sure
英 [ʃɔː; ʃʊə]
美 [ʃʊr]
- 確実に、確実に、確実に
- adv.
- n.(確かに)人名;(英)ヒューワー
英語の語源
- sure
- sure: [14] Sure and secure are doublets – that is to say, they come from the same ultimate source, but have diverged over the centuries. Latin sēcūrus (etymologically ‘without care’) was borrowed directly into English as secure, but in Old French it evolved into sur, from which English gets sure.
=> secure - sure (adj.)
- early 13c., "safe against attack, secure," later "firm, reliable" (c. 1300); "mentally certain, confident" (mid-14c.); "firm, strong, resolute" (c. 1400), from Old French seur, sur "safe, secure; undoubted, dependable, trustworthy" (12c.), from Latin securus "free from care, untroubled, heedless, safe" (see secure (adj.)). Pronunciation development is that of sugar (n.).
As an affirmative meaning "yes, certainly" it dates from 1803, from Middle English meanings "firmly established; having no doubt," and phrases like to be sure (1650s), sure enough (1540s), and for sure (1580s). The use as an adverb meaning "assuredly" goes back to early 14c. Sure-footed is from 1630s, literal and figurative; sure thing dates from 1836. In 16c.-17c., Suresby was an appellation for a person to be depended upon.
例文
- 1. But legal experts are not sure if such a charge can stick.
- しかし、法律専門家たちはこの告発が成立したかどうかを確信することはできない。
- 2.Be sure you get your daily quota of calcium.
- 毎日のカルシウム摂取量を確保する。
- 3.If something 's a sure -fire hit then Radio One will play it.
- どの曲がヒットするかが決まっていれば、第1チャンネルで放送されるに違いない。
- 4.They want to make sure the newcomers don 't get a look-in.
- 彼らは新人に顔を出す機会を与えたくない。
- 5.This proposal is by no means a sure thing.
- この提案は決して当然のように採択されることはありません。
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