'sとは 意味・読み方・使い方
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意味・対訳 英語アルファベットの第 19 字、(連続したものの)第 19 番目(のもの)
'sの |
'sの学習レベル | レベル:11英検:1級以上の単語 |
研究社 新英和中辞典での「's」の意味 |
|
‐'s1
‐'s2
| 語法 |
‐'s3
S
S
S <$>
音節$, $
S.
S.
S1
音節s, S 発音記号・読み方/és/発音を聞く
S2
s
s.
‐s1
‐s2
‐s3
自然科学と技術のほかの用語一覧
「's」を含む例文一覧
該当件数 : 36570件
one's declining fortune(s)発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
衰運. - 研究社 新英和中辞典
the upper floor(s)発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
上階. - 研究社 新英和中辞典
menstrual period(s)発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
月経. - 研究社 新英和中辞典
One and one make(s) two.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
1+1=2. - 研究社 新英和中辞典
technical skill(s)発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
技巧. - 研究社 新英和中辞典
-
履歴機能過去に調べた
単語を確認! -
語彙力診断診断回数が
増える! -
マイ単語帳便利な
学習機能付き! -
マイ例文帳文章で
単語を理解! -
遺伝子名称シソーラスでの「's」の意味 |
|
s
| fly | 遺伝子名 | s |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | eb; ebonized; ebonised; sable | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | --- | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:44857 | |
| その他のDBのID | FlyBase:FBgn0003309 |
| human | 遺伝子名 | S |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | HTSS; D6S586E; corneodesmosin; CDSN; S protein; Corneodesmosin precursor | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | SWISS-PROT:Q15517 | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:1041 | |
| その他のDBのID | HGNC:1802 |
| mouse | 遺伝子名 | s |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | ETb; endothelin receptor type B; Endothelin B receptor precursor; ET-B; Sox10m1; ET>B<; AU022549; Ednrb; Endothelin receptor Non-selective type | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | SWISS-PROT:P48302 | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:13618 | |
| その他のDBのID | MGI:102720 |
| rat | 遺伝子名 | S |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | silver (mapped); S_mapped; Silver | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | --- | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:24762 | |
| その他のDBのID | RGD:3613 |
本文中に表示されているデータベースの説明
- SWISS-PROT
- スイスバイオインフォマティクス研究所と欧州バイオインフォマティクス研究所によって開発・運営されているタンパク質のアミノ酸配列のデータベース。
- EntrezGene
- NCBIによって運営されている遺伝子データベース。染色体上の位置、配列、発現、構造、機能、ホモロジーデータなどが含まれている。
- FlyBase
- 米英の大学のショウジョウバエの研究者などにより運営される、ショウジョウバエの生態や遺伝子情報に関するデータベース。
- HGNC
- HUGO遺伝子命名法委員会により運営される、ヒト遺伝子に関するデータベース。
- MGI
- 様々なプロジェクトによる、研究用マウスの遺伝的・生物学的なデータを提供するデータベース。
- RGD
- ウィスコンシン医科大学により運営される、ラットの遺伝子・ゲノム情報のデータベース。
Wiktionary英語版での「's」の意味 |
's
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/06 04:05 UTC 版)
- For the possessive ’s, see -'s.
別の表記
- ’s
発音
動詞
’s (clitic)
- Contraction of is.
- Contraction of has.
- The dog’s been chasing the mail carrier again.
- (proscribed, dialectal, Southern US) Contraction of was.
- (informal) Contraction of does (used only with the auxiliary meaning of does and only after interrogative words).
使用する際の注意点
派生語
参考
- apostrophe
- contraction
- 'd, ’d
- 'll, ’ll
- 'm, ’m
- 're, ’re
- -'s, -’s
- 've, ’ve
代名詞
’s (clitic)
- Contraction of us (found in the formula let’s which is used to form first-person plural imperatives).
接続詞
’s
- (UK, dialect) Contraction of as (when it is (nonstandardly) used as a relative conjunction, or like a relative pronoun, meaning "that").
