Definition of the word eve

Pronunciation of vocabulary eve

evenoun

đêm

/iːv//iːv/

Origin of the word eve

The word "eve" originates from the Old English word æfen, which meant "evening" or "nightfall." It was derived from the Germanic stem *aba-, meaning "to depart" or "to fade," which also gave rise to words like "event" and "evaporate." In Middle English, the word evolved to mean "the last night or evening before a festival or special event," particularly associated with All Hallows Eve (later known as Halloween). This usage of "eve" is the result of the Middle English suffix -en, which is a historical grammatical ending used to denote time periods or stages. The meaning of "eve" as "tonight" or "this evening" is also a result of its derivation from "evening," which further evolved into contemporary English forms like "yestereve," "eve of," and "date uncertain but presumed to be prior to midnight." The root meaning of "eve" conveys a sense of transition or antecedence, suggesting that the event, festival, or day to come is nigh.

Vocabulary summary eve

typenoun (bible)

meaning(Eve) Yes

exampledaughter of Eve

typenoun

meaningthe night before, the day before

exampledaughter of Eve

meaningtime before (when an event happened)

exampleon the eve of a general insurrection

meaning(archaic, archaic meaning) evening

Example of vocabulary evenamespace

meaning

the day or evening before an event, especially a religious festival or holiday

ngày hoặc buổi tối trước một sự kiện, đặc biệt là lễ hội tôn giáo hoặc ngày lễ

  • Christmas Eve (= 24 December)

    Đêm Giáng sinh (= 24 tháng 12)

  • a New Year’s Eve party (= on 31 December)

    tiệc đêm giao thừa (= ngày 31 tháng 12)

  • on the eve of the election

    vào đêm trước cuộc bầu cử

  • a special election eve show

    một chương trình đặc biệt đêm bầu cử

meaning

evening

buổi tối

  • one midsummer’s eve

    một đêm giữa mùa hè


Comment ()