Boulevard

来自Big Physics
Safin讨论 | 贡献2022年4月27日 (三) 06:17的版本 (建立内容为“Category:etymology == google == [https://www.google.com.hk/search?q=boulevard+etymology&newwindow=1&hl=en ref] mid 18th century: French, ‘a rampart’ (lat…”的新页面)
(差异) ←上一版本 | 最后版本 (差异) | 下一版本→ (差异)

google

ref

mid 18th century: French, ‘a rampart’ (later ‘a promenade on the site of one’), from German Bollwerk (see bulwark).


文件:Ety img boulevard.png

wiktionary

ref

Borrowed from French boulevard, from Middle French boulevard,  bollevart,  boulevars,  bolevers,  bollewerc(“promenade, avenue, rampart”), from Middle High German bolewerc,  bolwerc (modern German Bollwerk) or Middle Dutch bolwerk(“ bulwark,  bastion”).  Doublet of  bulwark; more at  bole,  work. 


etymonline

ref

boulevard (n.)

1769, "broad street or promenade planted with rows of trees," from French boulevard, originally "top surface of a military rampart" (15c.), from a garbled attempt to adopt Middle Dutch bolwerc "wall of a fortification" (see bulwark) into French, which at that time lacked a -w- in its alphabet.

The notion is of a promenade laid out atop demolished city walls, a way which would be much wider than urban streets. Originally in English with conscious echoes of Paris; in U.S., since 1929, used of multi-lane limited-access urban highways. Early French attempts to digest the Dutch word also include boloart, boulever, boloirque, bollvercq.