quword 趣词
            Word Origins Dictionary
         
        
        
     
    - turbot    
- turbot: [13] The turbot is etymologically the ‘thorn-flatfish’. Its name comes via Old French turbot from Old Swedish törnbut ‘turbot’. This was a compound noun formed from törn ‘thorn’ (a relative of English thorn) and but ‘flatfish’, a borrowing from Middle Low German but which probably denoted etymologically ‘stumpy’, and also supplied the final syllable of English halibut [15]. The name presumably alludes to the bony nodules on the fish’s back.
 => halibut, thorn
- rhizobium    
- "A nitrogen-fixing bacterium that is common in the soil, especially in the root nodules of leguminous plants", 1920s: modern Latin, from rhizo- 'root' + Greek bios 'life'.
- actinobacillosis    
- "Disease of cattle, other livestock, and occasionally humans caused by infection with bacteria of the genus Actinobacillus, typically characterized by suppurating nodules like those of actinomycosis but also seen as septicaemia in foals", Early 20th cent. From actino- + bacillus + -osis, after French actinobacillose.