Squeegee
来自Big Physics
mid 19th century: from archaic squeege ‘to press’, strengthened form of squeeze.
wiktionary
Probably from squeege, an intensified form of squeeze. Compare earlier squill-gee, squillgee.
etymonline
squeegee (n.)
"wooden scraping instrument with a rubber blade," 1844, a nautical word originally, earlier squilgee, squillagee (Dana, 1840), "a small swab made of untwisted yarns. Figuratively, a lazy mean fellow" [Smythe], perhaps from squeege "to press" (1782), an alteration of squeeze (v.). Later in photography, then window-washing.