英語單詞

stamp是什麽意思

stamp

英 [stæmp] 美 [stæmp]
  • n. 郵票;印記;標誌;跺腳
  • vt. 銘記;標出;蓋章於…;貼郵票於…;用腳踩踏
  • vi. 跺腳;搗碎;毀掉
  • n. (Stamp)人名;(德)施坦普;(英)斯坦普

中文詞源


stamp 郵票,印章,印花,痕跡,烙印,跺腳,猛踩

來 自 中 古 英 語 stampen, 踩 踏 , 搗 , 來 自 古 英 語 stempan, 搗 , 碾 碎 , 來 自 Proto-Germanic*stampijana,踩踏,擊打,來自 PIE*stemp,踩踏,踐踏,鼻音化自 PIE*stebh, 踩踏,詞源同 step,stomp,stump.最終來自 PIE*sta,站立,詞源同 stand.引申諸相關詞義。

英文詞源


stamp
stamp: [12] Stamp originally meant ‘crush into small pieces, pound’. The sense ‘slam the foot down’ did not emerge until the 14th century, and ‘imprint with a design by pressure’ (which forms the semantic basis of postage stamp [19]) is as recent as the 16th century. The word comes, probably via an unrecorded Old English *stampian, from prehistoric Germanic *stampōjan (source also of German stampfen, Dutch stampen, Swedish stampa, and Danish stampe).

This was derived from the noun *stampaz ‘pestle’, which was formed from the base *stamp- (a non-nasalized version of which, *stap-, lies behind English step). The Germanic verb was borrowed into Vulgar Latin as *stampīre, whose past participle has given English, via Mexican Spanish, stampede [19].

=> stampede, step
stamp (v.)
Old English stempan "to pound in a mortar," from Proto-Germanic *stamp- (cognates: Old Norse stappa, Danish stampe, Middle Dutch stampen, Old High German stampfon, German stampfen "to stamp with the foot, beat, pound," German Stampfe "pestle"), from nasalized form of PIE root *stebh- "to support, place firmly on" (cognates: Greek stembein "to trample, misuse;" see staff (n.)). The vowel altered in Middle English, perhaps by influence of Scandinavian forms.

Sense of "strike the foot forcibly downwards" is from mid-14c. The meaning "impress or mark (something) with a die" is first recorded 1550s. Italian stampa "stamp, impression," Spanish estampar "to stamp, print," French étamper (13c., Old French estamper) "to stamp, impress" are Germanic loan-words. Related: Stamped; stamping. To stamp out originally was "extinguish a fire by stamping on it;" attested from 1851 in the figurative sense. Stamping ground "one's particular territory" (1821) is from the notion of animals. A stamped addressed envelope (1873) was one you enclosed in a letter to speed or elicit a reply.
stamp (n.)
mid-15c., "instrument for crushing, stamping tool," from stamp (v.). Especially "instrument for making impressions" (1570s). Meaning "downward thrust or blow with the foot, act of stamping" is from 1580s. Sense of "official mark or imprint" (to certify that duty has been paid on what has been printed or written) dates from 1540s; transferred 1837 to designed, pre-printed adhesive labels issued by governments to serve the same purpose as impressed stamps. German Stempel "rubber stamp, brand, postmark" represents a diminutive form. Stamp-collecting is from 1862 (compare philately).

雙語例句


1. Last November the commission gave its stamp of approval to the deal.
去年11月,委員會核準了這宗交易。

來自柯林斯例句

2. It's FREEPOST, so there's no need for a stamp.
這是免費郵寄,不用貼郵票。

來自柯林斯例句

3. He says he'll have no problem authenticating the stamp.
他說自己可以對這枚郵票進行鑒定。

來自柯林斯例句

4. The stamp was a dull blue colour.
郵票是晦暗的深藍色。

來自柯林斯例句

5. Parliament's job is to rubber-stamp his decisions.
國會的工作就是例行公事式地批準他作出的決定。

來自柯林斯例句

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