quword 趣词
Word Origins Dictionary
- uniform[uniform 词源字典]
- uniform: [16] Something that is uniform has literally only ‘one form’, the same throughout. The word comes, probably via French uniforme, from Latin ūniformis, a compound adjective formed from ūnus ‘one’ and forma ‘form’. Its use as a noun, for a ‘set of identical clothes worn by everyone’, dates from the 18th century, and was inspired by French.
=> form[uniform etymology, uniform origin, 英语词源] - uniform (adj.)
- 1530s, "of one form," from Middle French uniforme (14c.), from Latin uniformis "having only one form or shape," from uni- "one" (see uni-) + forma "form" (see form (n.)). Related: Uniformly.
- uniform (n.)
- "distinctive clothes worn by one group," 1748, from French uniforme, from the adjective (see uniform (adj.)).
- uniform (v.)
- 1680s, "to make alike," from uniform (adj.). Meaning "to dress in a uniform" is from 1861. Related: Uniformed.