-'s
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/08/27 16:49 UTC 版)
別の表記
- -’s
- -s (now nonstandard)
- -s- (genitival interfix)
発音
語源 1
From 中期英語 -s, -es, from 古期英語 -es (“-'s”, masculine and neuter genitive singular ending), from Proto-Germanic *-as, *-is (masculine and neuter genitive singular ending). Cognate with Dutch -s, -es (“-'s”), German -s, -es (“-'s”), Danish -s, -es (“-'s”), Swedish -s (“-'s”), Norwegian -s (“-'s”), Icelandic -s (“-'s”).
接尾辞
-'s (enclitic)
- A possessive marker, indicating that an object belongs to the noun or noun phrase bearing the marker.
-
2012 April 15, Phil McNulty, “Tottenham 1-5 Chelsea”, in BBC:
-
Before kick-off, a section of Chelsea's support sadly let themselves and their club down by noisily interrupting the silence held in memory of the Hillsborough disaster and for Livorno midfielder Piermario Morosini, who collapsed and died after suffering a heart attack during a Serie B game on Saturday.
-
- In the absence of a specified object, used to indicate “the house/place/establishment of”.
- Indicates a purpose or a user.
- people's
- Used to indicate a quantity of something, especially of time.
- Used to indicate various other kinds of relationship, such as source or origin, object of an action, subject depicted, etc.
- (see usage notes) Attached to a noun or noun phrase linked to a genitive of, forming a double genitive (Compare of mine, etc.)
使用する際の注意点
- Irregular plurals with endings other than ‘s’ (e.g. children) always take ’s: the children’s voices.
- Words ending in s are made possessive in various ways. Consider:
- With regular plurals, the apostrophe is placed at the end, i.e. -s' is used (the dogs’ tails, whereas for singular ‘dog’, the dog’s tail).
- The possessives of names which end in s may be formed using either this suffix (-'s) or bare -' (which see for more). Hence: St. James’s or St. James’, Chris's or Chris', Jesus's or Jesus'. The American Heritage Dictionary (under the entry "possessive") prescribes restricting this to words or names of at least two syllables, such as witness'; in practice, it is found on names of any length, even one syllable. The suffixes used will alter the word's pronunciation; for example: Dickens’ novel /dɪkɪnz nɒvəl/ (identically to (a) Dickens novel), Dickens’s novel /dɪkɪnzɪz nɒvəl/.
- To remedy ambiguity or awkwardness in either speech or print, possessives can generally be recast using of: the tails of the dogs, the paths of St. James.
- When referring to joint possession by multiple people, the standard, formal way to form the possessive is Jack’s and Jill’s pails. However, it is common to treat the pair of names as a noun phrase and to form the possessive of this whole unit instead, using only one ’s: Jack and Jill’s pails. When the possession is not joint (i.e., each possessor has their own possession), the possessiveness is signaled for each possessor; for example, Jack’s and Jill’s pails were leaky and watertight, respectively.
- In joint possession, when one of the possessors is represented by a possessive pronoun rather than their name, the possessiveness is standardly signaled for each; for example, Jack’s and her pails were leaky. When the first person or second person is used, although forms such as "John and I’s car" for "John’s and my car" are descriptively not rare, they are nonstandard and are grating to some ears; they are thus prescriptively often avoided.
- The use of ’s to make nouns or noun phrases genitive that are seemingly already marked thus by of is widespread in English. It is nearly exclusively used with animate nouns. Its redundancy may often seem unnecessary but sometimes can clarify meaning and in some cases even has no idiomatic alternative; more at Wikipedia at double genitive.
- Nouns that look and sound identical in the singular and plural still do when this suffix is attached, so “one moose” becomes “one moose’s” and “two moose” becomes “two moose’s”.
同意語
語源 2
Equivalent to -s, with addition of apostrophe.
