trivia
英 [ˈtrɪv.i.ə]
美 [ˈtrɪv.i.ə]
trivia 琐事,小事来自拉丁语 trivia,三岔路,复数格于 trivium,三岔路,来自 tri-, 三,via,路,词源同 way.引申 词义公共地,闲聊,后用于指琐事,小事。
- trivia (n.)
- "trivialities, bits of information of little consequence," by 1932, from the title of a popular book by U.S.-born British aphorist Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946) first published in 1902 but popularized in 1918 (with "More Trivia" following in 1921 and a collected edition including both in 1933), containing short essays often tied to observation of small things and commonplace moments. Trivia is Latin, plural of trivium "place where three roads meet;" in transferred use, "an open place, a public place." The adjectival form of this, trivialis, meant "public," hence "common, commonplace" (see trivial). The Romans also had trivius dea, the "goddess of three ways," another name for Hecate, perhaps originally in her triple aspect (Selene/Diana/Proserpine), but also as the especial divinity of crossroads (Virgil has "Nocturnisque hecate triviis ululata per urbes"). John Gay took this arbitrarily as the name of a goddess of streets and roads for his mock Georgic "Trivia: Or, the Art of Walking the Streets of London" (1716); Smith writes in his autobiography that he got the title from Gay.
I KNOW too much; I have stuffed too many of the facts of History and Science into my intellectuals. My eyes have grown dim over books; believing in geological periods, cave dwellers, Chinese Dynasties, and the fixed stars has prematurely aged me. ["Trivia," 1918 edition]
Then noted c. 1965 as an informal fad game among college students wherein one asked questions about useless bits of information from popular culture ("What was Donald Duck's address?") and others vied to answer first.
Nobody really wins in this game which concentrates on sports, comics and television. Everyone knows that Amos's wife on the "Amos 'n' Andy Show" is Ruby, but who knows that she is from Marietta, Georgia? Trivia players do. They also know the fourth man in the infield of Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance, the Canadian who shot down Baron Von Richtofen, and can name ten Hardy Boy books. ["Princeton Alumni Weekly," Nov. 9, 1965]
The board game Trivial Pursuit was released 1982 and was a craze in U.S. for several years thereafter.
- 1. The newspaper is now weighted in favour of trivia.
- 这份报纸如今倾向于报道一些花边消息。
- 2. We spent the whole evening discussing domestic trivia.
- 我们整个晚上谈论家庭琐事。
- 3. She was not interested in the trivia of gossip.
- 她对琐碎的流言蜚语不感兴趣.
- 4. Much of our research is wasted on trivia.
- 我们的许多研究都浪费在一些无足轻重的琐事上.
- 5. The two men chatted about such trivia as their favourite kinds of fast food.
- 这两个男人闲聊了些诸如彼此最喜欢的快餐这样的琐事。