Entrance

来自Big Physics

google

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early 16th century: from Old French, from entrer ‘enter’.


Ety img entrance.png

wiktionary

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From Middle French entrance(“entry”). Replaced native Middle English ingang(“entrance, admission”), from Old English ingang(“ingress, entry, entrance”).

From en- + trance(“daze”)


etymonline

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entrance (n.)

1520s, "act of entering," from French entrance, from entrer (see enter). Sense of "door, gate" first recorded in English 1530s. Meaning "a coming of an actor upon the stage" is from c. 1600.




entrance (v.)

"to throw into a trance," 1590s, from en- (1) "put in" + trance (n.). Meaning "to delight" also is 1590s. Related: Entranced; entrancing; entrancement.