charwoman
英 ['tʃɑːwʊmən]
美 ['tʃɑrwʊmən]
中文詞源
charwoman 打雜女傭詞源同chore, charlady.
英文詞源
- charwoman
- charwoman: [16] A charwoman is, quite literally, a woman who does ‘chores’. Chore is a variant of the now obsolete noun chare or char, which meant literally ‘turn’ (it derived from the Old English verb cerran, which may be the source of charcoal). Hence ‘doing one’s turn’, ‘one’s turn at work’ in due course advanced its meaning to ‘job’. Already by the 15th century it had connotations of menial or household jobs: ‘making the beds and such other chares’, Nicholas Love, Bonaventura’s Mirror 1410.
=> ajar, chore - charwoman (n.)
- 1590s, from Middle English char, cherre "turn of work" (see chore) + woman. An Alicia Charwoman appears in the Borough of Nottingham records in 1379.
雙語例句
- 1. The only person inside the gloomy building was a charwoman cleaning.
- 那個昏暗的建築裏麵唯一的人,就是一個打雜兒的女人,在那兒打掃屋子.
來自辭典例句