fist: [OE] Like finger, fist seems etymologically to be a reference to the number of fingers on the hand. It comes from a prehistoric West Germanic *fūstiz (source also of German faust and Dutch vuist). This may represent an earlier *fungkhstiz, which has been referred to an Indo- European ancestor *pngkstis, a derivative of *pengke ‘five’. (Dutch vuist ‘fist’, incidentally, is probably the source of English foist [16], which originally denoted the dishonest concealing of a dice in one’s hand.) => finger, five, foist
fist (n.)
Old English fyst "fist, clenched hand," from West Germanic *fustiz (cognates: Old Saxon fust, Old High German fust, Old Frisian fest, Middle Dutch vuust, Dutch vuist, German Faust), from Proto-Germanic *funhstiz, probably ultimately from PIE *penkwe- "five" (see five, and compare Old Church Slavonic pesti, Russian piasti "fist").
Meaning "a blow with the fist" is from 1767. Fist-fight "duel with the fists" is from c. 1600. As a verb, Old English had fystlian "to strike with the fist."
双语例句
1. Without warning, Bardo smacked his fist into his open hand.
巴多没有任何预兆地一拳砸在自己摊开的手掌上.
来自柯林斯例句
2. She shook her fist. "I'll show you," she said.
她挥了挥拳头,“我要让你看看,”她说。
来自柯林斯例句
3. My son had a tantrum and banged his fist on the ground.
我儿子大发脾气,一拳捶在了地上。
来自柯林斯例句
4. He raised his right fist and declaimed: "Liar and cheat!"
他举起右拳高喊:“骗子,骗子!”
来自柯林斯例句
5. The iron-fist policy towards the fundamentalists is unlikely to be interrupted.