出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/01 08:38 UTC 版)
The adjective is derived from Late 中期英語 abiect, abject (adjective) [and other forms], from Middle French abject (modern French abject, abjet (obsolete)), and from its etymon Latin abiectus (“abandoned; cast aside”), an adjective use of the perfect passive participle of abiciō (“to discard, throw away”), from ab- (prefix meaning ‘away from’) + iaciō (“to throw”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(H)yeh₁- (“to throw”)).
The noun is derived from the adjective.
abject (comparative abjecter or more abject, superlative abjectest or most abject)
abject (plural abjects)
From Late 中期英語 abjecten (“to cast out, expel”) [and other forms], from abiect, abject (adjective) (see etymology 1).
Sense 3 (“of a fungus: to give off (spores or sporidia)”) is modelled after German abschleudern (“to give off forcefully”).
abject (third-person singular simple present abjects, present participle abjecting, simple past and past participle abjected) (transitive, chiefly archaic)
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はき出す
to disturb something
to distort the meaning of something
the action of suspecting someone unjustly