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Wiktionary英語版での「venus」の意味 |
Venus
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/09 22:16 UTC 版)
発音
固有名詞
Venus (plural Venuses or Veneres)
- (astronomy) The second planet in the Solar system, named for the goddess.
- Synonym: ♀ (symbol in astronomy and astrology)
- Near-synonyms: morning star, Phosphorus, Eosphorus, Lucifer; evening star, Vesper, Hesperus
- The Illustrated London Almanack 1867, London, page 45:
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1982 March 2, John Noble Wilford, “FIFTH SOVIET CRAFT LANDS ON VENUS AND IS FIRST TO SAMPLE PLANET'S SOIL”, in The New York Times, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 24 May 2015, Science:
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The robot craft, the fifth from the Soviet Union to land on Venus, is a module detached from Venera 13. It plunged through the dense, baking-hot carbon dioxide atmosphere and touched down in the foothills of a mountainous region known as Phoebe, just south of the Venusian equator and also below the active volcanic region of Beta. An identical lander, from Venera 14, is expected to reach Venus Friday and probably put down on the plains east of the Phoebe landing site.
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- (Roman mythology) The goddess of love, beauty, fertility, and sexuality.
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1958, Edgar Wind, “Sacred and Profane Love”, in Pagan Mysteries in the Renaissance, New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, →OCLC, page 126:
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To call either or both of them by the name of Venus seems to me too positive; for although the theory of love which they embody was unquestionably associated with the two Venuses in Plato, ‘one draped, the other nude’, it is important to observe that, in contradistinction to Botticelli and Mantegna, Titian endowed the figures with attributes and characters which transcend the mythological idiom.
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a. 1964, C[live] S[taples] Lewis, “Belphoebe, Amoret, and the Garden of Adonis”, in Alastair Fowler, editor, Spenser’s Image of Life, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, published 1967, →LCCN, →OCLC, section 3, page 51:
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Now from Ficino’s In Platonis Convivium we learn that for the Neoplatonic philosopher there are two Veneres, not one. The first of these ‘twin Veneres’ is the Venus coelestis, born of Coelus alone, without a mother—since mater interpreted philosophically implies materia, and she is altogether immaterial.
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- A female given name.
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2022 November 1, Hilarie M. Sheets, “Behind 3 Champions’ Smithsonian Portraits”, in The New York Times, New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 1 November 2022:
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A mirrored [Venus] Williams, shown from behind and in profile, wears a tennis skirt made of raffia and the Wimbledon trophy dish refashioned as a collared chestplate apropos for a warrior superhero. […] Pruitt sees “a fertile space of reflection” between his two Venuses. “My hope,” he said, “is that the duality of the portrait gives us this sense of a person looking back at themselves, considering where they came from and where they’re going.”
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派生語
- cleft of Venus
- crocus of Venus
- dimples of Venus
- mons Venus
- priestess of Venus
- protoVenus
- salt of Venus
- venereal
- Venerial
- Venerian
- Venus Bay
- Venus' comb
- Venus comb
- Venus flytrap
- Venusian
- Venuslike
- Venus mound
- venusquake
- Venus's basin
- Venus's basket (Euplectella aspergillum)
- Venus's bath
- Venus's comb
- Venus's flower basket (Euplectella aspergillum)
- Venus's girdle
- Venus's hair (Adiantum capillus-veneris)
- Venus's hair stone
- Venus's looking-glass (Triodanis spp.)
- Venus's pride (Houstonia purpurea)
- Venus's purse (Euplectella aspergillum)
- Venus's shell
- Venus zone
参考
名詞
Venus (countable and uncountable, plural Venuses or Veneres)
- (uncountable, poetic, otherwise obsolete) Sexual activity or intercourse; sex; lust, love.
- , II.ii.2:
- (uncountable, obsolete, alchemy and chemistry) Copper (a reddish-brown, malleable, ductile metallic element).
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1807, A New and Complete Encyclopaedia; or, Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences: Vol III, page 48:
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CRYSTALS of Venus or of copper, called also vitriol of Venus, is copper reduced into the form of vitriol by spirit of nitre, or by dissolving verdegris in good distilled vinegar, till the acid be saturated; it is very caustic and used to eat off proud flesh. It is also used by painters, and manufacturers, and sold under the name of distilled vinegar. See CHEMISTRY.
