military: [16] Military traces its history back to Latin mīles ‘soldier’, a word possibly of Etruscan origin. Its derived adjective mīlitāris entered English via French militaire. Also based on mīles was the verb mīlitāre ‘serve as a soldier’, which has given English militant [15] and militate [17], a verb whose meaning has changed sharply over the centuries: at first it was used in the same way as its Latin ancestor, but then it developed via ‘conflict with’ to ‘be evidence against’, and finally, in the 20th century, to ‘make unlikely’. Militia [16] comes from Latin militia ‘warfare’, another derivative of mīles.
military (adj.)
mid-15c., from Middle French militaire (14c.), from Latin militaris "of soldiers or war, of military service, warlike," from miles (genitive militis) "soldier," of unknown origin, perhaps ultimately from Etruscan, or else meaning "one who marches in a troop," and thus connected to Sanskrit melah "assembly," Greek homilos "assembled crowd, throng." Related: Militarily. Old English had militisc, from Latin. Military-industrial complex coined 1961 in farewell speech of U.S. president Dwight D. Eisenhower.
military (n.)
"soldiers generally," 1757, from military (adj.). Earlier, "a military man" (1736).
雙語例句
1. The military regime in power was unpopular and repressive.
當權的軍政府壓製人民,不得人心。
來自柯林斯例句
2. They said the present system of military conscription should be phased out.
他們說,當前的征兵體係應當逐步廢除。
來自柯林斯例句
3. He had authorisation from the military command to retaliate.
他得到軍事指揮部授權,準備反擊。
來自柯林斯例句
4. The military government has been unable to win popular support.
軍政府一直未能贏得廣泛的支持。
來自柯林斯例句
5. The constitution prohibits them from military engagement on foreign soil.