star

英 [stɑ?] 美[stɑr]
  • n. 星,恒星;明星;星形物
  • vt. 用星號標(biāo)于;由…主演,由…擔(dān)任主角
  • vi. 擔(dān)任主角
  • adj. 明星的,主角的;星形的
  • n. (Star)人名;(瑞典)斯塔爾;(德)施塔爾

GRECET4TEM4考研CET6高頻詞基本詞匯

詞態(tài)變化


復(fù)數(shù):?stars;第三人稱單數(shù):?stars;過去式:?starred;過去分詞:?starred;現(xiàn)在分詞:?starring;

中文詞源


star 恒星,星星,星狀物,明星,主角

來自中古英語 sterre,來自古英語 steorra,星星,來自 Proto-Germanic*sterno,星星,來自 PIE*ster, 星星,來自 PIE*es,*as,燃燒,照明,詞源同 ash,ardent,-ter,表施動(dòng)者。

英文詞源


star
star: [OE] Star is a general Germanic word, with relatives in German stern, Dutch ster, Swedish stj?rna, and Danish stjerne. These were all descended from a prehistoric Germanic base *ster-, which had come down unaltered from Indo-European *ster- ‘star’, source also of Latin stēlla ‘star’ (from which English gets stellar [16]) and Greek astér ‘star’ (from which English gets asterisk, astronomy, disaster, etc).

The ultimate source of the Indo-European base is not known for certain, but the traditional view is that it comes from the base *ster- ‘spread out’, the underlying notion being of the stars ‘spread out’ in the sky. Sterling ‘British money’ was originally named from the design of a small ‘star’ on a coin, but starling is not etymologically related. The modern sense of star, ‘leading performer’, is first recorded in the early 19th century.

=> asterisk, astronomy, disaster, stellar, sterling
star (n.)
Old English steorra "star," from Proto-Germanic *sterron, *sternon (cognates: Old Saxon sterro, Old Frisian stera, Dutch ster, Old High German sterro, German Stern, Old Norse stjarna, Swedish stjerna, Danish stierne, Gothic stairno).

This is from PIE *ster- (2) "star" (cognates: Sanskrit star-, Hittite shittar, Greek aster, astron, Latin stella, Breton sterenn, Welsh seren "star"), of uncertain connection to other roots. Some suggest it is from a root meaning "to strew, scatter." Buck and others doubt the old suggestion that it is a borrowing from Akkadian istar "venus." The source of the common Balto-Slavic word for "star" (Lithuanian ?vaig?de, Old Church Slavonic zvezda, Polish gwiazda, Russian zvezda) is not explained.

Astrological sense of "influence of planets and zodiac on human affairs" is recorded from mid-13c., hence "person's fate as figured in the stars" (c. 1600); star-crossed "ill-fated" is from "Romeo and Juliet" (1592). Meaning "lead performer" is from 1824; star turn is from 1898. Stars as a ranking of quality for hotels, restaurants, etc. are attested from 1886, originally in Baedecker guides. Sticker stars as rewards for good students are recorded from 1970s. Brass star as a police badge is recorded from 1859 (New York City). Star-cluster is from 1870. To see stars when one is hit hard on the head is from 1839.
star (v.)
1590s, "to affix a star or asterisk to," from star (n.). From 1718 as "to set with stars." Meaning "perform the lead part" (of actors, singers, etc.) is from 1824. Sporting sense is from 1916. Related: Starred; starring.

雙語例句


1. A bright shooting star, or meteor, is an unforgettable sight.
明亮的流星,或者說隕石,是番難忘的景象。

來自柯林斯例句

2. She has some cockeyed delusions about becoming a pop star.
她還幻想著自己能成為流行歌星。

來自柯林斯例句

3. To the side of the large star is a smaller star.
大星星旁邊是一顆小一點(diǎn)的星星。

來自柯林斯例句

4. Has somebody helped himself to some film star's diamonds?
有人偷了某個(gè)影星的鉆石了嗎?

來自柯林斯例句

5. During the filming, Curtis fell in love with his co-star, Christine Kaufmann.
在電影攝制過程中,柯蒂斯愛上了同他聯(lián)袂主演的明星克里斯汀·考夫曼。

來自柯林斯例句

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