structure: [15] Structure comes via Old French structure from Latin structūra, a noun derived from the past participle of struere ‘build’. Other English words from the same source are construct, construe, destroy, destruction, instruct, and obstruct [17]. => construct, construe, destroy, destruction, instruct, obstruct, strain
structure (n.)
mid-15c., "action or process of building or construction;" 1610s, "that which is constructed, a building or edifice;" from Latin structura "a fitting together, adjustment; a building, mode of building;" figuratively, "arrangement, order," from structus, past participle of struere "to pile, place together, heap up; build, assemble, arrange, make by joining together," related to strues "heap," from PIE *stere- "to spread, extend, stretch out."
The widespread descendants of this ancient root are believed to include: Sanskrit strnoti "strews, throws down;" Avestan star- "to spread out, stretch out;" Greek stronymi "strew," stroma "bedding, mattress," sternon "breast, breastbone;" Latin sternere "to stretch, extend;" Old Church Slavonic stira, streti "spread," strama "district;" Russian stroji "order;" Gothic straujan, Old High German strouwen, Old English streowian "to sprinkle, strew;" Old English streon "strain," streaw "straw, that which is scattered;" Old High German stirna "forehead," strala "arrow, lightning bolt;" Old Irish fo-sernaim "spread out," srath "a wide river valley;" Welsh srat "plain."
structure (v.)
"put together systematically," by 1855 (occasional use from late 16c.), from structure (n.). Related: Structured; structuring.
雙語例句
1. The theatre is a futuristic steel and glass structure.
這家劇院是鋼筋和玻璃結構的未來派建築。
來自柯林斯例句
2. Torn muscles retract, and lose strength, structure, and tightness.
撕裂的肌肉會收縮,喪失原來的力量、結構和緊實度。
來自柯林斯例句
3. My grumble is with the structure and organisation of the material.
我所不滿的是素材的結構和組織。
來自柯林斯例句
4. The chronological sequence gives the book an element of structure.
時間順序讓這本書有了一定的結構。
來自柯林斯例句
5. The chemical structure of this particular molecule is very unusual.