Hazel

来自Big Physics

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Old English hæsel, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch hazelaar ‘hazel tree’, hazelnoot ‘hazelnut’, and German Hasel, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin corylus .


Ety img hazel.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English hasel, from Old English hæsl(“hazel, shrub”), from Proto-West Germanic *hasl, from Proto-Germanic *haslaz(“hazel”), from Proto-Indo-European *kóslos(“hazel”). Cognate with Dutch hazelaar(“hazel”), German Hasel(“hazel”), Swedish hassel(“hazel”), Latin corulus, corylus(“hazel-tree, hazelwood”), Irish coll(“hazel”).


etymonline

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hazel (n.)

Old English hæsl, hæsel, from Proto-Germanic *hasalaz (source also of Old Norse hasl, Middle Dutch hasel, German hasel), from PIE *koselo- "hazel" (source also of Latin corulus, Old Irish coll "hazel"). Shakespeare ("Romeo and Juliet," 1592) was first to use it (in print) in the sense of "reddish-brown color of eyes" (in reference to the color of ripe hazel-nuts), when Mercutio accuses Benvolio:


Thou wilt quarrell with a man for cracking Nuts, hauing no reason, but because thou hast hasell eyes.