bison: [14] Bison appears to be of Germanic origin, from a stem *wisand- or *wisund-. This became Old English wesand, which did not survive; and it was acquired again in the 19th century as wisent, borrowed from German wisent, applied to the ‘aurochs’, an extinct species of European wild ox. The b- form came into English via Latin bison, a borrowing from the Germanic. Originally of course referring to the European bison, the term was first applied to the North American species at the end of the 17th century.
bison (n.)
c. 1600, from French bison (15c.), from Latin bison "wild ox," borrowed from Proto-Germanic *wisand- "aurochs" (cognates: Old Norse visundr, Old High German wisunt "bison," Old English/Middle English wesend, which is not attested after c. 1400). Possibly ultimately of Baltic or Slavic origin, and meaning "the stinking animal," in reference to its scent while rutting (see weasel). A European wild ox formerly widespread on the continent, including the British Isles, now surviving on forest reserves in Lithuania. Applied 1690s to the North American species commonly mis-called a buffalo.
雙語例句
1. a herd of bison
一群野牛
來自《權威詞典》
2. In the year 1700, about 60 million bison wandered freely in North America.
在1700年約有6000萬頭野牛在北美無拘無束地活動.
來自《簡明英漢詞典》
3. Large herds of bison used to live on the plains of North America.
大群的野牛過去曾生活在北美大草原上.
來自《簡明英漢詞典》
4. Reindeer receded northward and eastward, and bison and horse followed.