adj. 快速的,迅速的;紧的,稳固的
adv. 迅速地;紧紧地;彻底地
vi. 禁食,斋戒
n. 斋戒;绝食
n. (Fast)人名;(德、英、俄、芬、捷、瑞典)法斯特
英 [fɑːst] 美 [fæst]
权威例句
- Megamalls and fast food restaurants line the highway system.
公路系统沿线有大型商场和快餐店。
来自柯林斯例句 - The auguries of death are fast gathering round his head.
死亡凶兆迅速地在他脑海中盘旋。
来自柯林斯例句 - Word has been spreading fast of the incidents on the streets.
有关街头骚乱的消息迅速传播开来。
来自柯林斯例句 - Daly was a fast-talking Irish-American who had started out as a salesman.
达利是个花言巧语的爱尔兰裔美国人,最初是干推销员的。
来自柯林斯例句 - The band was starting to play a fast, loud number.
乐队奏起一首很大声的快歌。
来自柯林斯例句
中文词源
fast 稳固的,快的,绝食
来自PIEpast,固定,稳固,进一步来自PIEpag, 固定,连接,词源同fang, pact.用于宗教术语斋戒,绝食。同时由稳固的衍生词义快速的。类似词义演变参照very, 原义真实的,fair, 原义美丽的,或汉语成语欲速则不达。
英文词源
fast
**fast: **[OE] Widely dissimilar as they now seem, _fast _‘quick’ and _fast _‘abstain from food’ in fact come from the same ultimate source. This was Germanic *fastuz, which denoted ‘firm’. That underlying sense persists in various contexts, such as ‘hold fast’ and ‘fast friend’. The verbal application to ‘eating no food’ originated in the notion of ‘holding fast to a particular observance’ – specifically, abstinence from food.
The use of _fast _for ‘quick’ is a much later development, dating from the 13th century. It probably comes from a perception of _fast _‘firm’ containing an underlying connotation of ‘extremity’ or ‘severity’.
fast (adj.)
Old English fæst "firmly fixed, steadfast, constant; secure; enclosed, watertight; strong, fortified," probably from Proto-Germanic *fastu- "firm, fast" (cognates: Old Frisian fest, Old Norse fastr, Dutch vast, German fest), from PIE root *past- "firm, solid" (source of Sanskrit pastyam "dwelling place").
Meaning "rapid, quick" is from 1550s, from the adverb (q.v.). Of colors, from 1650s; of clocks, from 1840. The sense of "living an unrestrained life, eager in pursuit of pleasure" (usually of women) is from 1746 (fast living is from 1745). Fast buck recorded from 1947; fast food is first attested 1951. Fast lane is by 1966; the fast track originally was in horse-racing (1934), one that permits maximum speed; figurative sense by 1960s. Fast-forward is by 1948, originally of audio tape.
fast (v.)
"abstain from food," Old English fæstan "to fast" (as a religious duty), also "to make firm; establish, confirm, pledge," from Proto-Germanic *fastan "to hold fast, observe abstinence" (cognates: Old Frisian festia, Old High German fasten, German fasten, Old Norse fasta "abstain from food"), from the same root as fast (adj.).
The original meaning in prehistoric Germanic was "hold firmly," and the sense evolved via "have firm control of oneself," to "hold oneself to observance" (compare Gothic fastan "to keep, observe," also "to fast"). Perhaps the Germanic sense shifted through use of the native words to translate Medieval Latin observare in its sense "to fast." The verb in the sense "to make fast" continued in Middle English, but was superseded by fasten. Related: Fasted; fasting.
fast (n.)
"act of fasting," late Old English fæsten "voluntary abstinence from food and drink or from certain kinds of food," especially, but not necessarily, as a religious duty; either from the verb in Old English or from Old Norse fasta "a fast, fasting, season for fasting," from a Proto-Germanic noun formed from the verbal root of fast (v.). In earlier Old English fæsten meant "fortress, cloister, enclosure, prison."
fast (adv.)
Old English fæste "firmly, securely; strictly;" also, perhaps, "speedily," from Proto-Germanic *fasto (cognates: Old Saxon fasto, Old Frisian feste, Dutch vast, Old High German fasto, German fast "firmly, immovably, strongly, very"), from *fastu- (adj.) "firm, fast" (see fast (adj.)).
The meaning "quickly, swiftly, rapidly" was perhaps in Old English, certainly by c. 1200, probably from or developed under influence of Old Norse fast "firmly, fast." This sense developed, apparently in Scandinavian, from that of "firmly, strongly, vigorously" (to run hard means the same as to run fast; also compare fast asleep, also compare Old Norse drekka fast "to drink hard," telja fast "to give (someone) a severe lesson"). Or perhaps from the notion of a runner who "sticks" close to whatever he is chasing (compare Old Danish fast "much, swiftly, at once, near to, almost," and sense evolution of German fix "fast, fixed; fast, quick, nimble," from Latin fixus). The expression fast by "near, close, beside" also is said to be from Scandinavian. To fast talk someone (v.) is recorded by 1946.