oral: [17] Oral comes from Latin ōs ‘mouth’. This went back to a prehistoric Indo-European *ōs- or *ōus-, which also produced Sanskrit ās-, ‘mouth’ and Old Norse óss ‘mouth of a river’. Its other contributions to English include orifice [16] (etymologically ‘forming a mouth’), oscillate, osculate ‘kiss’ [17], and usher. => orifice, oscillate, osculate, usher
oral (adj.)
1620s, from Late Latin oralis, from Latin os (genitive oris) "mouth, opening, face, entrance," from PIE *os- "mouth" (cognates: Sanskrit asan "mouth," asyam "mouth, opening," Avestan ah-, Hittite aish, Middle Irish a "mouth," Old Norse oss "mouth of a river," Old English or "beginning, origin, front"). Psychological meaning "of the mouth as the focus of infantile sexual energy" (as in oral fixation) is from 1910. The sexual sense is first recorded 1948, in Kinsey. As a noun, "oral examination," attested from 1876. Related: Orally (c. 1600); orality. Os was the usual word for "mouth" in Latin, but as the vowel distinction was lost it became similar in sound to os "bone" (see osseous). Thus bucca, originally "cheek" but used colloquial as "mouth," because the usual word for "mouth" (see bouche).
雙語例句
1. The story of King Arthur became part of oral tradition.
亞瑟王的故事成為口頭傳說的一部分。
來自柯林斯例句
2. I spoke privately to the candidate after the oral.
口試後,我私下裏與那位考生談了談。
來自柯林斯例句
3. a test of both oral and written French
法語口試和筆試
來自《權威詞典》
4. No oral test will be required for admission to that university.
上那所大學不必經過口試.
來自《現代漢英綜合大詞典》
5. Students of English should have a lot of oral drills.