英単語

ringの意味・使い方・発音

ring

英 [rɪŋ] 美 [rɪŋ]
  • vi.鐘を鳴らす;鐘を撞く;反響させる;輪を形成する
  • n.鐘を鳴らす;鐘を鳴らす;鐘を鳴らす;鐘を鳴らす;鐘を鳴らす
  • vt.鳴らす;包む;鐘を鳴らす;陥れる
  • n. (環状の)人名;(英語、スペイン語、ドイツ語、ハンガリー語、スウェーデン語、フィンランド語の)森

語源


リング?リング、鐘の音

オノマトペ

リングサークル、リング、ラウンドアバウト、リング、ギャング、シンジケート

古英語のhring, 円, 環, 丸い物体, 原語ゲルマン語 *hringaz, 曲がった物体, 丸い物体, PIE *skrengh, sker, 曲がる, 回る, 語源は脊柱側湾症, 曲がり, ひび割れと同じ.

英語の語源


ring
ring: [OE] English has two distinct words ring. The one meaning ‘circle’ goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *khrenggaz, which also produced German, Dutch, Swedish, and Danish ring (not to mention the Finnish borrowing rengas). It may be related to Old Church Slavonic kragu ‘circle’. The Germanic form was taken over by Old French as ranc, from which English gets rank, and also as renc, which may be the source of English rink [18]. Ring ‘chime’ presumably goes back to a prehistoric Germanic ancestor that imitated the sound of clanging, and also produced German and Dutch ringen, Swedish ringa, and Danish ringe (the suggestion that it contains some reference to the circular motion of tolling bells is attractive, but has no basis in fact).
=> range, rank, rink
ring (n.1)
"circular band," Old English hring "small circlet, especially one of metal for wearing on the finger or as part of a mail coat; anything circular," from Proto-Germanic *hringaz "something curved, circle" (cognates: Old Norse hringr, Old Frisian hring, Danish, Swedish, Dutch ring, Old High German hring, German Ring), from PIE *(s)kregh- nasalized form of (s)kregh-, from root *(s)ker- (3) "to turn, bend," with wide-ranging derivative senses (cognates: Latin curvus "bent, curved," crispus "curly;" Old Church Slavonic kragu "circle," and perhaps Greek kirkos "ring," koronos "curved").

Other Old English senses were "circular group of persons," also "horizon." Meaning "place for prize fight and wrestling bouts" (early 14c.) is from the space in a circle of bystanders in the midst of which such contests once were held, "... a circle formed for boxers, wrestlers, and cudgel players, by a man styled Vinegar; who, with his hat before his eyes, goes round the circle, striking at random with his whip to prevent the populace from crowding in" [Grose, 1785]. Meaning "combination of interested persons" is from 1829. Of trees, from 1670s; fairy ring is from 1620s. Ring finger is Old English hringfingr, a compound found in other Germanic languages. To run rings round (someone) "be superior to" is from 1891.

Nursery rhyme ring a ring a rosie is attested in an American form (with a different ending) from c. 1790. "The belief that the rhyme originated with the Great Plague is now almost universal, but has no evidence to support it and is almost certainly nonsense" ["Oxford Dictionary of English Folklore"]. This proposal of connection dates only to the late 1960s.
ring (v.1)
"sound a bell," Old English hringan "sound, give a certain resonant sound when struck; announce by bells," from Proto-Germanic *khrengan (cognates: Old Norse hringja, Swedish ringa, Middle Dutch ringen), probably of imitative origin. Related: Rang; rung. Originally a weak verb, strong inflection began in early Middle English by influence of sing, etc. To ring down a theatrical curtain is from 1772, from the custom of signaling for it by ringing a bell. To ring up a purchase on a cash register is by 1937, from the bell that sounded. Specialized sense "give a resonant sound when struck as an indication of genuineness or purity," with transferred use (as in to ring hollow) is from 1610s.
ring (v.2)
"make a circle around," Old English ymbhringan, from the root of ring (n.1). Intransitive sense "gather in a ring" is mid-15c. Sense of "provide or attach a ring" is late 14c. Meaning "move in a circle around" is from 1825. Related: Ringed; ringing. Compare Frisian ringje, Middle Dutch and Dutch ringen, Old High German ringan, German ringen, Old Norse hringa, hringja.
ring (n.2)
1540s, "set of church bells," from ring (v.1). Meaning "a call on the telephone" is from 1900; to give (someone) a ring "call on the telephone" was in use by 1910. Meaning "a ringing tone" is from 1620s; specifically "the ringing sound made by a telephone" by 1951. Meaning "resonance of coin or glass as a test of genuineness" is from 1850, with transferred use (ring of truth, etc.).

例文


1. If you 'd like more information, ring the Hotline on 414 3929.
詳細については、ホットライン4143929に電話してください。

2.Friendship is much more important to me than a stupid old ring
友情は私にとって破れた指輪よりずっと重要です!

3.Any minute now,that phone is going to ring .
その電話はいつでも鳴る可能性があります。

4.She could ring for food and drink,laundry and sundry services.
彼女は電話で注文して、洗濯物を取りに来てもらうことができて、他のいろいろなサービスを呼ぶことができます。

5.Weather satellites have observed a ring of volcanic ash girdling the earth.
気象衛星は地球を周回する火山灰帯を観測した。

頭文字