🎆

fireworks

Reikšmė (Anglų k.)

plural of firework.

firework

A device using gunpowder and other chemicals which, when lit, emits a combination of coloured flames, sparks, whistles or bangs, and sometimes made to rocket high into the sky before exploding, used for entertainment or celebration.

Vertimai

feu d’artifice

fuochi d’artificio

fuoco d’artificio

πυροτεχνήματα

πυροτέχνημα

focs artificials

Dažnis

C1
Tariamas kaip (IPA)
/ˈfaɪ̯.ə.wɜːks/
Etimologija (Anglų k.)

In summary

From fire + work(s). The similarity with Dutch vuurwerk and German Feuerwerk, both “fireworks”, is hardly coincidental. Since the word was apparently first attested in English circa 1575, probably from the Dutch (1540), from the German (sense early 16th c.), from Middle High German viurwerc (14th c. as “fuel, firewood”). A spread from the south northwards is also in line with the fact that the first European fireworks were produced in Italy in the late 14th century.

Patobulinkite savo tarimą

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes