Clock

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late Middle English: from Middle Low German and Middle Dutch klocke, based on medieval Latin clocca ‘bell’.


文件:Ety img clock.png

wiktionary

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c. 1350–1400, Middle English clokke, clok, cloke, from Middle Dutch clocke(“bell, clock”), from Old Northern French cloque(“bell”), from Medieval Latin clocca, probably of Celtic origin, from Proto-Celtic *klokkos(“bell”) (compare Welsh cloch, Old Irish cloc), either onomatopoeic or from Proto-Indo-European *klek-(“to laugh, cackle”) (compare Proto-Germanic *hlahjaną(“to laugh”)).

Related to Old English clucge, Saterland Frisian Klokke(“bell; clock”), Low German Klock(“bell, clock”), German Glocke, Swedish klocka.

Doublet of cloak.

Origin uncertain; designs may have originally been bell-shaped and thus related to Etymology 1, above.

clock (plural clocks)

Old English cloccian ultimately imitative; compare Dutch klokken, English cluck.


etymonline

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clock (n.1)

"machine to measure and indicate time mechanically" (since late 1940s also electronically), late 14c., clokke, originally "clock with bells," probably from Middle Dutch clocke (Dutch klok) "a clock," from Old North French cloque (Old French cloke, Modern French cloche "a bell"), from Medieval Latin clocca "bell," which probably is from Celtic (compare Old Irish clocc, Welsh cloch, Manx clagg "a bell") and spread by Irish missionaries (unless the Celtic words are from Latin). Ultimately of imitative origin.


Wherever it actually arose, it was prob. echoic, imitating the rattling made by the early handbells of sheet-iron and quadrilateral shape, rather than the ringing of the cast circular bells of later date. [OED]


Replaced Old English dægmæl, from dæg "day" + mæl "measure, mark" (see meal (n.1)). The Latin word was horologium (source of French horologe, Spanish reloj, Italian oriolo, orologio); the Greeks used a water-clock (klepsydra, literally "water thief;" see clepsydra).

The image of put (or set) the clock back "return to an earlier state or system" is from 1862. Round-the-clock (adj.) is from 1943, originally in reference to air raids. To have a face that would stop a clock "be very ugly" is from 1886. (Variations from c. 1890 include break a mirror, kill chickens.)

I remember I remember

That boarding house forlorn,

The little window where the smell

Of hash came in the morn.

I mind the broken looking-glass,

The mattress like a rock,

The servant-girl from County Clare,

Whose face would stop a clock.

[... etc.; The Insurance Journal, January 1886]




clock (v.)

"to time by the clock," 1883, from clock (n.1). The slang sense of "hit, sock" is 1941, originally Australian, probably from earlier slang clock (n.) "face" (1923). To clock in "register one's arrival by means of a mechanical device with a clock" is from 1914. Related: Clocked; clocking.




clock (n.2)

"ornament pattern on a stocking," 1520s, probably identical with clock (n.1) in its older sense and meaning "bell-shaped ornament," though clock seems never to have been used for "bell" in English. Related: Clocked; clock-stocking.