接尾辞
-'s
- (sometimes proscribed) Used to form the plurals of numerals, letters, some abbreviations and some nouns, usually because the omission of an apostrophe would make the meaning unclear or ambiguous.
- (obsolete) Used to form plurals of foreign words, to clarify pronunciation, such as “banana’s” or “pasta’s”.
- index’s
- (proscribed) Used to form the plural of nouns that correctly take just an "s" in the plural. See greengrocer’s apostrophe.
使用する際の注意点
- The use of ’s to form plurals of initialisms or numerals is not currently recommended by most authorities, except when the meaning would otherwise be unclear. The use in foreign words was common before the 19th century, but is no longer accepted. The use of the apostrophe in any other plural (as in “apple’s”) — the so-called “greengrocer’s apostrophe” — is proscribed.
等位語
- -'d
参考
- its, it’s
- let’s
- greengrocer’s apostrophe
-(s)
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/02/03 17:18 UTC 版)
語源 1
From -s (suffix forming regular plurals of nouns) and ( ) (encloses optional variants or variant elements).
接尾辞
-(s)
- Added to the end of a singular noun (which normally uses the suffix -s to become plural) to indicate that the noun represents an unknown number which may be one or more than one.
語源 2
From -s (suffix forming the third-person singular indicative present tense of verbs) and ( ) (encloses optional variants or variant elements).
接尾辞
-(s)
参考
- -s
-s
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/10/25 15:41 UTC 版)
発音
- IPA: /s/ (after a voiceless consonant sound /p, t, k, f, θ/)
- IPA: /z/ (after a vowel sound or a voiced consonant sound /m, n, ŋ, b, d, ɡ, v, ð, l, ɹ/)
- IPA: /ɪz/ (after a sibilant consonant sound /s, z, ʃ, ʒ, tʃ, dʒ/—usually written -es)
- (weak vowel merger) IPA: /əz/
- 異形同音異義語: -'s, 's
語源 1
Inherited from 中期英語 -s, -es, from 古期英語 -as, nominative-accusative plural ending of masculine a-stem (i.e. strong) declension nouns, from Proto-West Germanic *-ōs, from Proto-Germanic *-ōs, *‑ōz, from Proto-Indo-European *-es, *-oes (plural endings). The spread of this ending in later 中期英語 was once argued to have been the result of Anglo-Norman influence; however, -as was already the most common 古期英語 plural marker (used in approximately 40% of 古期英語 nouns), and was initially more common in the North of England where French influence was weakest, only later gradually spreading south, replacing the usual southern plural ending -en. Cognate with Scots -s (plural ending), Saterland Frisian -s (plural ending), West Frisian -s (plural ending), Dutch -s (plural ending), Low German -s (plural ending), Danish -er (plural ending), Swedish -r, -ar, -or (plural ending), Icelandic -ar (plural ending), Gothic -𐍉𐍃 (-ōs, nominative plural ending of a-stem masculine nouns). Not directly related to German -er (plural ending) which has a different origin.
接尾辞
-s
- Used to form regular plurals of nouns.
- Used to form many pluralia tantum (nouns that are almost or entirely without singular forms).
- When appended to a number ending in at least one 0, expresses a range of numbers which share the digits before some or (usually) all of the 0s; frequently used for decades, centuries and temperatures.
-
2022 March 25, Sandee LaMotte, “Dangerous chemicals found in food wrappers at major fast-food restaurants and grocery chains, report says”, in CNN:
-
High indicators of PFAS (in the 500s) were also found in a Chick-fil-A sandwich wrapper and in fiber bowls at Cava, a Mediterranean restaurant chain.
Indicator levels in the 300s and 400s were found in a bag of cookies at Arby’s, bamboo paper plates at Stop & Shop, and in a bag for both cookies and French toast sticks at Burger King.
Levels of PFAS indicators in the 200s were found in a Sweetgreen paper bag for focaccia, additional items at Cava, and in bags for french fries, cookies and Chicken McNuggets at McDonald’s.
