beneath: [OE] Beneath is a compound adverb and preposition, formed in Old English from bi ‘by’ and nithan or neothan ‘below’. This came originally from Germanic *nith- (also the source of nether [OE]), a derivative of the base *ni- ‘down’. => nether
beneath (adv., adj.)
Old English beneoðan "beneath, under, below," from be- "by" + neoðan "below," originally "from below," from Proto-Germanic *niþar "lower, farther down, down" (see nether). Meaning "unworthy of" is attested from 1849 (purists prefer below in this sense). "The be- gave or emphasized the notion of 'where,' excluding that of 'whence' pertaining to the simple niðan" [OED].
雙語例句
1. The doctor worked busily beneath the blinding lights of the delivery room.
這位醫生在產房刺目的燈光下忙碌著。
來自柯林斯例句
2. Patterson pointed toward a plain cardboard box beneath a long wooden table.
帕特森指著長木桌下的一個普通的紙板箱。
來自柯林斯例句
3. Somewhere deep beneath the surface lay a caring character.
在內心深處的某個角落裏埋藏著一顆愛心。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Beneath the conscious mind there are many levels of the unconscious.
在意識心理之下存在很多層次的無意識。
來自柯林斯例句
5. The flagstones beneath their feet were worn smooth by centuries of use.