salute
英 [səˈluːt]
美 [səˈluːt]
- n. 致敬,欢迎;敬礼
- vt. 行礼致敬,欢迎
- vi. 致意,打招呼;行礼
salute 致意,致敬,敬礼来自拉丁语 salutare,致意,打招呼,表达尊重或尊敬,来自 salutis,健康的,有益处的,来自
- salute
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salute: [14] Salute goes back ultimately to the Latin noun salūs, a relative of salvus ‘safe, healthy’ (source of English safe and save). This had two main strands of meaning. The primary one was ‘health, well-being’, and in that sense it lies behind English salubrious [16] and salutary [15]. But by extension it also denoted a ‘wish for someone’s well-being’, hence a ‘greeting’, and it is this that has given English, via its derived verb salūtāre ‘greet’, salute.
=> safe, salubrious, save
- salute (v.)
- late 14c., "to greet courteously and respectfully," earlier salue (c. 1300), from Latin salutare "to greet, pay respects," literally "wish health to," from salus (genitive salutis) "greeting, good health," related to salvus "safe" (see safe (adj.)). The military and nautical sense of "display flags, fire cannons, etc., as a mark of respect" is recorded from 1580s; specific sense of "raise the hand to the cap in the presence of a superior officer" is from 1844.
- salute (n.)
- c. 1400, "act of saluting, respectful gesture of greeting, salutation," from salute (v.). The military sense is from 1690s; specifically of the hand-to-cap gesture from 1832.
- 1. As a second lieutenant, he had to salute damned near everybody.
- 身为少尉,他几乎是逢人便得敬礼。
- 2. He raised his hand in salute.
- 他举手致意。
- 3. The soldier gave the clenched-fist salute.
- 士兵行握拳礼。
- 4. The Queen's birthday was honoured by a 21 - gun salute.
- 鸣 二十一 响礼炮庆祝女王的生日.
- 5. The sailor dipped the ship's flag as a salute.
- 水手将船上的旗降下来再上去以示致敬.