herd: [OE] Herd is part of a widespread Indo- European family of words denoting ‘group’ (others include Sanskrit árdhas ‘troop, multitude’ and Welsh cordd ‘tribe, family’). It goes back to an Indo-European *kherdhā-, whose Germanic descendant *kherthō produced German herde, Swedish and Danish hjord, and English herd. Herd ‘herdsman’, now found only in compounds such as shepherd and goatherd, is a different word, albeit derived from the same Germanic source. Its Germanic relatives are German hirte, Swedish herde, and Danish hyrde.
herd (n.)
Old English heord "herd, flock," from Proto-Germanic *herdo- (cognates: Old Norse hjor, Old High German herta, German Herde, Gothic hairda "herd"), from PIE *kerdh- "a row, group, herd" (cognates: Sanskrit árdhah "herd, troop," Old Church Slavonic reda "herd," Greek korthys "heap," Lithuanian kerdius "shepherd"). Herd instinct in psychology is first recorded 1908.
herd (v.)
mid-13c., to watch over or herd (livestock); of animals, to gather in a herd, to form a flock, late 14c., from herd (n.). Related: Herded; herding.
双语例句
1. Stefano used a motor cycle to herd the sheep.
斯特凡诺骑一辆摩托车放羊。
来自柯林斯例句
2. A herd of elephants lolloped across the plains towards a watering hole.