Bask

来自Big Physics

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late Middle English (originally in the sense ‘bathe’): perhaps related to Old Norse batha ‘bathe’.


Ety img bask.png

wiktionary

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From Old Norse baðask(“to take a bath”, literally “to bathe oneself”), mediopassive form from underlying baða(“to bathe”) + sik(“oneself”), from Proto-Germanic *baþōną and *sek. Doublet of English bathe.


etymonline

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bask (v.)

late 14c., basken "to wallow" (especially in warm water or blood, of unknown etymology. The Middle English Compendium rejects the derivation from Old Norse baðask "to bathe oneself" (with loss of middle syllable), reflexive of baða "bathe" (see bathe) + Proto-Germanic *-sik "one's self" (source also of German sich; see -sk).

Meaning "soak up a flood of warmth" is apparently due to Shakespeare's use of the word in reference to sunshine in "As You Like It" (1600). Related: Basked; basking.