英語單詞

span是什麽意思

span

英 [spæn] 美 [spæn]
  • n. 跨度,跨距;範圍
  • vt. 跨越;持續;以手指測量
  • n. (Span)人名;(捷)斯潘

助記提示


span “石板”橋的→跨度

中文詞源


span 拃,跨度,跨距,範圍,持續時間,紮牢,縛住

來自古英語 span,拃,張開大拇指和小拇指的距離,來自動詞 spannan,張開,展開,綁定, 連接,來自 Proto-Germanic*spannan,張開,拉開,來自 PIE*spen,張開,拉開,懸掛,詞源同 pendulum,depend.引申諸相關詞義。

英文詞源


span
span: [OE] Span is of Germanic origin, with relatives in German and Dutch spanne, Swedish spann, and Danish spand. It originated in the notion of the distance between the tip of the thumb and the tip of the little finger. The verb span was derived in the 14th century from the noun. Its German relative spannen ‘stretch, tighten’ produced the derived noun spanner, which was borrowed by English in the 17th century.
=> spanner
span (n.1)
"distance between two objects," from Old English span "distance between the thumb and little finger of an extended hand" (as a measure of length, roughly nine inches), probably related to Middle Dutch spannen "to join, fasten" (see span (v.)).

The Germanic word was borrowed into Medieval Latin as spannus, hence Italian spanna, Old French espan "hand's width, span as a unit of measure," French empan. As a measure of volume (early 14c.), "what can be held in two cupped hands." Meaning "length of time" first attested 1590s; that of "space between abutments of an arch, etc." is from 1725. Meaning "maximum lateral dimension of an aircraft" is first recorded 1909.
span (v.)
Old English spannan "to join, link, clasp, fasten, bind, connect; stretch, span," from Proto-Germanic *spannan (cognates: Old Norse spenna, Old Frisian spanna, Middle Dutch spannen, Dutch spannan "stretch, bend, hoist, hitch," Old High German spannan, German spannen "to join, fasten, extend, connect"), from PIE root *(s)pen- "to draw, stretch, spin" (cognates: Latin pendere "to hang, to cause to hang," pondus "weight" (perhaps the notion is the weight of a thing measured by how much it stretches a cord), pensare "to weigh, consider;" Greek ponos "toil," ponein "to toil;" Lithuanian spendziu "lay a snare;" Old Church Slavonic peti "stretch, strain," pato "fetter," pina "I span;" Old English spinnan "to spin;" for other cognates, see spin (v.)).

The meaning "to encircle with the hand(s)" is from 1781; in the sense of "to form an arch over (something)" it is first recorded 1630s. Related: Spanned; spanning.
span (n.2)
"two animals driven together," 1769, American English, from Dutch span, from spannen "to stretch or yoke," from Middle Dutch spannan, cognate with Old English spannan "to join" (see span (v.)). Also used in South African English.

雙語例句


1. The batteries had a life span of six hours.
這些電池的壽命為6小時。

來自柯林斯例句

2. They have extended the potential life span of humanity everywhere.
世界各地人類的預期壽命均有所延長。

來自柯林斯例句

3. It is a very pretty butterfly, with a 2 inch wing span.
這是一隻非常美麗的蝴蝶,翼展2英寸。

來自柯林斯例句

4. The apartment was spick and span.
公寓非常整潔。

來自柯林斯例句

5. I worked with him over a span of six years.
我和他共事達六年之久。

來自《權威詞典》

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