berserker
n. 狂暴的人 adv. 不披挂甲胄地
发音
词形变化
别名
释义与例句
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1.
A Norse warrior who purportedly fought in a trance-like frenzy; a berserk.
巴萨卡
狂战士
历史 -
2.
One who fights as if frenzied, like a berserker.
引申义 -
3.
A type of von Neumann probe whose mission is to exterminate alien lifeforms.
媒体 引申义
词汇关系
同义词 1
上位词 2
相关短语
词源
Borrowed from Old Norse berserkr (“Norse warrior who fights with frenzy”), probably from bjǫrn (“bear”) + serkr (“coat; shirt”), referring to the bearskins worn by the warriors. Bjǫrn is possibly ultimately derived from Proto-Indo-European *bʰerH- (“brown”); and serkr from Proto-Indo-European *ser- (“to bind, tie together; thread”). Alternatively, it has been suggested that the first element of the word is from berr (“bare, naked”), suggesting warriors who went into battle without armour, but this is now thought unlikely. Doublet of berserk. The word was introduced in English by the Scottish author and historian Walter Scott (1771–1832) in Illustrations of Northern Antiquities (1814) (spelled berserkir), and in his novel The Pirate (1822) (spelled berserkar). The sense “type of von Neumann probe whose mission is to exterminate alien lifeforms” was coined by the American author Fred Saberhagen (1930–2007) in 1963 in his Berserker series of novels and short stories. Cognates * Icelandic berserkur * Swedish bärsärk
来源:wiktionary