Cursory

来自Big Physics

google

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early 17th century: from Latin cursorius ‘of a runner’, from cursor (see cursor).


Ety img cursory.png

wiktionary

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Borrowed from Middle French cursoire(“rapid”), from Latin cursorius(“hasty, of a race or running”)


etymonline

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cursory (adj.)

"hasty, slight, superficial, careless," c. 1600, from French cursoire "rapid," from Late Latin cursorius "hasty, of a race or running," from Latin curs-, past-participle stem of currere "to run" (from PIE root *kers- "to run"). The literal sense of "running, not stationary" (c. 1600) is obsolete.