英単語

pinkの意味・使い方・発音

pink

英 [pɪŋk] 美 [pɪŋk]
  • n. pink; incarnation, exemplar; stonecrop; figurehead
  • vt.刺す、突く、突く; ピンク色にする; 顔を赤くする
  • vi.ピンク色にする
  • adj.ピンク色の; より過激な; ダイアンサス科; 赤面する
  • n. (ピンク色の)人名;(英語、ドイツ語、ハンガリー語)ピンク色;(フランス語)パンケーキ

語源


ピンク色の突き刺す、刺す、貫通する、バルサム、ピンク色。

語源は不明だが、おそらく中フランス語のpiquer(刺す、突き刺す、貫通する)、語源はpike(杭、ピック)と同じか、ラテン語のpungere(刺す、突き刺す、貫通する)、語源はpuncture(穿刺)と同じ。派生語源はperforate(穿孔する、ギザギザにする)で、後にバルサムの花を指すようになり、花びらが不揃いでギザギザなのでそう呼ばれるようになった。ピンク。

英語の語源


pink
pink: English has three distinct words pink. The colour term [18] appears to have come, by a bizarre series of twists, from an early Dutch word meaning ‘small’. This was pinck (source also of the colloquial English pinkie ‘little finger’ [19]). It was used in the phrase pinck oogen, literally ‘small eyes’, hence ‘half-closed eyes’, which was borrowed into English and partially translated as pink eyes.

It has been speculated that this was a name given to a plant of the species Dianthus, which first emerged in the abbreviated form pink in the 16th century. Many of these plants have pale red flowers, and so by the 18th century pink was being used for ‘pale red’. Pink ‘pierce’ [14], now preserved mainly in pinking shears, is probably of Low German origin (Low German has pinken ‘peck’).

And pink (of an engine) ‘make knocking sounds’ [20] is presumably imitative in origin.

pink (n., adj.)
1570s, common name of Dianthus, a garden plant of various colors, of unknown origin. Its use for "pale rose color" first recorded 1733 (pink-coloured is recorded from 1680s), from one of the colors of the flowers. The plant name is perhaps from pink (v.) via notion of "perforated" petals, or from Dutch pink "small" (see pinkie), from the term pinck oogen "half-closed eyes," literally "small eyes," which was borrowed into English (1570s) and may have been used as a name for Dianthus, which sometimes has pale red flowers.

The flower meaning led (by 1590s) to a figurative use for "the flower" or finest example of anything (as in Mercutio's "Nay, I am the very pinck of curtesie," Rom. & Jul. II.iv.61). Political noun sense "person perceived as left of center but not entirely radical (i.e. red)" is attested by 1927, but the image dates to at least 1837. Pink slip "discharge notice" is first recorded 1915. To see pink elephants "hallucinate from alcoholism" first recorded 1913 in Jack London's "John Barleycorn."
pink (v.)
c. 1200, pungde "pierce, stab," later (early 14c.) "make holes in; spur a horse," of uncertain origin; perhaps from a Romanic stem that also yielded French piquer, Spanish picar (see pike (n.2)). Or perhaps from Old English pyngan and directly from Latin pungere "to prick, pierce" (see pungent). Surviving mainly in pinking shears.

例文


1. He was holding a cloth that dripped pink drops upon the floor.
彼は布を持っていて、布の上にピンク色の水が床に滴り落ちている。

2.A glass of red wine keeps you in the pink .
一杯のワインは健康に良い。

3.Businesses are now more aware of the importance of the " pink pound ".
現在、商人は同性愛者の消費力、いわゆる「ピンクポンド」の重要性をより意識している。Mr.Long was now cutting himself a piece of the pink cake.
朗さんは自分のためにピンクのケーキを切っています。

5.She was wearing a flimsy pink dress that streamed out behind her.
彼女が着ていた薄手のピンク色のワンピースは後ろで踊っていた。

頭文字