alike: [OE] Alike is an ancient word whose ultimate Germanic source, *galīkam, meant something like ‘associated form’ (*līkam ‘form, body’ produced German leiche ‘corpse’ and Old English lic, from which we get lychgate, the churchyard gate through which a funeral procession passes; and the collective prefix *gameant literally ‘with’ or ‘together’).
In Old English, *galīkam had become gelīc, which developed into Middle English ilik; and from the 14th century onwards the prefix i-, which was becoming progressively rarer in English, was assimilated to the more familiar a-. The verb like is indirectly related to alike, and the adjective, adverb, preposition, and conjunction like was formed directly from it, with the elimination of the prefix. => each, like
alike (adj.)
c. 1300, aliche, from Old English gelic and/or onlice "similar," from Proto-Germanic *galikam "associated form" (cognates: Old Frisian gelik, German gleich, Gothic galeiks, Old Norse glikr; see like (adj.)).
雙語例句
1. The language of Darwin was intelligible to experts and non-experts alike.
達爾文的語言無論對專家還是非專業人士而言都明白易懂。
來自柯林斯例句
2. Mr Bowles could engender delight in students and musicians alike.
鮑爾斯先生能夠讓學生和音樂家都感到快樂。
來自柯林斯例句
3. Exporters, farmers and industrialists alike are vexed and blame the government.
出口商、農場主和實業家們都很惱火,紛紛譴責政府。
來自柯林斯例句
4. The wine goes with strong and mild cheese alike.
喝這酒的時候可以搭配濃乳酪或淡乳酪。
來自柯林斯例句
5. The police, raining blows on rioters and spectators alike, cleared the park.