出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/20 22:57 UTC 版)
Probably from Middle French and Old French drap (“cloth”), either:
The English word is cognate with Ancient Greek δρέπω (drépō, “to pluck”), Avestan 𐬛𐬭𐬀𐬟𐬱𐬀 (drafša, “banner, flag”), Lithuanian drãpanos (“household linens”), Old Norse trefja (“to rub, wear out”), trof (“fringes”), Sanskrit द्रापि (drāpi, “mantle, gown”), Serbo-Croatian drápati (“to scratch, scrape”)).
drab (countable and uncountable, plural drabs) (also attributively)
drab (comparative drabber, superlative drabbest)
The origin of the noun is uncertain; compare 中期英語 drabelen, drablen, draplen (“to soil; make dirty; to drag on the ground or through mud”), and Low German drabbe (“dirt, mud”), drabbeln (“to soil”), and Old Norse drabba (“to make drab; make dirty”), the latter three ultimately from Proto-Germanic *drepaną (“to hit, strike”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰreb- (“to crush, grind; to kill”). The word is also likely to be related to Dutch drab (“dregs, sediment”), Irish drabog, Scottish Gaelic drabag (“dirty woman; slattern”).
The verb is derived from the noun.
drab (third-person singular simple present drabs, present participle drabbing, simple past and past participle drabbed)
Unknown.
Alteration of drag, possibly via the folk-etymological backronym "DRessed As a Girl" (with boy replacing girl).
drab (uncountable)
drab (third-person singular simple present drabs, present participle drabbing, simple past and past participle drabbed)
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口うるさいさま
乱雑なさま
テグー
tejus
skuas
ごみ
a hiccup
a wrinkle
a plaything with which one trifles for pleasure