crony
                                        英 ['krəʊnɪ]
美 ['kroni]
                                        
                                        
                 
                                
                             
                                                
            crony 密友来自词根chrono, 时间,见chronicle, chronology.
 
                                    
            - crony
- crony: [17] Crony originated as a piece of Cambridge university slang. Originally written chrony, it was based on Greek khrónios ‘longlasting’, a derivative of khrónos ‘time’ (source of English chronicle, chronology, chronic, etc), and seems to have been intended to mean ‘friend of long-standing’, or perhaps ‘contemporary’. The first recorded reference to it is in the diary of Samuel Pepys, a Cambridge man: ‘Jack Cole, my old school-fellow … who was a great chrony of mine’, 30 May 1665.
 => chronic, chronicle, chronology
- crony (n.)
- 1660s, Cambridge student slang, probably from Greek khronios "long-lasting," from khronos "time" (see chrono-), and with a sense of "old friend," or "contemporary."
                 - 1. In her late sixties she traveled over Europe with a crony of equal years. 
- 在接近古稀之年,她同一个与她同年的密友漫游欧洲.
来自《简明英汉词典》