sympathy: [16] Sympathy is etymologically ‘feeling with’ someone else. The word comes via Latin sympathīa from Greek sumpátheia, a derivative of sumpathés ‘feeling with or similarly to someone else’. This was a compound adjective formed from the prefix sun- ‘together, with, like’ and páthos ‘feeling’ (source of English pathetic [16], pathology [17], pathos [17], etc). => pathetic, pathology, pathos
sympathy (n.)
1570s, "affinity between certain things," from Middle French sympathie (16c.) and directly from Late Latin sympathia "community of feeling, sympathy," from Greek sympatheia "fellow-feeling, community of feeling," from sympathes "having a fellow feeling, affected by like feelings," from assimilated form of syn- "together" (see syn-) + pathos "feeling" (see pathos).
In English, almost a magical notion at first; used in reference to medicines that heal wounds when applied to a cloth stained with blood from the wound. Meaning "conformity of feelings" is from 1590s; sense of "fellow feeling, compassion" is first attested c. 1600. An Old English loan-translation of sympathy was efensargung.
雙語例句
1. Several hundred workers struck in sympathy with their colleagues.
幾百名工人罷工以聲援他們的同事。
來自柯林斯例句
2. I have had very little help from doctors and no sympathy whatsoever.
我從醫生那裏沒有得到什麽幫助,也未獲得絲毫同情。
來自柯林斯例句
3. It sounds as if he's just angling for sympathy.
聽起來好像他隻是在博取同情。
來自柯林斯例句
4. The President has offered his sympathy to the Georgian people.
總統對格魯吉亞人民表示了同情。
來自柯林斯例句
5. Milne resigned in sympathy because of the way Donald had been treated.