Spiral

来自Big Physics

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mid 16th century (as an adjective): from medieval Latin spiralis, from Latin spira ‘coil’ (see spire2).


Ety img spiral.png

wiktionary

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From Middle French spirale, from Medieval Latin spiralis, from Latin spira, from Ancient Greek σπείρα(speíra, “wreath, coil, twist”).


etymonline

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spiral (adj.)

1550s, from French spiral (16c.), from Medieval Latin spiralis "winding around a fixed center, coiling" (mid-13c.), from Latin spira "a coil, fold, twist, spiral," from Greek speira "a winding, a coil, twist, wreath, anything wound or coiled," from PIE *sper-ya-, from base *sper- (2) "to turn, twist." Related: Spirally. Spiral galaxy first attested 1913.




spiral (v.)

1726 (implied in spiraled), transitive, from spiral (n.). Intransitive use by 1834. Transferred and figurative sense by 1922. Related: Spiraling.




spiral (n.)

1650s, from spiral (adj.). U.S. football sense is from 1896. Figurative sense of "progressive movement in one direction" is by 1897. Of books, spiral-bound (adj.) is from 1937.