brew: [OE] The ancestral meaning of brew has basically to do with ‘heat’. It comes from an Indo-European base *bhreu- or *bhru, which is also the source of Latin fervēre ‘boil’, from which we get fervent, ferment, and the second syllable of comfrey. Broth and possibly bread can be traced back to the same Indo-European base, and some etymologists have linked it with burn. To ‘brew’ was thus originally something like ‘make a drink by boiling’, ‘fermentation’ being a secondary but connected connotation. => broth, comfrey, ferment, fervent
brew (v.)
Old English breowan "to brew" (class II strong verb, past tense breaw, past participle browen), from Proto-Germanic *breuwan "to brew" (cognates: Old Norse brugga, Old Frisian briuwa, Middle Dutch brouwen, Old High German briuwan, German brauen "to brew"), from PIE root *bhreuə- "to bubble, boil, effervesce" (cognates: Sanskrit bhurnih "violent, passionate," Greek phrear "well, spring, cistern," Latin fervere "to boil, foam," Thracian Greek brytos "fermented liquor made from barley," Russian bruja "current," Old Irish bruth "heat;" Old English beorma "yeast;" Old High German brato "roast meat"), the original sense thus being "make a drink by boiling." Related: Brewed; brewing.
brew (n.)
c. 1500, "a brewed beverage," from brew (v.).
雙語例句
1. Brew up, Curly. We could all do with a cup of tea.
沏茶,柯利,我們每人都要喝一杯。
來自柯林斯例句
2. I brew my own beer.
我自己釀製啤酒。
來自柯林斯例句
3. I'll get Venner to brew some tea.
我會讓文納沏些茶。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Most cities generate a complex brew of pollutants.