Acid

来自Big Physics

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early 17th century (in the sense ‘sour-tasting’): from Latin acidus, from acere ‘be sour’.


文件:Ety img acid.png

wiktionary

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From French acide, from Latin acidus(“sour, acid”), from aceō(“I am sour”). Doublet of agita.


etymonline

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acid (adj.)

1620s, "of the taste of vinegar," from French acide (16c.) or directly from Latin acidus "sour, sharp, tart" (also figurative, "disagreeable," etc.), adjective of state from acere "to be sour, be sharp," from PIE root *ak- "be sharp, rise (out) to a point, pierce."

Figurative use in English is from 1775; applied to intense colors from 1916; an acid dye (1888) involves an acid bath. Acid test is American English, 1881, a quick way to distinguish gold from similar metals by application of nitric acid. Acid rain "highly acidity in rain caused by atmospheric pollution" is first recorded 1859 in reference to England. Acid drop as a kind of hard sugar candy flavored with tartaric acid is by 1835, with drop (n.) in the "lozenge" sense.




acid (n.)

1690s, from acid (adj.); originally loosely applied to any substance tasting like vinegar, in modern chemistry gradually given more precise definitions from early 18c. Slang meaning "LSD-25" first recorded 1966 (see LSD).


When I was on acid I would see things that looked like beams of light, and I would hear things that sounded an awful lot like car horns. [Mitch Hedberg, 1968-2005, U.S. stand-up comic]


Acid rock (type performed or received by people using LSD) is also from 1966; acid house dance music style is 1988, probably from acid in the hallucinogenic sense + house "dance club DJ music style."