young: [OE] Young is part of a widespread family of words that go back to Indo-European *juwngkós ‘young’ (others include Welsh ieuanc, Irish ōg, and Sanskrit juva?ás). And this in turn was derived from *juwen-, which produced Latin juvenis (source of English junior, juvenile, etc), Lithuanian jaunas, Russian junyj, Bulgarian jun, etc.
The Indo-European adjective passed into prehistoric Germanic as *juwunggaz. This was later contracted to *junggaz, which evolved into German jung, Dutch jong, Swedish and Danish ung, and English young. Youth [OE], and its relatives German Jugend and Dutch jeugd, go back to prehistoric West Germanic *jugunth-, an alteration of *juwunth-, which was derived from *juwunggaz ‘young’. => junior, juvenile, yeoman, youth
young (n.)
"young animals collectively, offspring," late 15c., from young (adj.).
young (adj.)
Old English geong "youthful, young; recent, new, fresh," from Proto-Germanic *juwunga- (cognates: Old Saxon and Old Frisian jung, Old Norse ungr, Middle Dutch jonc, Dutch jong, Old High German and German jung, Gothic juggs), from PIE *yuwn-ko-, suffixed form of root *yeu- "vital force, youthful vigor" (cognates: Sanskrit yuva "young," Latin juvenis "young," Lithuanian jaunas, Old Church Slavonic junu, Russian junyj "young," Old Irish oac, Welsh ieuanc "young").
From c. 1830-1850, Young France, Young Italy, etc., were loosely applied to "republican agitators" in various monarchies; also, especially in Young England, Young America, used generally for "typical young person of the nation." For Young Turk, see Turk.
例文
1. A young man plunged from a sheer rock face to his death.
男性青年が切り立った岩壁から崖から転落して死亡した。
2.Traditionally young Asians in Britain have gravitated towards medicine,law and engineering.
イギリスのアジア系若者は、一般的に医学、法律、エンジニアリングの専門家に引きつけられている。
3.I remember being very young and being totally enamored of him.
若い頃、彼に夢中になっていたのを覚えています。
4. Young people came from the four corners of the nation.
全国各地の若者が訪れている。
5.She called her young son:"Here,Stephen,come and look at this!"