英文词源
- fellow
- fellow: [11] Etymologically, a fellow is somebody who ‘lays money’. The word originated as an Old Norse compound félagi, formed from fé ‘money’ and *lag-, a verbal base denoting ‘lay’. Someone who puts down money with someone else in a joint venture is his or her associate: hence a fellow is a ‘companion’ or ‘partner’. When English adopted the Old Norse word in the 11th century, it translated its first element into Old English fēoh ‘property’, giving late Old English féolaga and eventually modern English fellow. (Both Old English fēoh and Old Norse fé originally meant ‘cattle’, and are probably related to modern English fee.)
=> fee, lay - fellow (n.)
- "companion, comrade," c. 1200, from Old English feolaga "partner, one who shares with another," from Old Norse felagi, from fe "money" (see fee) + lag, from a verbal base denoting "lay" (see lay (v.)). The root sense is of fellow is "one who puts down money with another in a joint venture."
Meaning "one of the same kind" is from early 13c.; that of "one of a pair" is from c. 1300. Used familiarly since mid-15c. for "any man, male person," but not etymologically masculine (it is used of women, for example, in Judges xi:37 in the King James version: "And she said unto her father, Let this thing be done for me: let me alone two months, that I may go up and down upon the mountains, and bewail my virginity, I and my fellows"). Its use can be contemptuous or dignified in English and American English, and at different times in its history, depending on who used it to whom, it has carried a tinge of condescension or insult. University senses (mid-15c., corresponding to Latin socius) evolved from notion of "one of the corporation who constitute a college" and who are paid from its revenues. Fellow well-met "boon companion" is from 1580s, hence hail-fellow-well-met as a figurative phrase for "on intimate terms."
In compounds, with a sense of "co-, joint-," from 16c., and by 19c. also denoting "association with another." Hence fellow-traveler, 1610s in a literal sense but in 20c. with a specific extended sense of "one who sympathizes with the Communist movement but is not a party member" (1936, translating Russian poputchik).
Fellow-countrymen formerly was one of the phrases the British held up to mock the Americans for their ignorance, as it is redundant to say both, until they discovered it dates from the 1580s and was used by Byron and others.
中文词源
fellow(伙伴):掏钱出资的合伙人
英语单词fellow翻译成中文有多个意思,如伙伴、同事、会员、同胞、小伙子、家伙等,还有一种美国的奖学金也被称为fellowship。如此多的释义难免让人头晕,但其实只要理解了它的词源和初始含义,这些困惑就迎刃而解了。
fellow源自古北欧语felagi,由fe(表示“钱”,如fee)+lagi(放下,=lay)组成,意思是“往里放钱、投资”,用来表示掏钱出资、参与某项商业或事业的合伙人,所以fellow一词的初始含义就是“合伙人”的意思。从“合伙人”很自然地延伸为“同事、伙伴”的意思,用来称呼同事、朋友,甚至陌生人,相当于中文的“哥们、伙计、家伙”。而在庄重的场合,还可以用来表示“同胞、战友”等。在学术场合中,常用来表示某个学术团体的会员、学术职位或职称,如research fellow就是“研究员”,teaching fellow就是“助教”(通常由研究生担任)。fellowship的本意指的是某种fellow资格,而大学会为这种fellow提供奖学金,所以fellowship就等同于奖学金了。
fellow:['feləʊ] n.家伙,朋友,同事,同胞,会员adj.同伴的,同事的,同道的
fellowship:['felə(ʊ)ʃɪp] n.奖学金,研究员职位,伙伴关系,友谊
该词的英语词源请访问趣词词源英文版:fellow 词源,fellow 含义。
fellow:同伴
来自古英语feolaga, 同伴,合作者。feo-,同fee, 古义金钱,laga-, 同lay, 放置。即合伙做事情的人,同伴。