1. Latin ira "anger" => ire.
2. Latin ira "anger" => Latin irasci "be angry" => irasc- "be angry".
3. 諧音“愛惹”-----愛惹他發(fā)怒,故意招惹他使其發(fā)怒。
4. 諧音“愛怒哦、易怒哦”。
c. 1300, from Old French ire "anger, wrath, violence" (11c.), from Latin ira "anger, wrath, rage, passion," from PIE root *eis- (1), forming various words denoting "passion" cognates: Greek hieros "filled with the divine, holy," oistros "gadfly," originally "thing causing madness;" Sanskrit esati "drives on," yasati "boils;" Avestan aesma "anger;" Lithuanian aistra "violent passion").
Old English irre in a similar sense is from an adjective irre "wandering, straying, angry," cognate with Old Saxon irri "angry," Old High German irri "wandering, deranged," also "angry;" Gothic airzeis "astray," and Latin errare "wander, go astray, angry" (see err (v.)).
(cognates: Avestan ae?ma- "anger," Lithuanian aistra "violent passion," Latin ira "anger")
雙語例句
1. Objective : To explore the regulatory mechanism of iron responsive element binding protein ( IRE? BP ) in iron metabolism.