense of "columns of writing on a scroll." When books replaced scrolls, the word continued to be used. Related: Paginal. Page-turner "book that one can't put down" is from 1974.
page (n.2)
"youth, lad, boy of the lower orders," c. 1300, originally also "youth preparing to be a knight," from Old French page "a youth, page, servant" (13c.), possibly via Italian paggio (Barnhart), from Medieval Latin pagius "servant," perhaps ultimately from Greek paidion "boy, lad," diminutive of pais (genitive paidos) "child."

But OED considers this unlikely and points instead to Littré's suggestion of a source in Latin pagus "countryside," in sense of "boy from the rural regions" (see pagan). Meaning "youth employed as a personal attendant to a person of rank" is first recorded mid-15c.; this was transferred from late 18c. to boys who did personal errands in hotels, clubs, etc., also in U.S. legislatures.
page (v.1)
"to summon or call by name," 1904, from page (n.2), on the notion of "to send a page after" someone. Related: Paged; paging.
page (v.2)
"to turn pages," 1620s, from page (n.1). Related: Paged; paging.

例文


1. The correct answers can be found at the bottom of page 8.
正解は8ページの末尾にあります。

2. Page is well versed in many styles of jazz.
ペイジは多様なスタイルのジャズに精通している。

3.Be sure to read about how mozzarela is made,on page 65.
モザレラチーズがどのように作られているか、65ページ目に必ず見てください。

4.He handed each of them a page of photos.
彼は彼ら一人一人に写真を1枚ずつ渡した。

5.A single word at the foot of a page caught her eye.
ページの下部の1文字が彼女の注目を集めている。

頭文字