英単語

scratchの意味・使い方・発音

scratch

英 [skrætʃ] 美 [skrætʃ]
  • n. 擦り傷; ひっかき傷; かすれる音; 走り書き
  • adj.下書きをする;でっち上げる;たまたまする
  • vt.ひっかく;こすりだす;すくいとる;らくがきする
  • vi.ひっかく;ひっかき傷をつける;ひっかき音を立てる;生計をやりくりする;競争から退く

語源


スクラッチ

おそらく中英語のscrten「ひっかく」、最終的にはPIE*sker「刻む」「切る」「皮をむく」「削る」が語源。

英語の語源


scratch
scratch: [15] Early Middle English had two words for ‘scratch’ – scrat and cratch; and it seems likely that scratch represents a blend of them. Where exactly they came from is not clear, although cratch is no doubt related to German kratzen ‘scratch’, and both probably had their origins in imitation of the sound of scratching.
scratch (v.)
c. 1400, probably a fusion of Middle English scratten and crachen, both meaning "to scratch," both of uncertain origin. Related: Scratched; scratching. Billiards sense of "to hit the cue ball into a pocket" is first recorded 1909 (also, originally, itch), though earlier it meant "a lucky shot" (1850). Meaning "to withdraw (a horse) from a race" is 1865, from notion of scratching name off list of competitors; used in a non-sporting sense of "cancel a plan, etc." from 1680s. To scratch the surface "make only slight progress in penetrating or understanding" is from 1882. To scratch (one's) head as a gesture of perplexity is recorded from 1712.
scratch (n.)
1580s, "slight skin tear produced by a sharp thing," from scratch (v.). Meaning "mark or slight furrow in metal, etc." is from 1660s. American English slang sense of "money" is from 1914, of uncertain signification. Many figurative senses (such as up to scratch, originally "ready to meet one's opponent") are from sporting use for "line or mark drawn as a starting place," attested from 1778 (but the earliest use is figurative); meaning "nothing" (as in from scratch) is 1918, generalized from specific 19c. sporting sense of "starting point of a competitor who receives no odds in a handicap match." Sense in billiards is from 1850. Scratch-pad is attested from 1883.
Scratch (n.2)
in Old Scratch "the Devil," 1740, from earlier Scrat, from Old Norse skratte "goblin, wizard," a word which was used in late Old English to gloss "hermaphrodite;" probably originally "monster" (compare Old High German scraz, scrato "satyr, wood demon," German Schratt, Old High German screz "a goblin, imp, dwarf;" borrowed from Germanic into Slavic, as in Polish skrzat "a goblin").

例文


1. My mother always made me feel I wasn 't coming up to scratch .
母はいつも私に自分が優秀ではないと感じさせてくれた。

2.The old man lifted his cardigan to scratch his side.
老人はカーディガンをかきあげて体を掻いた側を掻いた。

3.Building a home from scratch can be both exciting and chalenging.
新しい家庭を築くことは、人を興奮させ、挑戦に富む。

4.Knives will scratch the worktop.
ナイフはテーブルにスクラッチを残します。

5. Scratch my back-I 've got an itch.
背中を掻いてくれる--少しかゆい。

頭文字