Nude

来自Big Physics

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late Middle English (in the sense ‘plain, explicit’): from Latin nudus . The current sense is first found in noun use in the early 18th century.


Ety img nude.png

wiktionary

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Entered English 1531 as a legal term, meaning "unsupported, not formally attested," from Latin nūdus(“naked, bare”).


etymonline

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nude (adj.)

1530s, a legal term, "unsupported, not formally attested," from Latin nudus "naked, bare, unclothed, stripped," from PIE root *nogw- "naked" (see naked). General sense of "mere, plain, simple" is attested from 1550s. In reference to the human body, "unclothed, undraped," it is an artistic euphemism for naked, dating from 1610s (implied in nudity) but not in common use in this sense until mid-19c.




nude (n.)

"the representation of the undraped human figure in visual art," 1708, from French nud, obsolete variant of nu "naked, nude, bare," from Latin nudus (see nude (adj.)). In the nude "in a condition of being unclothed" is by 1856.