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see

英 [si?] 美[si]
  • vt. 看見(jiàn);理解;領(lǐng)會(huì)
  • vi. 看;看見(jiàn);領(lǐng)會(huì)
  • n. (See)人名;(英)西伊;(柬)塞;(德)澤

CET4TEM4考研CET6高頻詞基本詞匯

詞態(tài)變化


第三人稱單數(shù):?sees;過(guò)去式:?saw;過(guò)去分詞:?seen;現(xiàn)在分詞:?seeing;

中文詞源


see 看見(jiàn),看到

來(lái)自古英語(yǔ) seon,看,注視,留意,來(lái)自 Proto-Germanic*sehwana,看,注意,來(lái)自 PIE*sekw, 看,注意,可能衍生自 PIE*sekw,緊跟,跟隨,詞源同 sequence,second.引申諸相關(guān)詞義。

see 圣座,宗座,牧座,主教教區(qū)

縮寫自 Holy See,圣座,來(lái)自 seat 法語(yǔ)拼寫變體。

英文詞源


see
see: English has two words see. The older is the verb, ‘perceive visually’ [OE]. Like its Germanic cousins, German sehen, Dutch zien, and Swedish and Danish se, it goes back to a prehistoric *sekhwan, which was descended from an Indo-European base *seq-. This may have been the same *seq- that produced Latin sequī ‘follow’ (source of English sequence, sue, etc), in which case see would denote etymologically ‘follow with the eyes’. See ‘diocese’ [13] originally signified ‘bishop’s throne’.

It came via Anglo-Norman se from Vulgar Latin *sedem ‘seat’, descendant of classical Latin sēdem, the accusative case of sēdes ‘seat’. This in turn went back to the Indo- European base *sed- ‘sit’, which also produced English sit.

=> sight; seat, sit
see (v.)
Old English seon "to see, look, behold; observe, perceive, understand; experience, visit, inspect" (contracted class V strong verb; past tense seah, past participle sewen), from Proto-Germanic *sekhwan (cognates: Old Saxon, Old High German sehan, Middle High German, German sehen, Old Frisian sia, Middle Dutch sien, Old Norse sja, Gothic saihwan), from PIE root *sekw- (2) "to see," which is probably identical with *sekw- (1) "to follow" (see sequel), a root which produced words for "say" in Greek and Latin, and also words for "follow" (such as Latin sequor), but "opinions differ in regard to the semantic starting-point and sequences" [Buck]. Thus see might originally mean "follow with the eyes."

Used in Middle English to mean "behold in the imagination or in a dream" (c. 1200), "to recognize the force of (a demonstration)," also c. 1200. Sense of "escort" (as in to see (someone) home) first recorded 1607 in Shakespeare. Meaning "to receive as a visitor" is attested from c. 1500. Gambling sense of "equal a bet" is from 1590s. See you as a casual farewell first attested 1891. Let me see as a pausing statement is recorded from 1510s. To have seen everything as a hyperbolic expression of astonishment is from 1957.
When you have seen one of their Pictures, you have seen all. [Blake, c. 1811]
see (n.)
c. 1300, "throne of a bishop, archbishop, or pope," also "throne of a monarch, a goddess, Antichrist, etc.," from Old French sie "seat, throne; town, capital; episcopal see," from Latin sedem (nominative sedes) "seat, throne, abode, temple," related to sedere "to sit" (see sedentary). Early 14c. as "administrative center of a bishopric;" c. 1400 as "province under the jurisdiction of a bishop."

雙語(yǔ)例句


1. Specialists see various reasons for the recent surge in inflation.
專家們認(rèn)為目前通貨膨脹加劇有多種原因。

來(lái)自柯林斯例句

2. I don't see the point in it really. It's just stupid.
我真的不理解這到底有什么意義,簡(jiǎn)直是愚蠢透頂。

來(lái)自柯林斯例句

3. He'd phoned Laura to see if she was better.
他打電話給勞拉看她是不是好些了。

來(lái)自柯林斯例句

4. The criticisms will not stop people flocking to see the film.
批評(píng)的聲音不會(huì)阻止人們涌到影院觀看這部電影。

來(lái)自柯林斯例句

5. He could just about see the little man behind the counter.
他勉強(qiáng)能看到柜臺(tái)后面的小個(gè)子男人。

來(lái)自柯林斯例句