Spring: Porovnání verzí
Značka: editace z Vizuálního editoru |
|||
(Není zobrazena jedna mezilehlá verze od jednoho dalšího uživatele.) | |||
Řádek 3: | Řádek 3: | ||
'''Verb'''<ref>"spring." The Oxford English Dictionary. www.oed.com 16 Nov 2014 http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/187728.</ref> | '''Verb'''<ref>"spring." The Oxford English Dictionary. www.oed.com 16 Nov 2014 http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/187728.</ref> | ||
− | (past tense: sprang, past participle: sprung) class III strong verb | + | (past tense: '''''sprang''''', past participle: '''''sprung''''') class III strong verb |
+ | |||
+ | Proto Indo Euroopean: '''''sprengh'''''. (spring, hasten) | ||
Old English: Springan | Old English: Springan |
Aktuální verze z 18. 11. 2014, 17:32
Spring
Verb[1]
(past tense: sprang, past participle: sprung) class III strong verb
Proto Indo Euroopean: sprengh. (spring, hasten)
Old English: Springan
Middle English: Springen
Meaning: to leap, burst forth, fly up
Meaning 2: spread, grow
Mostly meaning sudden or rapid movement, especially upwards. (He..þæt spere sprengde, þæt hit sprang ongean.) Possible connection with the season in that it is the season when plants are supposed to spring. (spring - noun=conversion?)
Noun
Meaning:[2]
1. the source or head of a well,stream (pramen) - from OE
2. the act of springing (leaping)/ spring - tool (pružina) - from 14c.
3. season following winter 14c.
4. the beginning (eg.of day, year,...) (e.g. "dayspring" 14c.)
Old English: springe/spryng (masc.)[3]
OED:formed respectively from the primary and weak grades of the stem spring- , sprang- , sprung- : see spring v.1, from which a number of the later senses are directly derived. In OE not so common, occurring in senses which have not survived.
Middle English: springe
First appearances of "spring" in the meaning referring to the season.
Spring - season[4]
Derived from "spring of the year", the time when plants begin to rise, from the original meaning "to spring". Until 14th century, the term used to refer to the spring was "lent" derived from West Germanic "langa-tinaz" (long days), meaning forty days before Easter.
References:
- ↑ "spring." The Oxford English Dictionary. www.oed.com 16 Nov 2014 http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/187728.
- ↑ Harper D. "spring." Online Etymology Dictionary. 2001. http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=spring.
- ↑ "spring." The Oxford English Dictionary. www.oed.com 16 Nov 2014 http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/187725?rskey=Iqqfqb&result=121&isAdvanced=true#eid21296395
- ↑ Harper D. "spring." Online Etymology Dictionary. 2001. http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=spring.