ember: [OE] Ember goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *aimuzjōn, although it is possible that the modern English word represents a borrowing from the related Old Norse eimyrja rather than a direct line of descent from Old English ǣmyrge. The ember of Ember days [10], incidentally, ‘days following certain Christian festivals’, is a completely different word. It comes from Old English ymbryne ‘circuit’, literally ‘running round’, a compound formed from ymb ‘round’ and ryne ‘course, running’, a relative of modern English run. It was applied to these particular days of the Christian calendar because they ‘come round’ four times a year.
ember (n.)
"small, live coal," Old English æmerge "ember," merged with or influenced by Old Norse eimyrja, both from Proto-Germanic *aim-uzjon- "ashes" (cognates: Middle Low German emere, Old High German eimuria, German Ammern); a compound from *aima- "ashes" (from PIE root *ai- (2) "to burn;" see edifice) + *uzjo- "to burn" (from PIE root *eus- "to burn;" source also of Latin urere "to burn, singe"). The -b- is intrusive.
雙語例句
1. Sarah Long and Steve Ember tell about Doctor Seuss.
莎拉·朗和史蒂夫·安博來告訴我們他的故事.
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2. STEVE EMBER : Others praise hot soups prepared in their childhood homes.
史蒂夫·恩伯: 另有一些人則對他們小時候喝過的熱湯讚歎不已.
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3. And that's the VOA Special English Health Report. I'm Ember.
這是美國之音特別英語健康報告. 我史蒂夫恩貝爾.
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4. Ember burning with reeds flaunted to the blue sky.
蘆葦燃燒成灰燼,撒向蔚藍的蒼穹.
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5. Steve Ember tells us more abot the second National Book Festival.