-
使用する際の注意点
- (regular plurals): In semi-formal or formal contexts, where the plurality of a noun depends on some unknown aspect of the sentence, the s may be parenthesised: "The winner(s) will be invited to a prize ceremony."
- (number): Decades formed with -s are usually pronounced as if they were written as two separate numbers. For example, 1970s is read as nineteen-seventies, as if it were written as 19 70s, not as *nineteen-hundred seventies or *one thousand nine hundred and seventies.
- (number): When the number before the -s ends in more than one zero, there is ambiguity about the range of numbers that is meant. For example, 1800s could mean "the years from 1800 to 1899; the entire 19th century" or "the years from 1800 to 1809; the first decade of the 19th century". The intended meaning can usually be derived from context.
派生語
派生した語
参考
- -a
- -en
- -es
- -i
- -ir
- -z (nonstandard)
語源 2
From 中期英語 -(e)s (third-person singular ending), from Northumbrian 古期英語 -es, -as (third-person singular endings). Gradually replaced the older -eth, from 古期英語 -(e)þ, -aþ, during the 中期英語 and Early Modern English periods.
It is predominantly believed that -(e)s is identical to the 古期英語 second-person singular ending -es, -est (cf. archaic Modern English -est, as in thou singest). The use for the third-person singular would have been caused by speakers of Old Norse who switched to speaking English and confounded the endings due to analogy with their native tongue. In Old Norse, the second and third person singular indicative forms were identical (e.g. þú masar, hann masar; þú þekkir, hann þekkir; etc.).
An alternative theory sees the shift from /θ/ in -eth to /s/ (later /z/) in -(e)s as a mere phonetic simplification due to the frequency of the ending, but the objection to this is that no such development can be observed anywhere else in English. Nevertheless the relative similarity in sound between both forms may have facilitated the spread of -es.
接尾辞
-s
- Used to form the third-person singular indicative present tense of verbs.
- (nonstandard, dialectal) Used in various other indicative present tenses
使用する際の注意点
- As in modern nonstandard varieties, the -s suffix can be used to mark the third-person plural in Early Modern English. However, it is less common than the modern standard zero ending, and is frequently only found in restricted contexts; for instance, Shakespeare only uses it where a plural subject has "singular" semantics.
参照
- ^ Herbert Schendl (2000), “The third person present plural in Shakespeare’s First Folio: A case of interaction of morphology and syntax?”, in Words: Structure, meaning, function. A festschrift for Dieter Kastovsky, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyte, pages 263-276
語源 3
From 中期英語 -es, from 古期英語 -es, the masculine and neuter genitive singular ending of strong nouns. More at -'s.
接尾辞
-s
- Used in the formation of certain English adverbs.
- forward + -s → forwards
- downward + -s → downwards
- alway + -s → always
- sometime + -s → sometimes
- betime + -s → betimes
- while + -s → whiles
- betide + -s → betides
- toward + -s → towards
- beside + -s → besides
- evening + -s → evenings
- unaware + -s → unawares
- Sunday + -s → Sundays
- night + -s → nights
接尾辞
-s
使用する際の注意点
- In most cases where -s is found nowadays as a possessive case marker, it is a simple misspelling of -'s. However, possessive determiners derived from personal pronouns use -s (e.g., its, not it's). The same is true of pronouns derived from possessive determiners (e.g., theirs, not their's). The possessive form of who takes -se (whose, not who's).
- Bare -s is used in some business names that derive from possessive family names, e.g., Barclays and Harrods, but compare Sainsbury’s; compare Wikipedia's article on possessives in business names. In speech, /z/ (or /s/) is sometimes added to business names which have neither -s nor -'s in writing, resulting in s-forms.
- Sometimes used in place names; e.g., Harpers Ferry (formerly spelled “Harper’s Ferry”), Queens County (note that the former name of County Laois was officially “Queen’s County”, however, the apostrophe-less spelling is well-attested).
