본문 바로가기
중학교 3학년/3학년 동아 윤정미

동아 윤정미 중3 3과 본문 mp3 English Words of Foreign Origin

by ₯₺﷼₳
반응형

Lesson 3 Stories of English Words and Expressions

English Words of Foreign Origin

  

English has often borrowed words from other cultures or languages.

 

Here are some examples with interesting stories.

 

shampoo

The word shampoo comes from the Hindi word chāmpo, which means “to press.”

 

In India, the word was used for a head massage.

 

British traders in India experienced a bath with a head massage and introduced it to Britain in the 18th century.

 

The meaning of the word shampoo changed a few times after it first entered English around 1762.

 

In the 19th century, shampoo got its present meaning of “washing the hair.”

 

Shortly after that, the word began to be also used for a special soap for the hair.

 

robot

The word robot comes from the play R.U.R.*, which was written in 1920 by a Czech writer Karel Čapek.

 

In the play, robots are machines that look like humans.

 

They are designed to work for humans and are produced in a factory.

 

It is interesting that the idea of using the word robot didn’t come from Karel Čapek himself.

 

He originally called the machines in his play labori from the Latin word for “work.”

 

However, his brother suggested roboti, which means “slave workers” in Czech.

 

Karel Čapek liked the idea and decided to use the word roboti.

 

In 1938, the play was made into a science fiction show on television in Britain.

 

hurricane

The word hurricane comes from the Spanish word huracán, which originates from the name of a Mayan god.

In the Mayan creation myth, Huracán is the weather god of wind, storm, and fire, and he is one of the three gods who created humans.

 

However, the first humans angered the gods, so Huracán caused a great flood.

 

The first Spanish contact with the Mayan civilization was in 1517.

Spanish explorers who were passing through the Caribbean experienced a hurricane and picked up the word for it from the people in the area*.

In English, one of the early uses of hurricane was in a play by Shakespeare in 1608.

 

hamburger

The word hamburger originally comes from Hamburg, Germany’s second-largest city.

 

Hamburger means “people or things from Hamburg” in German.

 

The origin of the first hamburger is not clear.

 

However, it is believed that the hamburger was invented in a small town in Texas, USA, sometime between 1885 and 1904.

 

A cook placed a Hamburg-style steak* between two slices of bread, and people started to call such food a hamburger.

 

English Words of Foreign Origin  
345_english_words.mp3
0.05MB
346.mp3
0.09MB
347.mp3
0.06MB
348_shampoo.mp3
0.13MB
349.mp3
0.07MB
350.mp3
0.15MB
351.mp3
0.14MB
352.mp3
0.11MB
353.mp3
0.12MB
354_robot.mp3
0.15MB
355.mp3
0.08MB
356.mp3
0.08MB
357.mp3
0.11MB
358.mp3
0.11MB
359.mp3
0.10MB
360.mp3
0.09MB
361.mp3
0.11MB
362_hurricane.mp3
0.15MB
363.mp3
0.18MB
364.mp3
0.11MB
365.mp3
0.27MB
366.mp3
0.13MB
367_hamburger.mp3
0.11MB
368.mp3
0.08MB
369.mp3
0.06MB
370.mp3
0.18MB
371.mp3
0.14MB

반응형

댓글