journal

英 ['dʒɜːn(ə)l] 美 ['dʒɝnl]
  • n. 日报,杂志;日记;分类账

中文词源


journal 日志,期刊,新闻

来自古法语jornel,天,一天时间,一天的工作,来自拉丁语diurnalis,一天的,词源同daily.部分学者认为其拼写变化由字母d到字母j可能是来自后拉丁语时期,字母i变成字母j后导致首字母d脱落造成的。词义由一天的工作引申日志,日报,期刊,一天的新闻等。

英文词源


journal (n.)
mid-14c., "book of church services," from Anglo-French jurnal "a day," from Old French jornel, "day, time; day's work," noun use of adjective meaning "daily," from Late Latin diurnalis "daily" (see diurnal). Meaning "book for inventories and daily accounts" is late 15c.; that of "personal diary" is c. 1600, from a sense found in French. Meaning "daily publication" is from 1728. Initial -d- in Latin usually remains in French, but according to Brachet, when it is followed by an -iu-, the -i- becomes consonantized as a -j- "and eventually ejects the d." He also cites jusque from de-usque.

双语例句


1. A Wall Street Journal editorial encapsulated the views of many conservatives.
《华尔街日报》的一篇社论概述了很多保守派人士的观点。

来自柯林斯例句

2. The publishers planned to produce the journal on a weekly basis.
出版者计划将该期刊定为周刊。

来自柯林斯例句

3. In the post-war years her writing regularly appeared in The New Journal.
她的文章在战后那几年经常出现在《新日报》上。

来自柯林斯例句

4. On New Year's Day in 1974, I started keeping a journal.
1974年元旦我开始记日记。

来自柯林斯例句

5. The Wall Street Journal uses 220,000 metric tons of newsprint each year.
《华尔街日报》每年用去22万公吨新闻纸。

来自柯林斯例句

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