派生語
語源 5
Modern sense in slang [circa 1936]. According to OED, a colloquial clipping of the hypocoristic diminutive suffix -sy. As AHD writes, -sy itself usually being informal, ironic and/or jocular, and possibly a combination of -s (“plural marker”) and conflation of -y as adjectival with its sense as a diminutive suffix (e.g., puppy, kitty), the latter notion probably from Scots.
接尾辞
-s
派生語
関連する語
- -sies
語源 6
Derived from 's.
派生語
語源
From Proto-West Germanic *-issju, *-ussju, from Proto-Germanic *-isjō, *-usjō.
発音
- IPA: /s/
接尾辞
-s
- (often affects the value or quality of preceding consonants, may or may not cause i-mutation) Feminine noun suffix forming nouns from adjectives and verbs
語形変化
語源 1
語源 2
語源 3
語源
Inherited from Proto-Indo-European *-s. Cognate with Ancient Greek -ς (-s).
接尾辞
-s
- suffix marking the nominative singular form of non-neuter nouns and adjectives in declensions other than the first.
使用する際の注意点
The suffix appears most obviously in the third declension, as in urbs. Stem-final consonants are often modified or deleted before the suffix: for example, lēg- (“law”) + -s → lēx (“law”, nominative singular) and dent- (“tooth”) + -s → dēns (“tooth”, nominative singular). Etymologically, the Latin third declension includes both original consonant-stem nouns and i-stem nouns, but these two classes are not consistently distinguished in the nominative singular. Many nominative forms that originally ended in *-is were shortened by syncope or analogy (e.g. *ǵénh₁tis > gēns), while some nominative forms of original consonant-stem nouns had -is added by analogy (e.g. *ḱwṓ and *h₂yéwHō were replaced in Latin with canis and iuvenis, respectively). The ending -s usually does not appear in the nominative singular of n-stem, r-stem, or l-stem nouns. Most non-neuter n-stems instead drop the -n- and take the ending -ō̆ in the nominative singular (such as homō̆, hominis or carō̆, carnis); a smaller set end in -n in the nominative singular (as in tībīcen, tībīcinis); -s appears only in a handful of exceptional nouns such as canis, iuvenis, sanguī̆s. R-stem and l-stem nouns (such as āctor, cōnsul) normally have nominative singular forms ending in -r or -l respectively. Latin nominative singular forms that end in -ns, -rs or -ls are derived by consonant cluster simplification from stems ending in -t- or -d- (e.g. mōns, montis; pars, partis; puls, pultis).
Second declension non-neuter nominative singular forms originally ended in the suffix -s preceded by the Indo-European thematic vowel *-o-. Vowel reduction caused short -o- to be replaced with -u- in closed non-initial syllables, and so Proto-Italic *-os became Classical Latin -us, which is often interpreted as a nominative suffix of its own (an example of rebracketing) rather than a sequence of stem-final vowel + -s. Likewise, in the fourth declension and fifth declension, -s is always preceded by the characteristic vowels of these declensions (-u- and -ē- respectively), with the result that -us and -ēs are frequently regarded as nominative singular suffixes for these declensions.
The suffix -s generally appears only on non-neuter nominative/vocative forms, but it is found in the neuter nominative/vocative/accusative singular of third declension adjectives "of one termination". From an etymological perspective, third-declension neuter nouns such as genus, generis that end in -s in the nominative singular alternating with -r- in oblique forms do not end in this suffix: rather, they are derived from stems that originally ended in the consonant *s (which was changed to -r- by rhotacism when followed by a suffix starting with a vowel).
