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Wiktionary英語版での「Rothschildren」の意味 |
Rothschildren
語源
From children, plural of child, by re-analyzing Rothschild as Roth + -s- + child.
固有名詞
Rothschildren
- (nonstandard) plural of Rothschild (“surname”)
- 1825, Louisa Thompson, “Grimm’s Ghost. Letter XXVII. News from Brighton.”, in The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, part II (Original Papers), London: Henry Colburn, […], page 353:
- […] when the elderly worthies have arrived opposite the Snake Houses—so called because the Rothschildren were intertwined there—they stand open-mouthed to catch the sea-air, for all the world as if they were singing “Come if you dare,” to those horrid Roman Catholics the French, on the opposite coast, at a place they call Dip, because people go there to bathe.
- 1850 June 28, Thomas Babington Macaulay, edited by William Thomas, The Journals of Thomas Babington Macaulay, Routledge, published 2016, →ISBN:
- Lady Morley called my Hebrew hosts of yesterday the Rothschildren. I forgot to mention one droll occurrence - the Neapoli tan Rothschild near whom I sate began to abuse the King of Naples - a fool - a villain - a poltroon.
- 1862 May, “Theatres”, in Les Modes Parisiennes and Journal du Beau Monde, Fashions, Literature, the Drama, Music, and the Fine Arts, volume I, number 2, Paris: […]. London: W. Kent and Co., […], page 31, column 1:
- The Princess Anna Murat appeared as a Neapolitan woman; Madame de Girardin, a shepherdess with powdered hair and silver crook, while Madame Alphonse de Rothschild, (one of the Rothschildren,) appeared inundated with roses and diamonds, an amphora in hand (which must have been in the way of a valse), and her head surmounted by a little lyre.
- 1966, Randolph S[pencer] Churchill, Winston S. Churchill, volumes I (Youth, 1874–1900), Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Company; Cambridge, Mass.: The Riverside Press, →LCCN, page 274:
- The Rothschilds, in all the countries in which they settled, prospered and proved adaptable and good citizens of the countries of their adoption. They successfully transcended all kinds of snobbery and racial distaste in England, France, Germany and Austria. They acclimatized themselves to the new atmosphere in which they were living, and established rapidly their own standards of comfort, luxury, artistic taste and above all of cuisine. The Rothschildren achieved in many people’s eyes the status of minor royalty.
- 2020, Lucy Pollard, “War Again (1936–1945)”, in Margery Spring Rice: Pioneer of Women’s Health in the Early Twentieth Century, Open Book Publishers, →ISBN, page 116:
- The Ehrlichs and the Rothschilds1 were Jewish and, after the Anschluss, Margery was able to offer them sanctuary while they established themselves in Britain. […] 1 Always referred to by Margery as ‘the Rothschildren’.
名詞
Rothschildren
- (nonstandard) plural of Rothschild (“very rich person”)
- 1841, T[homas] Charles Morgan, [Sydney,] Lady Morgan, The Book Without a Name, volume II, London: Henry Colburn, […], pages 239–240:
- Now, though it must be admitted that the highest grades of wealth are but rarely within the reach of a good sort of person, and that “criminibus debent hortos” is as true at present, as it was in the days of Juvenal, yet is there something in this class that admirably fits its members for the business of money-making. If they are not all Rothschildren, they are, to a man, at their ease; and it is as rare to meet with a good sort of person, as a Quaker, in absolute destitution.
- [1861], Bracebridge Hemyng, The Dark Cloud with the Silver Lining, London: James Blackwood, […], pages 290 and 293:
- “Well, my friend, we will crush this quartz, and what will be the result? we shall become Rothschilds.” “There are two of us, shall we not become Rothschildren?” said Ducane incredulously. […] “And the money?” “I will mortgage my South farm.” “Ah! I shall not die—I shall live—we shall be Rothschildren.” “Yes, we will be gods!” and, taking up his hat, Ducane ran from the room.
- 1972 November 16, Nicholas Valéry, “Come all you Rothschildren”, in New Scientist, volume 56, number 820, page 371:
- Come all you Rothschildren / “If rape is inevitable,” Sir Frederick Dainton reminded a roomful of UK university vice-chancellors and principals last week, “relax and enjoy it.” The implication was that the saintly maidenhood of university research may be in jeopardy now (après Rothschild) that there may be more ministerial clients hanging around with bulging wallets ready to seduce the impoverished research worker.
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Rothschild
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