stocking: [16] Stocking is a derivative of stock, in the now defunct sense ‘stocking’. This appears to have arisen in the 15th century from the blackly humorous comparison of the stocks in which one’s legs are restrained as a punishment with ‘leggings, hose’. Until comparatively recently stocking was a unisex term (as it still is in the expression in one’s stockinged feet); the restriction to ‘women’s hose’ is a 20th-century development. => stock
stocking (n.)
"close-fitting garment covering the foot and lower leg," 1580s, from stock "leg covering, stocking" (late 15c.), from Old English stocu "sleeve," related to Old English stocc "trunk, log" (see stock (n.1)). Probably so called because of a fancied resemblance of legs to tree trunks, or a reference to the punishing stocks. Cognates include Old Norse stuka, Old High German stuhha, from the same Proto-Germanic source. Restriction to women's hose is 20c. As a receptacle for Christmas presents, attested from 1853; hence stocking stuffer first recorded 1945. Stocking-feet "without shoes" is from 1802.
雙語例句
1. New Yorkers have been stocking up with bottled water.
紐約人一直在貯備瓶裝水。
來自柯林斯例句
2. Some shops are bowing to consumer pressure and stocking organically grown vegetables.
一些商店迫於顧客的壓力,開始供應有機蔬菜。
來自柯林斯例句
3. He noticed a wrinkle in her stocking.
他注意到她長筒襪上有一道褶兒。
來自柯林斯例句
4. I worked stocking shelves in a grocery store.
我在一家雜貨店工作,負責為貨架上貨。
來自柯林斯例句
5. All the shops are now stocking up for Christmas.