出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/06/18 22:07 UTC 版)
From Late 中期英語 insufferable (“unbearably painful, intolerable”), and then either:
From Old French souffrable, suffrable are derived from Medieval Latin sufferābilis, from Latin sufferre + -ābilis (suffix meaning ‘able or worthy to be’); while sufferre is the present active infinitive of sufferō, subferō (“to bear or carry under; to bear, endure, suffer, undergo”), from sub- (prefix meaning ‘below, under’) + ferō (“to bear, carry; to endure, suffer, tolerate”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *bʰer- (“to bear, carry”)). The English word is analysable as in- (prefix meaning ‘not’) + sufferable.
insufferable (comparative more insufferable, superlative most insufferable)