Superficial
来自Big Physics
late Middle English: from late Latin superficialis, from Latin superficies (see superficies).
wiktionary
Borrowing from Late Latin superficiālis(“of or belonging to the surface”), from superficiēs(“top, surface”) + -ālis(“-al”, adjectival suffix).
etymonline
superficial (adj.)
late 14c., in anatomical and mathematical uses, "of or relating to a surface," from Late Latin superficialis "of or pertaining to the surface," from superficies "surface, upper side, top," from super "above, over" (see super-) + facies "form, face" (see face (n.)). Meaning "not deep, without thorough understanding, cursory, comprehending only what is apparent or obvious" (of perceptions, thoughts, etc.) first recorded early 15c. (implied in superficially "not thoroughly").