Spot

来自Big Physics

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Middle English: perhaps from Middle Dutch spotte . The sense ‘notice, recognize’ arose from the early 19th century slang use ‘note as a suspect or criminal’.


文件:Ety img spot.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English spot, spotte, partially from Middle Dutch spotte(“spot, speck”), and partially merging with Middle English splot, from Old English splott(“spot, plot of land”). Cognate with North Frisian spot(“speck, piece of ground”), Low German spot(“speck”), Old Norse spotti(“small piece”). See also splot, splotch.


etymonline

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spot (n.)

c. 1200, "moral stain," probably from Old English splott "a spot, blot, patch (of land)," and partly from or related to Middle Dutch spotte "spot, speck." Other cognates are East Frisian spot "speck," North Frisian spot "speck, piece of ground," Old Norse spotti "small piece," Norwegian spot "spot, small piece of land." It is likely that some of these are borrowed from others, but the exact evolution now is impossible to trace.


Meaning "speck, stain" is from mid-14c. The sense of "particular place, small extent of space" is from c. 1300. Meaning "short interval in a broadcast for an advertisement or announcement" is from 1923. Preceded by a number (as in five-spot) it originally was a term for "prison sentence" of that many years (1901, American English slang). To put (someone) on the spot "place in a difficult situation" is from 1928. Colloquial phrase hit the spot "satisfy, be what is required" is from 1868. Spot check is attested by 1933. Adverbial phrase spot on "completely right" attested from 1920.




spot (v.)

mid-13c., "to mark or stain with spots;" late 14c. as "to stain, sully, tarnish," from spot (n.). Meaning "to see and recognize," is from 1718, originally colloquial and applied to a criminal or suspected person; the general sense is from 1860. Related: Spotted; spotting. Spotted dick "suet pudding with currants and raisins" is attested from 1849.