String

来自Big Physics

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Old English streng (noun), of Germanic origin; related to German Strang, also to strong. The verb (dating from late Middle English) is first recorded in the senses ‘arrange in a row’ and ‘fit with a string’.


文件:Ety img string.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English string, streng, strynge, from Old English streng(“string, cord, rope; tackle, rigging; ligament, ligature, sinew; line, lineage”), from Proto-West Germanic *strangi, from Proto-Germanic *strangiz(“string”), from Proto-Indo-European *strengʰ-(“rope, cord, strand; to tighten”). Cognate with Scots string(“string”), Dutch streng(“cord, strand”), Low German strenge(“strand, cord, rope”), German Strang(“strand, cord, rope”), Danish streng(“string”), Swedish sträng(“string, cord, wire”), Icelandic strengur(“string”), Latvian stringt(“to be tight, wither”), Latin stringō(“I tighten”), Ancient Greek στραγγαλόομαι(strangalóomai, “to strangle”), from στραγγάλη(strangálē, “halter”), Ancient Greek στραγγός(strangós, “tied together, entangled, twisted”).


etymonline

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string (n.)

Old English streng "line, cord, thread, string of a bow or harp," in plural "tackle, rigging; lineage, race," from Proto-Germanic *strangiz (source also of Old Norse strengr, Danish streng, Middle Dutch strenge, Dutch streng, Old High German strang, German Strang "rope, cord"), from *strang- "taut, stiff," from PIE root *strenk- "tight, narrow." Gradually restricted by early Middle English to lines that are smaller than a rope. Sense of "a number of objects arranged in a line" first recorded late 15c.

Old English meaning "ligaments, tendons" is preserved in hamstring (n.), heart-strings. Meaning "limitations, stipulations" (1888) is American English, probably from the common April Fool's joke of leaving a purse that appears to be full of money on the sidewalk, then tugging it away with an attached string when someone stoops to pick it up.

To pull strings "control the course of affairs" (1860) is from the notion of puppet theater. First string, second string, etc. in athletics (1863) is from archers' custom of carrying spare bowstrings in the event that one breaks. Strings "stringed instruments" is attested from mid-14c. String bean is from 1759; string bikini is from 1974.




string (v.)

c. 1400, "to fit a bow with a string," from string (n.). Meaning "to thread (beads, etc.) on a string" is from 1610s. Of musical instruments from 1520s (stringed instrument is from c. 1600). To string (someone) along is slang from 1902; string (v.) in the sense "deceive" is attested in British dialect from c. 1812; perhaps ultimately from the musical instrument sense and with a notion of "to 'tune' someone (for some purpose)." Related: Stringed (later strung); stringing.