passage
英 ['pæsɪdʒ]
美 ['pæsɪdʒ]
- n. 通路(記事); 回廊; アクセス道路
- n. (通路)人名;(英)Passage;(仏)Pasaje
語源
passage パス、パイプpassから、通る、通過する。
英語の語源
- passage
- passage: [13] Passage goes back to the Latin ancestor of modern French. Here, the noun *passāticum was derived from passāre (source of English pass). This found its way into English via Old French passage. At first it simply meant ‘passing’ or ‘way along which one passes’; the sense ‘segment of music, text, etc’ did not emerge in English until the 16th century.
=> pass - passage (n.)
- early 13c., "a road, passage;" late 13c., "action of passing," from Old French passage "mountain pass, passage" (11c.), from passer "to go by" (see pass (v.)). Meaning "corridor in a building" first recorded 1610s. Meaning "a portion of writing" is from 1610s, of music, from 1670s.
例文
- 1. It 's been 200 years since the passage of the Bill of Rights.
- 「人権法案」が可決されて200年になる。
- 2.The gaslights in the passage would be on,turned low.
- 廊下のガス灯はつけているはずで、暗く調整されています。/
- 3.Two men suddenly elbowed a passage through the shopers.
- 2人の男が突然買い物客の中に肘で道を押し出した。/dd>
- 4.Mr Thomas would be given safe passage to and from Jaffna.
- トーマスさんは安全にジャフナーを行き来することができます。/
- 5.Harry steped into the passage and closed the door behind him.
- ハリーは通路に入り、ドアを閉めた。
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