1、muni- + cip- + -al.
2、字面含义:that which take or hold of duties, the town or city that take or hold of duties.
3、含义:free town, city whose citizens have the privileges of Roman citizens but are governed by their own laws.
3、也就是说:城市、市镇拥有自己的职权。
municipal: [16] Latin mūnus meant ‘office, duty, gift’. Combined with -ceps ‘taker’ (a derivative of the verb capere ‘take’, source of English capture) it formed mūniceps, which denoted a ‘citizen of a Roman city (known as a mūnicipium) whose inhabitants had Roman citizenship but could not be magistrates’. From mūnicipium was derived the adjective mūnicipālis, source of English municipal; this was originally used for ‘of the internal affairs of a state, domestic’, and the modern application to the sphere of local government did not emerge strongly until the 19th century.
The stem of Latin mūnus also crops up in commūnis (source of English common), and so community and municipality are etymologically related. Mūnus in the later sense ‘gift’ formed the basis of the Latin adjective mūnificus ‘giving gifts’, hence ‘generous’, from which ultimately English gets munificent [16]. => capture, common
municipal (adj.)
1540s, from Middle French municipal, from Latin municipalis "of a citizen of a free town, of a free town," also "of a petty town, provincial," from municipium "free town, city whose citizens have the privileges of Roman citizens but are governed by their own laws," from municeps "citizen, inhabitant of a free town." Second element is root of capere "assume, take" (see capable). First element is from munus (plural munia) "service performed for the community, duty, work," also "public spectacle paid for by the magistrate, (gladiatorial) entertainment, gift," from Old Latin moenus "service, duty, burden," from PIE *moi-n-es-, generally taken as a suffixed form of root *mei- (1) "to change, go, move" (Watkins; see mutable); but Tucker says "more probably" from the other PIE root
*mei- meaning "bind," so that munia = "obligations" and communis = "bound together."
1. The decor was reminiscent of a municipal arts-and-leisure centre.
这种布置让人想起都市里的艺术休闲中心。
来自柯林斯例句
2. The municipal authorities have kept the roads up well.
市政当局把道路保养得不错.
来自《简明英汉词典》
3. The city is planning to build a municipal library.
该市正计划建一座市立图书馆.
来自《简明英汉词典》
4. He works in the municipal government.
他在市政府工作.
来自《简明英汉词典》
5. Islanders have campaigned for the abolition of one of the three tiers of municipal power on the island.
1、muni- + cip- + -al.
2、字面含义:that which take or hold of duties, the town or city that take or hold of duties.
3、含义:free town, city whose citizens have the privileges of Roman citizens but are governed by their own laws.
3、也就是说:城市、市镇拥有自己的职权。
municipal: [16] Latin mūnus meant ‘office, duty, gift’. Combined with -ceps ‘taker’ (a derivative of the verb capere ‘take’, source of English capture) it formed mūniceps, which denoted a ‘citizen of a Roman city (known as a mūnicipium) whose inhabitants had Roman citizenship but could not be magistrates’. From mūnicipium was derived the adjective mūnicipālis, source of English municipal; this was originally used for ‘of the internal affairs of a state, domestic’, and the modern application to the sphere of local government did not emerge strongly until the 19th century.
The stem of Latin mūnus also crops up in commūnis (source of English common), and so community and municipality are etymologically related. Mūnus in the later sense ‘gift’ formed the basis of the Latin adjective mūnificus ‘giving gifts’, hence ‘generous’, from which ultimately English gets munificent [16]. => capture, common
municipal (adj.)
1540s, from Middle French municipal, from Latin municipalis "of a citizen of a free town, of a free town," also "of a petty town, provincial," from municipium "free town, city whose citizens have the privileges of Roman citizens but are governed by their own laws," from municeps "citizen, inhabitant of a free town." Second element is root of capere "assume, take" (see capable). First element is from munus (plural munia) "service performed for the community, duty, work," also "public spectacle paid for by the magistrate, (gladiatorial) entertainment, gift," from Old Latin moenus "service, duty, burden," from PIE *moi-n-es-, generally taken as a suffixed form of root *mei- (1) "to change, go, move" (Watkins; see mutable); but Tucker says "more probably" from the other PIE root
*mei- meaning "bind," so that munia = "obligations" and communis = "bound together."
双语例句
1. The decor was reminiscent of a municipal arts-and-leisure centre.
这种布置让人想起都市里的艺术休闲中心。
来自柯林斯例句
2. The municipal authorities have kept the roads up well.
市政当局把道路保养得不错.
来自《简明英汉词典》
3. The city is planning to build a municipal library.
该市正计划建一座市立图书馆.
来自《简明英汉词典》
4. He works in the municipal government.
他在市政府工作.
来自《简明英汉词典》
5. Islanders have campaigned for the abolition of one of the three tiers of municipal power on the island.