Senior

来自Big Physics

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late Middle English: from Latin, literally ‘older, older man’, comparative of senex, sen- ‘old man, old’.


Ety img senior.png

wiktionary

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Borrowed from Latin senior(“older”), comparative form of senex(“old”); see senate. Doublet of seigneur, seignior, sire, and sir.


etymonline

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senior (adj.)

late 13c., from Latin senior "older," comparative of senex (genitive senis) "old," from PIE root *sen- "old." Original use in English was as an addition to a personal name indicating "the father" when father and son had the same name; meaning "higher in rank, longer in service" first recorded 1510s.

The Latin word yielded titles of respect in many languages, such as French sire, Spanish señor, Portuguese senhor, Italian signor. Also compare Herr. Senior citizen first recorded 1938, American English.




senior (n.)

mid-14c., "person of authority;" late 14c., "person older than another," from senior (adj.). Sense of "fourth-year student" is from 1741, from earlier general sense of "advanced student" (1610s).