英単語

trainの意味・使い方・発音

train

英 [treɪn] 美 [tren]
  • n. 列車;行列;長い列;スカート
  • v. 訓練する;訓練する;目指す
  • n. (列車)人名;(英)Train;(仏)Tran;(伊)Train

語源


train 列車、電車、ライン、シリーズ、トレーニング、訓練された

古フランス語のtrainer「引きずる、引っ張る、移動させる」から、ラテン語のtractus「道、道」から(略)、trahere「引きずる、引っ張る、移動させる」から、語源的にはdrag, tractと同じ。strain、strictと比較。

英語の語源


train
train: [14] A train is etymologically something that is ‘pulled’ along. The word was borrowed from Old French train, a derivative of the verb trahiner ‘drag’. And this in turn went back to Vulgar Latin *tragināre, a derivative of Latin *tragere, a variant of trahere ‘pull’. It was first used in English for ‘delay’, from the notion of being ‘pulled’ back, and ‘part of a garment that trails behind’ dates from the 15th century.

When steam locomotives pulling carriages were introduced in the 1820s, the combined vehicle was called a train of carriages; the simple term train is first recorded in 1835. The use of the verb train for ‘instruct, school’, which dates from the 16th century, evolved from an earlier ‘direct the course of growth of a plant’, which in turn went back to the original notion of ‘pulling’.

=> tractor
train (n.)
early 14c., "a drawing out, delay;" late 14c., "trailing part of a skirt, gown, or cloak;" also "retinue, procession," from Old French train "tracks, path, trail (of a rome or gown); act of dragging," from trainer "to pull, drag, draw," from Vulgar Latin *traginare, extended from *tragere "to pull," back-formation from tractus, past participle of Latin trahere "to pull, draw" (see tract (n.1)).,

General sense of "series, progression, succession, continuous course" is from late 15c. Train of thought first attested 1650s. The railroad sense "locomotive and the cars coupled to it" is recorded from 1820 (publication year, dated 1816), from notion of a "train" of wagons or carriages pulled by a mechanical engine.
train (v.)
"to discipline, teach, bring to a desired state by means of instruction," 1540s, probably from earlier sense of "draw out and manipulate in order to bring to a desired form" (late 14c.), specifically of the growth of branches, vines, etc. from mid-15c.; from train (n.). Sense of "point or aim" (a firearm, etc.) is from 1841. Sense of "fit oneself for a performance by a regimen or exercise" is from 1832. The meaning "to travel by railway" is recorded from 1856. Related: Trained; training.

例文


1. In 1941,the train would have been pulled by a steam engine.
1941年、汽車は蒸気機関車で引っ張ることができた。

2.He lost a foot when he was struck by a train .
彼は列車に衝突して足を失った。

3.Businesses need to train their workers better,and spend more on R& ; D.
各企業は労働者をよりよく育成し、研究開発にも投資を増やす必要がある。

4.The train backed out of Adelaide Yard on to the Dublin-Belfast line.
列車はアデレード操車場を出て、ダブリン-ベルファスト線を運転した。

5.He rode on the president 's luxury train through his own state.
彼は大統領の豪華列車に乗って自分の州を通った。

頭文字