plead: [13] Essentially plead and plea are the same word. Both go back ultimately to Latin placitum ‘something pleasant’, hence ‘something that pleases both sides’, ‘something agreed upon’, and finally ‘opinion, decision’. This was a noun formed from the past participle of placēre ‘please’ (source of English please). It passed into Old French as plaid ‘agreement, discussion, lawsuit’, and formed the basis of a verb plaidier, from which (via Anglo-Norman pleder) English got plead. In later Old French plaid became plait, and Anglo-Norman took it over as plai or ple – whence English plea [13]. => plea, please
plead (v.)
mid-13c., "make a plea in court," from Anglo-French pleder, Old French plaidier, "plead at court" (11c.), from Medieval Latin placitare, from Late Latin placitum (see plea). Sense of "request, beg" first recorded late 14c. Related: Pleaded; pleading; pleadingly.
雙語例句
1. It was no defence to plead that they were only obeying orders.
辯稱他們隻是在服從命令站不住腳。
來自柯林斯例句
2. They will plead with him to pull back from confrontation.
他們將請求他退出衝突。
來自柯林斯例句
3. He would plead the cause of Russian unity.
他會公開支持俄羅斯的統一。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Are you ready to plead against the case offered by the defendant?