英単語

slyの意味・使い方・発音

sly

英 [slaɪ] 美 [slaɪ]
  • adj.ずるがしこい; いたずら好き; 秘密主義者
  • n.(ずるい)人の名前;(英)Sly.

語源


ずる賢い。

中世英語のslyから、古ノルド語のsloegr, 狡猾な、おそらく原ゲルマン語の *slogiz, 活発な、機敏な、狡猾な、PIE *slak, 打撃、攻撃から、語源はslay, sleightと同じ。

英語の語源


sly
sly: [12] Etymologically, sly means ‘able to hit’. It was borrowed from Old Norse sl?gr ‘clever, cunning’, which went back ultimately to the prehistoric Germanic base *slakh-, *slag-, *slōg- ‘hit’ (source also of English slaughter, slay, etc). The word’s original approbatory connotations of ‘cleverness’ or ‘skill’ survived into the 20th century in northern dialects, but elsewhere they were soon ousted by the notion of ‘underhandedness’. More neutral associations linger on in sleight ‘dexterity’ [13] (as in ‘sleight of hand’), which was acquired from an Old Norse derivative of sl?gr.
=> slaughter, slay, sleight
sly (adj.)
c. 1200, "skillful, clever, dexterous," from Old Norse sloegr "cunning, crafty, sly," from Proto-Germanic *slogis (cognates: Low German slu "cunning, sly," German schlau), probably from base *slak- "to strike, hit" (see slay (v.)), with an original notion of "able to hit." Compare German verschlagen "cunning, crafty, sly," schlagfertig "quick-witted," literally "strike-ready," from schlagen "to strike." A non-pejorative use of the word lingered in northern English dialect until 20c. On the sly "in secret" is recorded from 1812. Sly-boots "a seeming Silly, but subtil Fellow" is in the 1700 "Dictionary of the Canting Crew."

例文


1. He 's a sly old beggar if ever there was one.
彼は確かに老獪なやつだ。

2.She is devious and sly and manipulative.
彼女は陰険で狡猾で、人を遊ぶことができる。

3.He gave me a sly ,meaningful look.
彼は私をちらっと見て、意味深だった。

4.She darted a sly sideways glance at Bramwell.
彼女はずるい目つきでブラムウェルをちらっと見た。

5.His lips were spread in a sly smile.
彼は心の中で口を酸っぱくして笑った。

頭文字