happy

英 ['hæpɪ] 美['hæpɪ]
  • adj. 幸福的;高兴的;巧妙的
  • n. (Happy)人名;(英、瑞典、喀)哈皮

CET4TEM4考研CET6中高频词基本词汇

词态变化


比较级: happier;最高级: happiest;名词: happiness;

助记提示


1. happen => perhaps.
2. happen => hap.
3. happen => hapless.
4. hap "chance, fortune, luck" + 双写p加-y.

中文词源


happy 高兴的,幸运的

来自hap,发生,运气,机会。即运气好的,引申词义高兴的。

英文词源


happy
happy: [14] The Old and Middle English word for ‘happy’ was what in modern English has become silly. This began to change its meaning around the 15th century, and obviously an opportunity began to open up for an adjective expressing ‘contentment’ (as opposed to positive ‘joy’, denoted then by glad, fain, and joyful). The gap was partly filled by a weakening in the meaning of glad, but waiting in the wings was happy, a derivative of the noun hap ‘chance, luck’ (source of happen), which when it was coined in the 14th century meant ‘lucky, fortunate, prosperous’.

The main modern sense ‘highly pleased or contented’ developed in the early 16th century.

=> happen
happy (adj.)
late 14c., "lucky, favored by fortune, being in advantageous circumstances, prosperous;" of events, "turning out well," from hap (n.) "chance, fortune" + -y (2). Sense of "very glad" first recorded late 14c. Meaning "greatly pleased and content" is from 1520s. Old English had eadig (from ead "wealth, riches") and gesælig, which has become silly. Old English bliðe "happy" survives as blithe. From Greek to Irish, a great majority of the European words for "happy" at first meant "lucky." An exception is Welsh, where the word used first meant "wise."

Happy medium "the golden mean" is from 1702. Happy ending in the literary sense recorded from 1756. Happy as a clam (1630s) was originally happy as a clam in the mud at high tide, when it can't be dug up and eaten. Happy hunting ground, the reputed Indian paradise, is attested from 1840, American English. Happy day for "wedding day" is by 1739; happy hour for "early evening period of discount drinks and free hors-d'oeuvres at a bar" is by 1961, said to be 1950s. Related: Happier; happiest.
happy (adv.)
late 14c., from happy (adj.).

双语例句


1. She has now changed into a happy, self-confident woman.
如今她已经变成一个快乐、自信的女人。

来自柯林斯例句

2. He was so happy communing with the dolphin in Dingle Bay.
他在丁格尔湾与海豚交流的时候特别开心。

来自柯林斯例句

3. Like the best stories, this one may yet have a happy end.
就像最精彩的故事那样,这个故事也许仍会有个美好的结局。

来自柯林斯例句

4. Some foreign governments appear happy to gloss over continued human rights abuses.
一些外国政府似乎很乐于掩盖不断出现的侵犯人权现象。

来自柯林斯例句

5. I wasn't too happy with what I'd written so far.
我对于目前已写完的这些并不太满意。

来自柯林斯例句