dozen: [13] Dozen traces its ancestry back to the Latin word for ‘twelve’, duodecim. This was a compound formed from duo ‘two’ and decem ‘ten’. This gradually developed in the postclassical period via *dōdece to *doze, which, with the addition of the suffix -ēna, produced Old French dozeine, source of the English word. => duodenum
dozen (n.)
c. 1300, from Old French dozaine "a dozen," from doze (12c.) "twelve," from Latin duodecim "twelve," from duo "two" + decem "ten" (see ten).
The Old French fem. suffix -aine is characteristically added to cardinals to form collectives in a precise sense ("exactly 12," not "about 12"). The dozens "invective contest" (1928) originated in slave culture, the custom probably African, the word probably from bulldoze (q.v.) in its original sense of "a whipping, a thrashing."
雙語例句
1. Ernest Brown lives about a dozen blocks from where the riots began.
歐內斯特·布朗住在離騷亂發生處幾個街區遠的地方。
來自柯林斯例句
2. She loaded me down with around a dozen cassettes.
她塞給我十幾盒磁帶。
來自柯林斯例句
3. He sat behind a table on which were half a dozen files.
他坐在一張放有6個文件夾的桌子後麵。
來自柯林斯例句
4. The project has gone through nearly a dozen years of planning.
該項目已曆經近12年的規劃。
來自柯林斯例句
5. The riot left four people dead and several dozen injured.