falcon: [13] English acquired falcon via Old French faucon, but it is probably ultimately of Germanic origin. Related forms such as German falke and Dutch valk suggest a prehistoric Germanic *falkon, adopted into late Latin as falcō, and passing from there into Old French.
falcon (n.)
mid-13c., faucon, from Old French faucon "falcon" (12c.), from Late Latin falconem (nominative falco) "falcon" (source also of Old Spanish falcon, Portuguese falcão, Italian falcone, Old High German falcho, German Falke, Dutch valk), probably from Latin falx (genitive falcis) "curved blade, pruning hook, sickle, war-scythe" (see falcate); the bird said to be so called for the shape of its talons, legs, or beak, but also possibly from the shape of its spread wings.
The other theory is that the Latin bird name falx is of Germanic origin and means "gray bird" (from the source of fallow (adj.)), which is supported by the antiquity of the word in Germanic but opposed by those who point out that falconry by all evidences was imported from the East, and the Germans got it from the Romans, not the other way round.
双语例句
1. The shooting of The Maltese Falcon proceeded without a hitch.
《马耳他之鹰》的拍摄进展顺利。
来自柯林斯例句
2. I have a house in the city and an investment property and a 1972 Falcon pickup.
我在城里有座自己住的房子,还有个投资的房产和一辆1972年的Falcon小货.
来自互联网
3. The falcon cannot hear the falconer.
猎鹰再也听不见主人的呼唤。
来自辞典例句
4. The Comet, for example, was really only a fancy Falcon.