- bellowing (n.)[bellowing 词源字典]
- late 14c., from present participle of bellow (v.). As an adjective, recorded from 1610s.[bellowing etymology, bellowing origin, 英语词源]
- following (n.)
- late 14c., "action of following, an act of following," verbal noun from follow (v.). Meaning "a body of disciples or retainers" is from mid-15c.; Old English used folgoð in this sense.
- growing (adj.)
- Old English, present participle adjective from grow (v.). Growing season is attested from 1729; growing pains by 1752.
- growing (n.)
- late 14c., "a gradual increase, action of causing to increase," verbal noun from grow (v.). Meaning "that which has grown, a crop" is from 1540s. Dialectal growsome "tending to make things grow" is from 1570s.
- harrowing (adj.)
- "extremely distressing, painful," 1799 (implied in harrowingly), from present participle of harrow (v.).
- knowing (adj.)
- "with knowledge of truth," late 14c., from present participle of know (v.). Related: Knowingly.
- knowingly (adv.)
- late 14c., from knowing + -ly (2).
- lowing (n.)
- early 13c., verbal noun from low (v.).
- unknowing (adj.)
- c. 1300, "without knowledge, ignorant," from un- (1) "not" + present participle of know (v.). Noun meaning "ignorance" is mid-14c., especially in phrase cloud of unknowing, title of a medieval book of Christian mysticism. Related: Unknowingly. A verb unknow "fail to recognize" is attested from late 14c.
- showing
- "The action of showing something, or the fact of being shown", Old English scēawung.