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pagan词源

发布于:2025-07-05 11:05浏览量:161文/优校网

英文词源

paganyoudaoicibaDictYouDict
pagan: [14] The history of pagan is a bizarre series of semantic twists and turns that takes it back ultimately to Latin pāgus (source also of English peasant). This originally meant ‘something stuck in the ground as a landmark’ (it came from a base *pāg- ‘fix’ which also produced English page, pale ‘stake’, and pole ‘stick’ and is closely related to pact and peace).

It was extended metaphorically to ‘country area, village’, and the noun pāgānus was derived from it, denoting ‘country-dweller’. But then this in its turn began to shift semantically, first to ‘civilian’ and then (based on the early Christian notion that all members of the church were ‘soldiers’ of Christ) to ‘heathen’ – whence English pagan.

=> pact, page, pale, peace, peasant, pole
pagan (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
late 14c., from Late Latin paganus "pagan," in classical Latin "villager, rustic; civilian, non-combatant" noun use of adjective meaning "of the country, of a village," from pagus "country people; province, rural district," originally "district limited by markers," thus related to pangere "to fix, fasten," from PIE root *pag- "to fix" (see pact). As an adjective from early 15c.

Religious sense is often said to derive from conservative rural adherence to the old gods after the Christianization of Roman towns and cities; but the word in this sense predates that period in Church history, and it is more likely derived from the use of paganus in Roman military jargon for "civilian, incompetent soldier," which Christians (Tertullian, c.202; Augustine) picked up with the military imagery of the early Church (such as milites "soldier of Christ," etc.). Applied to modern pantheists and nature-worshippers from 1908.
Pagan and heathen are primarily the same in meaning; but pagan is sometimes distinctively applied to those nations that, although worshiping false gods, are more cultivated, as the Greeks and Romans, and heathen to uncivilized idolaters, as the tribes of Africa. A Mohammedan is not counted a pagan much less a heathen. [Century Dictionary, 1902]
The English surname Paine, Payne, etc., appears by old records to be from Latin paganus, but whether in the sense "villager," "rustic," or "heathen" is disputed. It also was a common Christian name in 13c., "and was, no doubt, given without any thought of its meaning" ["Dictionary of English Surnames"].

中文词源

pagan(异教徒):尚未信仰基督教的乡下人

英语单词pagan来自拉丁语paganus,本意是“住在pagus(乡下)的人”,与英语单词peasant(农民、乡下人)同源。在古罗马军队行话中,paganus表示“平民、不合格的士兵”。基督教传播至罗马帝国并被立为罗马国教后,首先在罗马的城市和城镇地区发展,而在广大农村,农民们依然信奉以前的罗马多神教。因此,原本表示“乡下人”的paganus就产生了“异教徒、无宗教信仰者”的含义。基督教会沿用了古罗马军队的行话,用paganus表示这些尚未信仰基督教的人,含有“基督军队中不合格的士兵”之意。于是,paganus就变成了一个宗教术语,表示“异教徒、无宗教信仰者”,原本的“乡下人”含义反而逐渐消失了。英语单词pagan就来自拉丁语paganus。

pagan:n.异教徒,无宗教信仰者adj.异教的,异教徒的

该词的英语词源请访问趣词词源英文版:pagan 词源,pagan 含义。

pagan:异教徒,没有宗教信仰的人

在一般辞书中,pagan有两个释义:“异教徒”和“不信教的人”,所谓“异教徒”多指非基督教徒,而“不信教的人”则常指不信基督教、犹太教或回教的人。pagan系源自意为“乡下人”的拉丁语paganus。从公元2世纪起,罗马人赋之以新义,他们把逃避兵役的人(相当于英语slacker)或平民(相当于英语non-soldier)也叫做paganus,含有强烈的轻蔑和贬抑意味。公元4世纪,罗马帝国将基督教定为国教,基督教由长期受迫害转而取得合法地位并开始传播,首先在城市中站稳了脚跟。早期的基督教徒崇尚勇武,常以“基督卫士”(milites Ch risti,相当于英语soldiers of Christ)自诩,对那些不皈依基督教的人,特别是基督教影响尚未扩及的农村地区的乡下人,他们便借用了兼有“乡下人”和“平民”含义的paganus 一词称谓之,以示区分。这一点在英国历史学家吉本( Gibbon,1737 - 1794)所著的《罗马帝国衰亡史》(The His-tOry of the DecLine and FaLL of the Roman Empire)一书第21章注释中就有说明。到了14世纪,paganus以pagan的形式进人英语中以后,词义便相对地固定了下来,一般多作“异教徒”解,有时也指“不信教的人”。

pagan:教外之人,异教徒

来自拉丁语pagus,乡村,村民,来自PIE*pag,固定,标记,词源同page,pact.后词义由村民引申为粗俗的,不信教的,不信基督的,异教徒。词义演变比较villain,village.