Hoop

来自Big Physics

google

ref

late Old English hōp, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch hoep .


Ety img hoop.png

wiktionary

ref

From Middle English hoop, hoope, from Old English hōp(“mound, raised land; in combination, circular object”), from Proto-Germanic *hōpą(“bend, bow, arch”) (compare Saterland Frisian Houp(“hoop”), Dutch hoep(“hoop”), Old Norse hóp(“bay, inlet”)), from Proto-Indo-European *kāb-(“to bend”) (compare Lithuanian kabė(“hook”), Old Church Slavonic кѫпъ(kǫpŭ, “hill, island”)). More at camp.

hoop (plural hoops)


etymonline

ref

hoop (n.)

late 12c., "circular band, flattened ring," probably from an unrecorded Old English *hop, from Proto-Germanic *hōp (source also of Old Frisian hop "a hoop, band," Middle Dutch and Dutch hoep "hoop," Old Norse hop "a small bay"). The original meaning must have been "curve; ring," but the IE etymology is uncertain.

As a child's plaything by 1792. In basketball from 1893. As something someone jumps through (on horseback) as a circus trick, by 1793; figurative use of jump through hoops is by 1917. As "circular band serving to expand the skirt of a woman's dress" from 1540s. They have been in and out of style over the centuries. Hoop-petticoat (one stiffened or expanded by hoops of ratan, whalebone, etc,) is attested from 1711; hoop-skirt in the same sense is from 1856, figurative of old-fashioned ways by 1893, when there was a general alarm at their rumored return to fashion. The U.S. Southern hoop snake (1784) is fabled to take its tail in its mouth and roll along like a hoop. Related: Hoops.




hoop (v.)

mid-15c., from hoop (n.). The surname Hooper "maker of hoops, one who hoops casks or tubs" is attested from early 13c. Related: Hooped; hooping.