-s'
別の表記
- -es' (after sibiliant consonants)
発音
- (after a vowel or a voiced consonant other than a sibilant) enPR: z, zəz, IPA(key): /z/, /zɪz/
- (after voiceless consonants /p/, /t/, /k/, /f/, または /θ/) enPR: s, səz, IPA(key): /s/, /sɪz/
- (after sibilant consonants /s/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ʒ/, /tʃ/, /dʒ/)
- (Received 発音, General American, weak vowel distinction) enPR: ĭz, IPA(key): /ɪz/
- (General Australian, weak vowel merger) enPR: əz, IPA(key): /əz/
不変化詞
-s’
使用する際の注意点
- Use of the plural possessive marker -s’ is to be distinguished from use of the possessive marker -' on nouns that terminate in -s (see -' for more) and from the possessive marker -'s (which also see). Whether they are pronounced identically or differently varies between idiolects. The BBC prescribes the following distinction:[1] (a) Dickens novel and Dickens’ novel /dɪkɪnz nɒvəl/, Dickens’s novel /dɪkɪnzɪz nɒvəl/; princess’s and princesses’ /pɹɪn.sɛs.ɪz/; i.e. adding bare ’ or -(e)s’ does not change pronunciation. Some speakers, however, may pronounce one or both as /ɪz/, i.e. Dickens’ as /ˈdɪkɪnzɪz/, princesses’ as /pɹɪn.sɛs.ɪs.ɪz/, and e.g. boys’ as /bɔɪzɪz/ (instead of the more common /bɔɪz/).
参考
- -'s
- -s
-s-
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/08/14 16:03 UTC 版)
語源
From 中期英語 -s, -es, from 古期英語 -es (“-'s”, masculine and neuter genitive singular ending), which survives in many old compounds. In more recent coinage, from contraction of the derived clitic -'s in compounds. For more, see -'s.
接合辞
-s-
- Genitival interfix used to link elements in some compounds, equivalent to the possessive clitic -'s.
参考
/s
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2024/09/15 20:12 UTC 版)
別の表記
語源
Based on pseudo–XML code, in which a slash indicates the end of an element (for example, marks the end of bold formatting). Originally written as (to mark the end of a sarcastic message) with the block of text enclosed (see < > ), this was later simplified to /sarcasm and eventually just /s.
参考
- /rant
?s
@s
S
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/10/14 18:23 UTC 版)
語源 1
文字
S (upper case, lower case s, plural Ss or S's)
- The nineteenth letter of the English alphabet, called ess and written in the Latin script.
派生語
参考
- (Latin-script letters) letter; A a, B b, C c, D d, E e, F f, G g, H h, I i, J j, K k, L l, M m, N n, O o, P p, Q q, R r, S s, T t, U u, V v, W w, X x, Y y, Z z
数
S (upper case, lower case s)
- The ordinal number nineteenth, derived from this letter of the English alphabet, called ess and written in the Latin script.
語源 2
Abbreviation.
S
- (Stenoscript) the sound sequence /st/ in a word, e.g. it's the transcription of the suffix -ist.
- (Stenoscript) the prefix sub-
- (Stenoscript) Abbreviation of south.
- (education) Initialism of satisfactory.
名詞
S (countable and uncountable, plural Ss)
- Initialism of south.
- Initialism of season (group of episodes of a series).
- Coordinate term: E (“episode”)
- (usually clothing) Initialism of small (the manufactured size or an item of that size).
- Coordinate terms: XXS, XS, M, L, XL, XLT, XXL, XXXL
- (music) Initialism of soprano.
- (television) Initialism of subtitles.
- (American Library Association) Initialism of sextodecimo (book size, 15-17.5 cm in height).
形容詞
S (not comparable)
- (usually clothing) Initialism of small (of the manufactured size).
- Coordinate terms: XXS, XS, M, L, XL, XXL
語源 3
From the first letter of set and of stage, two fundamental concepts of the theory.
固有名詞
S
- (set theory) An axiomatic set theory, developed by logician George Boolos, in which several of the axioms of ZF are derivable as theorems.
参考
- (Latin-script letters) A a, B b, C c, D d, E e, F f, G g, H h, I i, L l, M m, N n, O o, P p, Q q, R r, S s, T t, V v, X x, Y y, Z z
s'
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/06 04:05 UTC 版)
短縮形
s' (colloquial)
- Clitic form of it's.
