snoreyoudaoicibaDictYouDict[snore 词源字典]
snore: [14] Like snort [14] (which originally meant ‘snore’), snore goes back ultimately to a prehistoric Germanic base *snor-, imitative of the sound it represents. From the same source came German schnarchen ‘snore’, which produced the German dialect noun schnorchel ‘snout’. The mainstream language adopted it as a term for a ‘breathing tube’, and English borrowed it as snorkel [20].
=> snorkel, snort[snore etymology, snore origin, 英语词源]
snore (v.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
mid-15c., probably related to snort (v.) and both probably of imitative origin (compare Dutch snorken, Middle High German snarchen, German schnarchen, Swedish snarka; see snout). Related: Snored; snoring.
snore (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
mid-14c., "a snort;" c. 1600, "act of snoring," of imitative origin; see snore (v.).