minister
v.
early 14c., "to perform religious rites, provide religious services;" mid-14c., "to serve (food or drink);" late 14c. "render service or aid," from Old French menistrer "to serve, be of service, administer, attend, wait on," and directly from Latin ministrare "to serve, attend, wait upon" (see minister, n.). Related: Ministered; ministering.
n.
c.1300, "one who acts upon the authority of another," from Old French menistre "servant, valet, member of a household staff, administrator, musician, minstrel" (12c.), from Latin minister (genitive ministri) "inferior, servant, priest's assistant" (in Medieval Latin, "priest"), from minus, minor "less," hence "subordinate," (see minus) + comparative suffix *-teros. Formed on model of magister. Meaning "priest" is attested in English from early 14c. Political sense of "high officer of the state" is attested from 1620s, from notion of "service to the crown."
〔蒋〕[mini小,-ster名词后缀,表示人;’小人”→仆人→臣仆,古时大臣对君王自称为’小人”,仆人→君王或元首的仆人,转为现今的部长] 大臣,部长
〔李〕[mini=less important or inferior次要的,低下的;-ster n.=person人→“person in an inferior position, or servant身份卑下的人,仆人”→“person serving the country and inferior to the head of state地位次于元首的公仆”→] n. person in charge of a department in a government大臣;部长