Gauntlet

来自Big Physics

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late Middle English: from Old French gantelet, diminutive of gant ‘glove’, of Germanic origin.


Ety img gauntlet.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English gauntelett, gantlett, a borrowing from Old French gantelet(“gauntlet worn by a knight in armor, a token of one's personality or person, and symbolizing a challenge”), diminutive of gant(“glove”), a borrowing from Frankish *want(“glove; mitten”) and reinforced by Medieval Latin wantus(“glove”) itself borrowed from the former, from Proto-Germanic *wantuz(“glove; mitten”). Cognate with Dutch want(“mitten; shroud”), German Low German Want(“shroud”), Danish vante(“mitten”), Swedish vante(“glove; mitten”), Faroese vøttur(“glove; mitten”).

Modified, under the influence of etymology 1, from gantlope, from Swedish gatlopp(“passageway”), from Old Swedish gata(“lane”) + lopp(“course”), from löpa(“to run”)


etymonline

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gauntlet (n.1)

"glove," early 15c., gantelet, from Old French gantelet (13c.) "gauntlet worn by a knight in armor," also a token of one's personality or person, and in medieval custom symbolizing a challenge, as in tendre son gantelet "throw down the gauntlet" (a sense found in English by 1540s). The Old French word is a semi-diminutive or double-diminutive of gant "glove" (12c.), earlier wantos (7c.), from Frankish *wanth-, from Proto-Germanic *wantuz "glove" (source also of Middle Dutch want "mitten," East Frisian want, wante, Old Norse vöttr "glove," Danish vante "mitten"), which apparently is related to Old High German wintan, Old English windan "turn around, wind" (see wind (v.1)).


The name must orig. have applied to a strip of cloth wrapped about the hand to protect it from sword-blows, a frequent practice in the Icelandic sagas. [Buck]


Italian guanto, Spanish guante likewise are ultimately from Germanic. The spelling with -u- was established from 1500s.




gauntlet (n.2)

military punishment in which offender runs between rows of men who beat him in passing; see gantlet.