lunar: [17] Latin lūna ‘moon’ came from an Indo- European base which also produced English light (not to mention a range of Latin ‘light’- words, such as lūx and lūmen, which have given English illustrate, lucid, luminous, lustre, etc). It had two adjectival derivatives: lūnāris, which simply meant ‘of the moon’, and was borrowed by English as lunar; and lūnāticus.
This was originally used for ‘living on the moon’, but subsequently came to employed in the sense ‘crazy’, from the notion that certain sorts of periodic madness were caused by the phases of the moon. English acquired it via Old French lunatique as lunatic [13]. => illustrate, light, luminous, lunatic, lustre
lunar (adj.)
"crescent-shaped," early 15c.; "pertaining to the moon," 1620s, from Old French lunaire (15c.), from Latin lunaris "of the moon," from luna "moon" (with capital L- "moon goddess"); see Luna.
雙語例句
1. The astronauts piloted their craft down to the lunar surface.
宇航員駕駛太空飛船在月球表麵降落.
來自《簡明英漢詞典》
2. The lunar stone is different from earth's.
月球的石頭和地球的不同.
來自《簡明英漢詞典》
3. The Spring Festival is the lunar New Year.
春節即農曆新年.
來自《現代漢英綜合大詞典》
4. "Well I suppose it is based on the old lunar months isn't it."— 'Yes that's right.'
“噢,我想這是按照舊製陰曆來算的,是吧?”——“對,是的。”
來自柯林斯例句
5. When there is solar halo , it will rain; when there is lunar halo , it will blow.