obey: [13] ‘To hear is to obey’ carries more than a germ of etymological truth. For obey comes via Old French obeir from Latin ōbēdīre, which meant literally ‘listen to’. It was a compound verb formed from the prefix ob- ‘to’ and audīre ‘hear’ (source of English audible). By classical times the metaphorical sense ‘obey’ had virtually taken over from the original ‘listen to’, and it is this sense that informs the related obedient [13] and obeisance [14]. => audible, obedient
obey (v.)
late 13c., from Old French obeir "obey, be obedient, do one's duty" (12c.), from Latin obedire, oboedire "obey, be subject, serve; pay attention to, give ear," literally "listen to," from ob "to" (see ob-) + audire "listen, hear" (see audience). Same sense development is in cognate Old English hiersumnian. Related: Obeyed; obeying.
雙語例句
1. Clifford's only stipulation is that his clients obey his advice.
克利福德唯一的要求就是客戶必須聽從他的建議。
來自柯林斯例句
2. They obey the one unwritten rule that binds them all—no talking.
他們都遵守著那條約束他們所有人的默認規則——要守口如瓶。
來自柯林斯例句
3. He threatened to disinherit her if she refused to obey.
他威脅說如果她拒絕服從就剝奪她的繼承權。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Will you kindly obey the instructions I am about to give?