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2004, Maurice P. Crosland, Historical Studies in the Language of Chemistry, page 89:
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Another pair of terms which caused some confusion were Spirit of Saturn and Spirit of Venus, names suggesting compounds of lead and copper respectively. Jean Beguin described the preparation from minium and distilled vinegar of a liquid he called burning spirit of Saturn, because it was inflammable and he thought it was a compound of lead. Actually the lead takes no part in the reaction and the product of distilling lead acetate is impure acetone. Beguin’s terminology did not go without comment however, for Christopher Glaser later referred to ‘A burning Spirit of Saturn (as it is called) but rather, a Spirit of the Volatile Salt of Vinegar’. Tachenius referred to the product of distillation of copper acetate as ‘pretended spirit of Venus’ because it was really only distilled vinegar - the meaning which Macquer gave to the expression. It is typical of the confusion of terminology in early chemistry that the London Pharmacopoeia of 1721 gave the name Spiritus Veneris to sulphuric acid obtained by the distillation of copper sulphate.
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2013, John Read, From Alchemy to Chemistry:
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The association of the heavenly bodies with known metals and also with human organs and destinies goes back to ancient Chaldea, the land of astrologers. In Chaucer’s words: ‘The seven bodies eek, lo hear anon. Sol gold is, and Luna silver we declare; Mars yron, Mercurie is quyksilver; Saturnian leed; and Jubitur is tyn, and Venus coper, by my fathers kyn.’ […] Corresponding names were bestowed upon salts of these metals by the alchemists, and some of them have persisted down to the present day. Some examples are lunar caustic (silver nitrate); vitriol of Venus (copper sulphate); sugar of Saturn (lead acetate); and vitriol of Mars, or Martial vitriol (ferrous sulphate).
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- (countable, art) Any depiction of an idealized or erotic figure of a nude woman, especially one in a mythological setting.
- (countable) Any Upper Palaeolithic statuette portraying a woman, usually carved in the round.
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1986, Brian Hayden, “Old Europe: sacred matriarchy or complementary opposition?”, in Anthony Bonanno, editor, Archaeology and Fertility Cult in the Ancient Mediterranean: Papers Presented at the First International Conference on Archaeology of the Ancient Mediterranean, University of Malta, 2–5 September 1985, Amsterdam: B.R. Grüner Publishing Co., →ISBN, section I (Prehistory), page 23:
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1990, D. Bruce Dickson, “An Interpretation”, in The Dawn of Belief: Religion in the Upper Paleolithic of Southwestern Europe, Tucson, Ariz.: The University of Arizona Press, published 1996, →ISBN, page 211:
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However, a number of well-crafted studies in recent years have forcefully questioned—and perhaps refuted—the view that the Venuses were simply or solely goddesses.
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2016, Jean Clottes, “Perceptions of the World, Functions of the Art, and the Artists”, in Oliver Y. Martin, Robert D. Martin, transl., What Is Paleolithic Art?: Cave Paintings and the Dawn of Human Creativity, Chicago, Ill.; London: The University of Chicago Press, →ISBN, page 148:
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Her proportions, the stylistic elements, the choice of anatomical elements represented are characteristic of the Aurignacian or Gravettian Venuses, known especially from the statuary of Central and Eastern Europe.
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参照
- “Venus”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
アナグラム
語源
From Latin Venus.
固有名詞
Venus
関連する語
- venerien
派生した語
- English: Venus
参考
- venus
参照
語源
From venus (“loveliness”), see there for more.
発音
- (Classical Latin) IPA: [ˈwɛ.nʊs]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA: [ˈvɛː.nus]
固有名詞
Venus f (genitive Veneris); third declension
- (Roman mythology) Venus (goddess of love and beauty)
- (astronomy) Venus (planet)
- (poetic) metaphor for the genus of animation, living matter
- (alchemy, chemistry) copper
- (dice games) the best throw at the dice
- Antonyms: canīcula, canis
- Coordinate terms: vulturius, basilicus; bīniō, terniō, quaterniō, quīniō, sēniō
- See venus.
使用する際の注意点
The Old Latin form Venerus shows the rare genitive singular ending -us instead of the standard Classical Latin ending -is. This unique ending is poorly attested and largely exclusive to religious or legal documents.
語形変化
Third-declension noun.
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | Venus | Venerēs |
| genitive | Veneris | Venerum |
| dative | Venerī | Veneribus |
| accusative | Venerem | Venerēs |
| ablative | Venere | Veneribus |
| vocative | Venus | Venerēs |
派生した語
- → French: Vénus
- → Italian: Venere
- →? Messapic: 𐌅𐌄𐌍𐌀𐌔 (venas)
- → Middle English: Venus
- → Portuguese: Vénus / Vênus
- Sicilian: Vènniri
- → Spanish: Venus
参照
- “Venus”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- Coleman, Robert (1990), “Dialectal Variation in Republican Latin, with Special Reference to Praenestine”, in Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society, number 36 (216) (quotation in English; overall work in English), →ISSN, page 8
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