college: [14] College comes from the same source as colleague. Latin collēga, literally ‘one chosen to work with another’, a compound based on the stem of lēgāre ‘choose’. An ‘association of collēgae, partnership’ was thus a collēgium, whence (possibly via Old French college) English college. For many hundreds of years this concept of a ‘corporate group’ was the main semantic feature of the word, and it was not really until the 19th century that, via the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge universities, the notion of ‘academic institution’ overtook it. => colleague, delegate, legal, legitimate
college (n.)
"body of scholars and students within a university," late 14c., from Old French college "collegiate body" (14c.), from Latin collegium "community, society, guild," literally "association of collegae" (see colleague). At first meaning any corporate group, the sense of "academic institution" attested from 1560s became the principal sense in 19c. via use at Oxford and Cambridge.
雙語例句
1. I've had the hots for him ever since he came to college.
自從他來上大學後,我就對他春心萌動。
來自柯林斯例句
2. We were in the same college, which was male-only at that time.
我們那時在同一所學院,當時隻招男生。
來自柯林斯例句
3. The teacher training college put up a plaque to the college's founder.
那所教師培訓學院為該學院的創立者立了一塊紀念牌匾。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Faculty members complain that their students are unprepared to do college-level work.
學院的老師們抱怨說他們的學生還很不適應大學的課業。
來自柯林斯例句
5. Novello says college students will spend $4.2 billion yearly on alcoholic beverages.