bottle: [14] Etymologically, a bottle is a small butt, or barrel. The word comes ultimately from medieval Latin butticula, a diminutive form of late Latin buttis ‘cask’ (whence English butt ‘barrel’). It reached English via Old French botele. The 20th-century British colloquial meaning ‘nerve, courage’ comes from rhyming slang bottle and glass ‘class’. In medieval Latin, a servant who handed wine round at meals and looked after the wine cellar was a buticulārius: hence, via Old French bouteillier and Anglo-Norman buteler, English butler [13]. => butler
bottle (n.)
mid-14c., originally of leather, from Old French boteille (12c., Modern French bouteille), from Vulgar Latin butticula, diminutive of Late Latin buttis "a cask," which is perhaps from Greek. The bottle, figurative for "liquor," is from 17c.
bottle (v.)
1640s, from bottle (n.). Related: Bottled; bottling.
雙語例句
1. As I sidestepped, the bottle hit me on the left hip.
我側一步要躲閃的時候,瓶子打中了我的左髖部。
來自柯林斯例句
2. We had a nice meal with a bottle of champagne.
我們美餐了一頓,還喝了一瓶香檳。
來自柯林斯例句
3. I got a bottle of my best malt out of the sideboard.
我從餐具櫃裏取出一瓶自己收藏的最好的麥芽威士忌。
來自柯林斯例句
4. I haven't come all this way to bottle out.
我一路走來不是為了在最後關頭打退堂鼓。
來自柯林斯例句
5. But will anyone have the bottle to go through with it?