crazy
英 ['kreɪzɪ]
美 ['krezi]
中文詞源
英文詞源
- crazy
- crazy: [16] Crazy originally meant literally ‘cracked’ (a sense preserved in the related crazed). This soon came to be extended metaphorically to ‘frail, ill’ (as in Shakespeare’s ‘some better place, fitter for sickness and crazy age’, 1 Henry VI), and thence to ‘mentally unbalanced’. It was derived from the verb craze [14], which was probably borrowed from an unrecorded Old Norse verb *krasa ‘shatter’ (likely source, too, of French écraser ‘crush, smash’).
- crazy (adj.)
- 1570s, "diseased, sickly," from craze + -y (2). Meaning "full of cracks or flaws" is from 1580s; that of "of unsound mind, or behaving as so" is from 1610s. Jazz slang sense "cool, exciting" attested by 1927. To drive (someone) crazy is attested by 1873. Phrase crazy like a fox recorded from 1935. Crazy Horse, Teton Lakhota (Siouan) war leader (d.1877) translates thašuka witko, literally "his horse is crazy."
雙語例句
- 1. "That's crazy," I said. "Isn't it just?" he said.
- “那簡直是瘋了,”我說。“誰說不是呢?”他說。
來自柯林斯例句
- 2. Some people can diet like crazy and not lose weight.
- 有些人拚命節食也不能減肥。
來自柯林斯例句
- 3. None of that matters, because we're crazy about each other.
- 那些都不重要,因為我們深深地愛著對方。
來自柯林斯例句
- 4. I'm also not crazy about the initial terms of the deal.
- 我對該協議的最初條款也不太滿意。
來自柯林斯例句
- 5. So there we were with Amy and she was driving us crazy.
- 就這樣,我們和埃米到了一起,而她快把我們逼瘋了。
來自柯林斯例句