sit
v.
Old English sittan "to occupy a seat, be seated, sit down, seat oneself; remain, continue; settle, encamp, occupy; lie in wait; besiege" (class V strong verb; past tense sæt, past participle seten), from Proto-Germanic *setjan (cognates: Old Saxon sittian, Old Norse sitja, Danish sidde, Old Frisian sitta, Middle Dutch sitten, Dutch zitten, Old High German sizzan, German sitzen, Gothic sitan), from PIE root *sed- (1) "to sit" (see sedentary).With past tense sat, formerly also set, now restricted to dialect, and sate, now archaic; and past participle sat, formerly sitten. In reference to a legislative assembly, from 1510s. Meaning "to baby-sit" is recorded from 1966.To sit back "be inactive" is from 1943. To sit on one's hands was originally "to withhold applause" (1926); later, "to do nothing" (1959). To sit around "be idle, do nothing" is 1915, American English. To sit out "not take part" is from 1650s. Sitting pretty is from 1916.
词根:sit = food, grain, to sir
来自希腊语的sit 意为food,grain,to sir。
同源词:
1. parasite (是坐在旁边只吃食物的人 para(=beside) + sit(=food,grain))
n.寄生生物;<喻>寄生虫;食客
parasitic/parasitical adj.寄生的,寄食的;寄客的
He lives like a parasite. 他像寄生虫一样活着。
2. site
n.场所,地点;遗址;v.决定...的场所,为...选址
site for a new school 新学校位置
built on the site of an old fort 在过去的要塞位置上建立的
deliver materials to a building site 把材料运到建筑工地
Where have they decided to site the new factory ?他们把工厂的位置害在哪了?