Scroll

来自Big Physics

google

ref

late Middle English: alteration of obsolete scrow ‘roll’, shortening of escrow.


Ety img scroll.png

wiktionary

ref

From Middle English scrowle, scrolle, from earlier scrowe, scrouwe (influenced by Middle English rolle), from Old French escroe, escrowe, escrouwe(“scroll, strip of parchment”), from Frankish *skrōda(“a shred”), from Proto-Germanic *skraudō, from *skrew-(“to cut; cutting tool”), extension of *(s)ker-(“to cut”). Doublet of shred and escrow.


etymonline

ref

scroll (n.)

c. 1400, "roll of parchment or paper," altered (by association with rolle "roll") from scrowe (c. 1200), from Anglo-French escrowe, Old French escroe "scrap, roll of parchment," from Frankish *skroda "shred" or a similar Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *skrauth- (source also of Old English screada "piece cut off, cutting, scrap;" see shred (n.)). As an ornament on furniture or in architecture, from 1610s.




scroll (v.)

"to write down in a scroll," c. 1600, from scroll (n.). Sense of "show a few lines at a time" (on a computer or TV screen) first recorded 1981. Related: Scrolled; scrolling.