1740, an instruction in musical scores, from Italian segue, literally "now follows," meaning to play into the following movement without a break, third person singular of seguire "to follow," from Latin sequi "to follow," from PIE *sekw- (1) "to follow" (see sequel). Extended noun sense of "transition without a break" is from 1937; the verb in this sense is first recorded 1958.
雙語例句
1. You can segue intoyour education reform initiative from there.
在那裏你可以借機宣傳你的教育改革措施.
來自電影對白
2. And finally, we will segue into our instrumentation discussion in Chapter 12.