Terrain

来自Big Physics

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early 18th century (denoting part of the training ground in a riding school): from French, from a popular Latin variant of Latin terrenum, neuter of terrenus (see terrene).


Ety img terrain.png

wiktionary

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Borrowed from French terrain, from Latin terrenum(“land, ground”), neuter of terrenus(“consisting of earth”), from terra(“earth”).


etymonline

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terrain (n.)

1727, "ground for training horses," from French terrain "piece of earth, ground, land," from Old French (12c.), from Vulgar Latin *terranum, from Latin terrenum "land, ground," noun use of neuter of terrenus "of earth, earthly," from terra "earth, land," literally "dry land" (as opposed to "sea"); from PIE root *ters- "to dry." Meaning "tract of country, considered with regard to its natural features" first attested 1766.