- Clitic form of so.
- Clitic form of is.
-
2005, Allen Wyler, chapter 2, in Deadly Errors, New York, N.Y.: Forge, →ISBN, page 30:
-
On his side, knees against his chest, Larry Childs struggled to roll onto his stomach when something kicked his leg. A white-hot ember glowed in the back of his mouth above his tongue, stealing his breath. “What the hell . . .” that voice said. “Oh, Blessed Virgin Mary, Larry, s’that you? What’s wrong?”
-
派生語
関連する語
- 's (“is”)
s***
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/10/17 01:57 UTC 版)
名詞
- Censored spelling of shit.
-
2015 November 10, Brandon Griggs, “Do U.S. colleges have a race problem?”, in CNN:
-
At USC, where a member of a fraternity called student President Rini Sampath an “Indian piece of s***,” student leaders are demanding a campuswide action plan against bias, including the appointment of a top administrator to promote diversity, equity and inclusion.
-
-
- Censored spelling of slut.
- Censored spelling of spic.
動詞
s*** (third-person singular simple present s***s, present participle s***ting or s****ing, simple past and past participle s*** or s***ted or s****ed)
s-
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/16 03:07 UTC 版)
語源 1
Abbreviation of scalar (“particle with spin 0”).
発音
- IPA: /s/
接頭辞
s-
- (physics) Subatomic particles with a spin (quantum angular momentum) of 0, predicted by supersymmetry; the bosonic equivalent of known fermions.
派生語
語源 2
Abbreviation of sec- (“secondary”).
発音
- IPA: /ɛs/
接頭辞
s-
- (organic chemistry) secondary form
- Synonym: sec-
- Coordinate terms: (normal form) n-, (tertiary form) t-
語源 3
発音
- IPA: /s/
接頭辞
s-
- Super.
派生語
- squbit
s.
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/03/19 03:08 UTC 版)
s/
語源
This comes from the command s (substitute), originally in ed and also found in Perl, to replace one string with another. Although the command does not require slashes (other punctuation can be used as delimiters) in this informal use (i.e., outside of scripting) slashes are virtually universally used.
In the original command, a trailing g means that the change in strings should be effected every time the first string appears (not just the first time it appears); this g is often used in this informal verb also, as described in the usage note below.
動詞
s/ (imperative only)
- (informal or even humorous) Replace the following string with the one that appears after it.
- I hate you, you idiot!
- Erm, s/hate/love/ and s/idiot/lovable fellow/.
使用する際の注意点
引用
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:s/.
ウィキペディア英語版での「's」の意味 |
S*
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2009/02/20 00:42 UTC 版)
Weblio例文辞書での「's」に類似した例文 |
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「's」を含む例文一覧
該当件数 : 36570件
the tender passion(s) [sentiment(s)]発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
愛情; 恋愛. - 研究社 新英和中辞典
permutation(s) and combination(s)発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
順列と組み合わせ. - 研究社 新英和中辞典
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Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) and/or GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). Weblio英和・和英辞典に掲載されている「Wiktionary英語版」の記事は、Wiktionaryの's (改訂履歴)、-'s (改訂履歴)、-(s) (改訂履歴)、-s (改訂履歴)、-s' (改訂履歴)、-s- (改訂履歴)、/s (改訂履歴)、?s (改訂履歴)、@s (改訂履歴)、S (改訂履歴)、s' (改訂履歴)、s*** (改訂履歴)、s- (改訂履歴)、s. (改訂履歴)、s/ (改訂履歴)の記事を複製、再配布したものにあたり、Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA)もしくはGNU Free Documentation Licenseというライセンスの下で提供されています。 |
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Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) and/or GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). Weblio英和・和英辞典に掲載されている「Wikipedia英語版」の記事は、WikipediaのS* (改訂履歴)の記事を複製、再配布したものにあたり、Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA)もしくはGNU Free Documentation Licenseというライセンスの下で提供されています。 |
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