Segue

来自Big Physics

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Italian, literally ‘follows’.


Ety img segue.png

wiktionary

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Borrowed from Italian segue(“it follows”) [1], from seguire(“to follow”), from Latin sequor; originally a term used in a musical score to indicate that the next movement or passage is to follow without a break. Cognate with Spanish seguir. Doublet of sue. Related to suit and sequence.


etymonline

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segue (n.)

1740, an instruction in musical scores, from Italian segue, literally "now follows," meaning to play into the following movement without a break, third person singular of seguire "to follow," from Latin sequi "to follow," from PIE root *sekw- (1) "to follow." Extended noun sense of "transition without a break" is from 1937; the verb in this sense is first recorded 1958.