Pave

来自Big Physics

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Middle English: from Old French paver ‘pave’.


Ety img pave.png

wiktionary

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From Old French paver(“to pave, to cover”), from Vulgar Latin *pavāre(“to beat down, to smash”), from Latin pavīre, present active infinitive of paviō(“I beat, strike, ram, tread down”).


etymonline

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pave (v.)

early 14c., paven, "to cover (a street) with blocks of stone, tiles, or similar hard material set regularly and firmly in place," from Old French paver "to pave" (12c.), perhaps a back-formation from Old French pavement or else from Vulgar Latin *pavare, from Latin pavire "to beat, ram, tread down," from PIE root *pau- (2) "to cut, strike, stamp." Related: Paved; paving. The figurative sense of "make smooth or easy" (in pave the way "prepare the way for something to come") is attested from 1580s.