Dressing
来自Big Physics
Middle English (in the sense ‘put straight’): from Old French dresser ‘arrange, prepare’, based on Latin directus ‘direct, straight’.
wiktionary
From Middle English dressing, dressinge, dressynge, equivalent to dress + -ing.
From Middle English dressynge, dressande, equivalent to dress + -ing.
etymonline
dressing (n.)
mid-14c., "rule, control," verbal noun from dress (v.). In cookery, "sauce used in preparing a dish for the table," from c. 1500. Meaning "bandage applied to a wound or sore" is recorded from 1713. Dressing-gown "a loose and easy robe worn while applying make-up or doing the hair" is attested from 1777; dressing-room "room intended to be used for dressing" is from 1670s.