出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/08 17:41 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 warloghe, warlowe, warloȝe, from 古期英語 wǣrloga (“traitor, deceiver”, literally “truce-breaker”), from Proto-West Germanic *wārulogō (“liar”), equivalent to 古期英語 wǣr (“covenant, truce, pact, promise”) (from Proto-Indo-European *weh₁- (“true”); whence also Latin vērus) + loga (“liar”), from Proto-Germanic *lugô, related to 古期英語 lēogan (whence English lie). The hard -ck ending originated in Scottish and Northern English, like the sense "male magic-user" (from the notion that such men were in league with the Devil and had thus broken their baptismal vows / betrayed Christianity). Cognate with Old Saxon wārlogo (“liar, unfaithful or insidious one”).
A few writers alternatively propose a derivation from Old Norse varðlokkur (“incantations, charms”, literally “ward songs”), but as the OED notes, this is implausible due to the extreme rarity of the Norse word, the semantic difference, and because forms without hard -k, which are consistent with the 古期英語 etymology (“traitor”), are attested earlier than forms with -k, and forms with -ð- are not attested.
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warblers
弓師.
jacamars
the hornet
木挽(こび)き.
the stork
ツルギメダカ
swordtails
a shield
ビスカーチャ
viscachas
thornbills
名詞の変化形:
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