quword 趣词
Word Origins Dictionary
- sheaf (n.)




- Old English sceaf (plural sceafas) "large bundle of corn," from Proto-Germanic *skauf- (cognates: Old Saxon scof, Middle Dutch scoof, Dutch schoof, Old High German scoub "sheaf, bundle," German Schaub "sheaf;" Old Norse skauf "fox's tail;" Gothic skuft "hair on the head," German Schopf "tuft"), from PIE root *(s)keup- "cluster, tuft, hair of the head." Extended to bundles of things other than grain by c. 1300. Also used in Middle English for "two dozen arrows." General sense of "a collection" is from 1728.
- meristele




- "In certain vascular plants, especially ferns: any of the vascular bundles comprising a dictyostele", Late 19th cent.; earliest use found in Sydney Vines (1849–1934), botanist. Apparently irregularly from ancient Greek μερίς part + stele.