lazy: [16] Lazy is one of the problem words of English. It suddenly appears in the middle of the 16th century, and gradually replaces the native terms slack, slothful, and idle as the main word for expressing the concept ‘averse to work’, but no one knows for sure where it came from. Early spellings such as laysy led 19th-century etymologists to speculate that it may have been derived from lay, but the more generally accepted theory nowadays is that it was borrowed from Low German. Middle Low German had the similar lasich ‘lazy, loose’, which may go back to an Indo-European form denoting ‘slack’.
lazy (adj.)
1540s, laysy, of unknown origin. Replaced native slack, slothful, and idle as the main word expressing the notion of "averse to work." In 19c. thought to be from lay (v.) as tipsy from tip. Skeat is responsible for the prevailing modern view that it probably comes from Low German, from a source such as Middle Low German laisch "weak, feeble, tired," modern Low German läösig, early modern Dutch leuzig, all of which may go back to the PIE root *(s)leg- "slack." According to Weekley, the -z- sound disqualifies a connection with French lassé "tired" or German lassig "lazy, weary, tired." A supposed dialectal meaning "naught, bad," if it is the original sense, may tie the word to Old Norse lasenn "dilapidated," lasmøyrr "decrepit, fragile," root of Icelandic las-furða "ailing," las-leiki "ailment." Lazy Susan is from 1917. Grose ("Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue," 1788) has Lazy Man's Load: "Lazy people frequently take up more than they can safely carry, to save the trouble of coming a second time."
雙語例句
1. Lazy and incompetent police officers are letting the public down.
懶惰兼無能的警官令公眾失望。
來自柯林斯例句
2. "Yous two are no 'gettin' paid," he said. "Ye're too lazy!"
“你們兩個別指望拿到工錢,”他說。“你們太懶了!”
來自柯林斯例句
3. He roused himself from his lazy contemplation of the scene beneath him.
他不再懶洋洋地注視著下麵的景色。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Of all the lazy, indifferent, unbusinesslike attitudes to have!
這是多麽懶惰、冷漠、不敬業的態度!
來自柯林斯例句
5. He keeps company with all sorts of lazy characters.