diet
英 ['daɪət]
美 ['daɪət]
- n. 飲食;食物;規定飲食
- vi. 節食
- vt. [醫] 照規定飲食
- n. (Diet)人名;(法)迪耶
中文詞源
diet 飲食來自拉丁語dieta, 一日的工作,飲食,作息。
英文詞源
- diet
- diet: [13] Diet comes, via Old French diete and Latin diaeta, from Greek díaita ‘mode of life’. This was used by medical writers, such as Hippocrates, in the specific sense ‘prescribed mode of life’, and hence ‘prescribed regimen of food’. It has been speculated that Latin diaeta, presumably in the yet further restricted sense ‘day’s allowance of food’, came to be associated with Latin diēs ‘day’.
This gave rise to medieval Latin diēta ‘day’s journey’, ‘day’s work’, etc, hence ‘day appointed for a meeting’, and thus ‘meeting (of legislators)’. English acquired this word (coming orthographically full circle as diet) in the 15th century, but it is now mainly used for referring to various foreign legislatures.
- diet (n.1)
- "regular food," early 13c., from Old French diete (13c.) "diet, pittance, fare," from Medieval Latin dieta "parliamentary assembly," also "a day's work, diet, daily food allowance," from Latin diaeta "prescribed way of life," from Greek diaita, originally "way of life, regimen, dwelling," related to diaitasthai "lead one's life," and from diaitan, originally "separate, select" (food and drink), frequentative of *diainysthai "take apart," from dia- "apart" + ainysthai "take," from PIE root *ai- (1) "to give, allot." Often with a sense of restriction since 14c.; hence put (someone) on a diet (mid-15c.).
- diet (n.2)
- "assembly," mid-15c., from Medieval Latin dieta, variant of diaeta "daily office (of the Church), daily duty, assembly, meeting of counselors," from Greek diaita (see diet (n.1)), but associated with Latin dies "day" (see diurnal).
- diet (v.)
- late 14c., "to regulate one's diet for the sake of health," from Old French dieter, from diete (see diet (n.1)); meaning "to regulate oneself as to food" (especially against fatness) is from 1650s. Related: Dieted; dieting. An obsolete word for this is banting. The adjective in this sense (Diet Coke, etc.) is from 1963, originally American English.
雙語例句
- 1. It makes sense to eat a reasonably balanced diet when slimming.
- 在減肥過程中保持飲食的營養相對均衡是明智的。
來自柯林斯例句
- 2. The radio had fed him a diet of pop songs.
- 他從廣播裏聽到的都是千篇一律的流行歌曲。
來自柯林斯例句
- 3. Some cases of arthritis respond to a gluten-free diet.
- 無麩質飲食對一些關節炎患者有療效。
來自柯林斯例句
- 4. New diet books appear at a rate of nearly one a week.
- 新的飲食類書籍差不多一周出一本。
來自柯林斯例句
- 5. She lost 16 pounds in the first month of her diet.
- 她節食的頭一個月就減掉了16磅。
來自柯林斯例句