us: [OE] Us can be traced back ultimately to Indo- European *ns. This passed into prehistoric Germanic as uns, which has evolved into German uns, Dutch ons, Swedish and Danish os, and English us. Latin nōs ‘we’ (source of French nous) is distantly related. => our, we
us (pron.)
Old English us (cognate with Old Saxon, Old Frisian us, Old Norse, Swedish oss, Dutch ons, German uns), accusative and dative plural of we, from PIE *nes- (2), forming oblique cases of the first person plural personal pronoun (cognates: Sanskrit nas, Avestan na, Hittite nash "us;" Greek no "we two;" Latin nos "we, us;" Old Church Slavonic ny "us," nasu "our;" Old Irish ni, Welsh ni "we, us"). The -n- is preserved in Germanic in Dutch ons, German uns.
US
also U.S., abbreviation of United States, attested from 1834. U.S.A. for "United States of America" is recorded from 1885; before that it generally meant "U.S. Army."
雙語例句
1. I would prefer him to be with us next season.
我更希望他下一個賽季和我們在一起。
來自柯林斯例句
2. This brings us to the second question I asked.
這就將我們帶到了我所提的第二個問題。
來自柯林斯例句
3. What is right for us need not be right for others.
對我們來說是對的東西,對別人來說未必正確。
來自柯林斯例句
4. He told us to get stuffed so we leaned on his kid.