procure: [13] The -cure of procure goes back to Latin cūrāre ‘look after’, source of English cure. Combination with prō- ‘for’ produced prōcūrāre ‘look after on behalf of someone else, manage’, which English acquired via Old French procurer as procure. The main modern sense ‘obtain’ developed via ‘take care, take pains’ and ‘bring about by taking pains’. The agent noun derived from the Latin verb was prōcūrātor ‘manager, agent’; English adopted this as procurator [13], and subsequently contracted it to proctor [14]. A similar process of contraction lies behind proxy, which goes back to Latin prōcūrātiō. => cure, proctor, proxy
procure (v.)
c. 1300, "bring about, cause, effect," from Old French procurer "care for, be occupied with; bring about, cause; acquire, provide" (13c.) and directly from Late Latin procurare "manage, take care of;" from pro- "in behalf of" (see pro-) + curare "care for" (see cure (v.)). Main modern sense "obtain; recruit" (late 14c.) is via "take pains to get" (mid-14c.). Meaning "to obtain (women) for sexual gratification" is attested from c. 1600. Related: Procured; procuring.
雙語例句
1. The meat they'd managed to procure assuaged their hunger.
他們把搞到手的肉拿來充饑。
來自柯林斯例句
2. She managed to procure a ticket for the concert.
她好不容易弄到一張音樂會入場券。
來自《權威詞典》
3. It remained very difficult to procure food, fuel and other daily necessities.
食物、燃料和其他日用必需品仍然很難得到。
來自辭典例句
4. Can you procure some specimens for me / procure me some specimens?
你能替我弄到一些標本 嗎 ?
來自辭典例句
5. What documents should he attempt to procure from Portland?