yet: [OE] Yet is one of the mystery words of English. It seems to have emerged from the Anglo-Frisian group of dialects in northeastern Europe before the Angles and Saxons crossed the Channel (Old Frisian had iēta), but its ultimate source is unknown.
yet (adv.)
Old English get, gieta "till now, thus far, earlier, at last, also," an Anglo-Frisian word (cognates: Old Frisian ieta, Middle High German ieuzo), of unknown origin; perhaps connected to PIE pronominal stem *i- (see yon). The meaning in other Germanic languages is expressed by descendants of Proto-Germanic *noh- (source of German noch), from PIE *nu-qe- "and now." As a conjunction from c. 1200.
雙語例句
1. "Have they been to visit you yet?" — "Just the once, yeah."
“他們來看過你嗎?”——“來過,就一次.”
來自柯林斯例句
2. The worst of the storm is yet to come.
最猛烈的暴風雨就要來了。
來自柯林斯例句
3. Life has not yet returned to normal but we are getting there.
生活還沒有恢複正常,不過就快了。
來自柯林斯例句
4. Like the best stories, this one may yet have a happy end.
就像最精彩的故事那樣,這個故事也許仍會有個美好的結局。
來自柯林斯例句
5. It was not yet clear how the rudder had sheared off.