verse
英 [vɜːs]
美 [vɝs]
- n. 詩,詩篇;韻文;詩節
- vi. 作詩
- vt. 使熟練,使精通
- n. (Verse)人名;(德)費爾澤
助記提示
1、vers- + -e.
2、The metaphor is of plowing, of "turning" from one line to another (vertere = "to turn") as a plowman does.
3. 諧音“我詩,玩兒詩” --- 詩,作詩。
中文詞源
verse 詩,韻文來自拉丁語versus,轉,翻轉,詞源versus,toward。引申詞義詩行,韻文。
英文詞源
- verse
- verse: [OE] Verse is one of a large family of English words that come ultimately from the Latin verb vertere or its past participial stem vers-. Others include versatile [17], version [16], versus [15], vertebra, vertical, and vertigo, as well as prefixed forms such as controversy [14], conversation, convert, diverse, invert [16], pervert [14], and reverse [14].
Latin vertere itself came from the Indo-European base *wert-, which also produced English weird and the suffix -ward. Verse was borrowed from the Latin derivative versus ‘turning, turning of the plough’, hence ‘furrow’, and by further metaphorical extension ‘line, line of poetry’.
=> controversy, conversation, convert, diverse, invert, pervert, reverse, subvert, versatile, version, versus, vertebra, vertical, vertigo, weird - verse (n.)
- late Old English (replacing Old English fers, an early West Germanic borrowing directly from Latin), "line or section of a psalm or canticle," later "line of poetry" (late 14c.), from Anglo-French and Old French vers "line of verse; rhyme, song," from Latin versus "a line, row, line of verse, line of writing," from PIE root *wer- (3) "to turn, bend" (see versus). The metaphor is of plowing, of "turning" from one line to another (vertere = "to turn") as a plowman does.
Verse was invented as an aid to memory. Later it was preserved to increase pleasure by the spectacle of difficulty overcome. That it should still survive in dramatic art is a vestige of barbarism. [Stendhal "de l'Amour," 1822]
The English New Testament first was divided fully into verses in the Geneva version (1550s). Meaning "metrical composition" is recorded from c. 1300; as the non-repeating part of a modern song (between repetitions of the chorus) by 1918.
The Negroes say that in form their old songs usually consist in what they call "Chorus and Verses." The "chorus," a melodic refrain sung by all, opens the song; then follows a verse sung as a solo, in free recitative; the chorus is repeated; then another verse; chorus again;--and so on until the chorus, sung for the last time, ends the song. [Natalie Curtis-Burlin, "Negro Folk-Songs," 1918]
雙語例句
- 1. I have been moved to write a few lines of verse.
- 我因感動而寫下了幾句詩。
來自柯林斯例句
- 2. He published only three slim volumes of verse in his short life.
- 在他短暫的一生裏,他隻出版過3卷薄薄的詩集。
來自柯林斯例句
- 3. The verse rose up to fire his breast with inspiration.
- 這首詩激發了他的靈感。
來自柯林斯例句
- 4. This verse describes three signs of spring.
- 這節詩描繪了春天來臨的三個征兆。
來自柯林斯例句
- 5. He recited a verse of the twenty-third psalm.
- 他背誦了《詩篇》第23篇中的一節。
來自柯林斯例句