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Wiktionary英語版での「CHOPSTICK」の意味 |
chopstick
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/01 23:38 UTC 版)
別の表記
- chop-stick
語源
Apparently a compound of chop + stick, but the sense of the first element is not clear. The eating utensil sense (attested since 1637) is presumably a transfer of sense from the earlier fishing tackle sense (attested from 1615), based on physical resemblance.
The common derivation from Chinese Pidgin English chop(-chop) (“quick”), a supposed calque from Chinese 筷子 (kuàizi, “chopstick”), derived from 快 (kuài, “quick”), is chronologically impossible as Chinese Pidgin English did not come into existence until the 18th century.
名詞
chopstick (plural chopsticks)
- (usually in the plural) An East Asian eating utensil usually used as a pair and held in one hand to grip pieces of food or occasionally to mix liquids or scoop up small pieces of food. The utensil is a stick, usually made of wood and measuring approximately 23 cm (10 inches) in length.
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1637, Peter Mundy, Diary; in Richard Carnac Temple, editor, The English Factory in Japan, 1613–1623: Volume I, Cambridge: The Hakluyt Society, 1919, page 194:
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Then broughtt they us some henne cutt in small peeces and Fresh porcke Don in like Manner, giving us Choppsticks to eatt our Meat, butt wee knew not how to use them, soe imployed our Fingers. [...] Having before mentioned Chopstickes, I will Describe a ordinary Fellow, as boatmen, etts., how hee eateth / his meat, which is commonly on the ground or Decke. Hee taketh the stickes (which are aboutt a foote longe) beetweene his Fingers and with them hee taketh uppe his Meat, beeing first cut smalle, as saltporcke, Fish, etts., with which they relish their Rice (it beeing their common Foode). I say first taking upp a bitt of the Meatte, hee presently applies to his Mouth a smalle procelane with sodden Rice. Hee thrusts, Crammes and stuffes it full of the said Rice with the Chopsticks in exceedingly hasty Manner untill it will hold No more.
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1697, William Dampier, A New Voyage Round the World, London: James Knapton, page 85:
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All the Tonquineses keep many of these Sticks in their Houses, as well for their own use, as to entertain Strangers at meals: they are as ordinarily placed at the Table here, as Knives, Forks, and Spoons are in England: and a man that cannot dextrously handle these instruments, makes but an odd figure at their Tables. The richer sort of people, especially the Mandarins, have them tipt with Silver. In China also these things are constantly used: they are called by the English Seamen Chopsticks.
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- (ethnic slur) An Asian person.
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1832 April 11, The Launceston Advertiser, Tasmania, page 119, column 2:
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When was in Hampshire the other day, a chop-stick, who came to my lodging to talk to me about the mode of harvesting and preserving the corn, and who soon diverged into a talk about the Reform Bill, said, "And this cholera morbus, sir, don't you think it's a sort of a shoshoy to frighten us out of the Reform?"
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- (obsolete, fishing) A long straight stick forming part of various fishing tackle arrangements.
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1726, Nathan Bailey, Dictionarium Rusticum, Urbanicum and Botanicum, London: James and John Knapton et al., page s.v. Iceland:
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1862, W.B. Lord, Sea Fish and How to Catch Them, London: Bradbury, Agnew and Co., page 44:
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The spreader is passed through the hole in the sinker, c, until its centre is reached, when the edges of the holes must be closed in tightly with a small hammer, which will, if properly done, retain the spreader securely in its place. This arrangement is generally known amongst fishermen as a set of "chop-sticks."
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派生語
- choppers
- chopsticker
- chopstickery
- chopstickful
- chopstickiness
- chopstickish
- chopstickism
- chopstick land
- chopstick legs
- chopstickless
- chopstick-like
- chopstickology
- chopstick rest
- chopstick stand
- chopsticky
- chork
関連する語
- stick
- waribashi
動詞
chopstick (third-person singular simple present chopsticks, present participle chopsticking, simple past and past participle chopsticked)
参照
- ^ The Pidgin English derivation was first put forward by Handley Moule and presented in Yule and Burnell's Hobson-Jobson (1886), page 162/1: (The Chinese name of the article is ‘kwai-tsz’, ‘speedy-ones’, “Possibly the inventor of the present word, hearing that the Chinese name had this meaning, and accustomed to the phrase chop-chop for ‘speedily’, used chop as a translation” (Bishop Moule).) Thence adopted by the Oxford English Dictionary (in 1893), and so passing down to most English language dictionaries from the late 19th century onwards.
- ^ The chronological impossibility of the Pidgin English derivation was first noted by Kingsley Bolton in his Chinese English: A Sociolinguistic History (2003), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, page 139.
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