出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/05 03:23 UTC 版)
From Late 中期英語 acute (“of a disease or fever: starting suddenly and lasting for a short time; of a humour: irritating, sharp”), from Latin acūta, from acūtus (“sharp, sharpened”), perfect passive participle of acuō (“to make pointed, sharpen, whet”), from acus (“needle, pin”). The word is cognate to ague (“acute, intermittent fever”).
As regards the noun, which is derived from the verb, compare 中期英語 acūte (“severe but short-lived fever; of blood: corrosiveness, sharpness; musical note of high pitch”).
acute (comparative acuter or more acute, superlative acutest or most acute)
acute (plural acutes)
acute (third-person singular simple present acutes, present participle acuting, simple past and past participle acuted)
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