Dame

来自Big Physics

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Middle English (denoting a female ruler): via Old French from Latin domina ‘mistress’.


Ety img dame.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English dame, dam(“noble lady”), from Old French dame(“lady; term of address for a woman; the queen in card games and chess”), from Latin domina(“mistress of the house”), [1] feminine form of dominus(“lord, master, ruler; owner of a residence”), ultimately either from Proto-Indo-European *demh₂-(“to domesticate, tame”) or from Latin domus(“home, house”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *dem-(“to build (up)”)). Doublet of domina and donna.


etymonline

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dame (n.)

c. 1200, "a mother," also "a woman of rank or high social position; superior of a convent," and an address for a woman of rank or position, used respectfully to other ladies, from Old French dame "lady, mistress, wife," from Late Latin domna, from Latin domina "lady, mistress of the house," from Latin domus "house" (from PIE root *dem- "house, household").

From early 14c. as "a woman" in general, particularly a mature or married woman or the mistress of a household. Used in Middle English with personifications (Study, Avarice, Fortune, Richesse, Nature, Misericordie). In later use the legal title for the wife of a knight or baronet.

Slang sense of "woman" in the broadest sense, without regard to rank or anything else, is attested by 1902 in American English.

We got sunlight on the sand

We got moonlight on the sea

We got mangoes and bananas

You can pick right off the tree

We got volleyball and ping-pong

And a lot of dandy games!

What ain't we got?

We ain't got dames!

[Richard Rodgers, "There Is Nothin' Like a Dame," 1949]