Archer

来自Big Physics

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Middle English: from Old French archier, based on Latin arcus ‘bow’.


Ety img archer.png

wiktionary

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from Middle English archer, archere, from Old French archier, from Latin arcārius, alteration of arcuārius, from Latin arcus(“bow”). Displaced native Old English sċytta.

archer


etymonline

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archer (n.)

"one who shoots arrows from a (long) bow," late 13c., from Anglo-French archer, Old French archier "archer; bow-maker," from Late Latin arcarius, alteration of Latin arcuarius "maker of bows," from arcus "bow" (see arc (n.)). (The classical Latin word was arquites "archers;" the Greeks shunned archery as an unmanly tactic, and the Romans seem to have had little appreciation for it until their later encounters with mounted barbarian archers). Also a 17c. name for the bishop in chess. As a type of tropical fish, 1834, from its shooting drops of water at insects.