echo: [14] Echo comes via Old French or Latin from Greek ēkhó, a word related to ēkhé ‘sound’. It may have originated as a personification of the concept ‘sound’, which developed eventually into the mythological mountain nymph Echo, who faded away for love of Narcissus until nothing but her voice was left. (The Greek verb derived from ēkhé, ēkhein, is the ultimate source of English catechism.) => catechism
echo (n.)
mid-14c., "sound repeated by reflection," from Latin echo, from Greek echo, personified in classical mythology as a mountain nymph who pined away for love of Narcissus until nothing was left of her but her voice, from or related to ekhe "sound," ekhein "to resound," from PIE *wagh-io-, extended form of root *(s)wagh- "to resound" (cognates: Sanskrit vagnuh "sound," Latin vagire "to cry," Old English swogan "to resound"). Related: Echoes. Echo chamber attested from 1937.
echo (v.)
1550s (intrans.), c. 1600 (trans.), from echo (n.). Related: Echoed; echoing.
实用例句
1. Pinks and beiges were chosen to echo the colours of the ceiling.
选用了粉红色和米色,以跟从天花板的颜色。
来自柯林斯例句
2. Many phrases in the last two chapters echo earlier passages.
最后两章中的很多说法是对前面段落的呼应。
来自柯林斯例句
3. The old fable continues to echo down the centuries.
这则古老的寓言流传了数个世纪。
来自柯林斯例句
4. Political attacks work only if they find an echo with voters.
政治攻击只有在选民中引起共鸣才会有作用。
来自柯林斯例句
5. There was an echo on the line and I couldn't hear clearly.