n. 杂志;弹药库;胶卷盒
英 [mægə'ziːn]美 ['mæɡəzin]
权威例句
- Frank Deford is a contributing editor for Vanity Fair magazine.
弗兰克·德福特是杂志《名利场》的特约编辑。
来自柯林斯例句 - She presents a monthly magazine programme on the BBC.
她在英国广播公司主持一个月刊节目。
来自柯林斯例句 - I have been a subscriber to Railway Magazine for many years.
我订阅《铁路杂志》已有很多年了。
来自柯林斯例句 - The magazine's aim is to discuss topical issues within a Christian framework.
该杂志的宗旨是在基督教框架下讨论时下的热门话题。
来自柯林斯例句 - There's no need for that kind of language in this magazine.
这份杂志没必要出现那种语言。
来自柯林斯例句
中文词源
magazine 弹药库,弹夹,杂志,期刊
来自阿拉伯语makhzan,仓库,ma-,地名前缀,词源同mosque,khazana,存储。在16世纪进入英语后,该词原义也为仓库,特指军火库。后在1731年,一本杂志取名为”Gentleman’s Magazin”,字面意思即绅士的仓库,绅士信息指南。随着该杂志的流行,使该词引申词义杂志,期刊,并成为主要词义。比较arsenal.
英语词源
magazine: [16] The original meaning of magazine, now disused, was ‘storehouse’. The word comes, via French magasin and Italian magazzino, from Arabic makhāzin, the plural of makhzan ‘store-house’ (a derivative of the verb khazana ‘store’). It was soon applied specifically to a ‘store for arms’, and the modern sense ‘journal’, first recorded in the early 18th century, goes back to a 17th-century metaphorical application to a ‘storehouse of information’.
1580s, "place for storing goods, especially military ammunition," from Middle French magasin "warehouse, depot, store" (15c.), from Italian magazzino, from Arabic makhazin, plural of makhzan "storehouse" (source of Spanish almacén "warehouse, magazine"), from khazana "to store up." The original sense is almost obsolete; meaning "periodical journal" dates from the publication of the first one, "Gentleman's Magazine," in 1731, which was so called from earlier use of the word for a printed list of military stores and information, or in a figurative sense, from the publication being a "storehouse" of information.