succeed: [15] To succeed someone is etymologically to ‘go next to them’, hence to follow them. The word comes via Old French succeder from Latin succēdere, a compound verb formed from the prefix sub- ‘under’ (used here in the sense ‘next below’, hence ‘next to, after’) and cēdere ‘go’ (source also of English cede, exceed, proceed, etc). The notion of ‘getting near to something’ evolved in Latin into ‘doing well, prospering’ – whence the other main meaning of English succeed. => cede, excede, proceed, success
succeed (v.)
late 14c., intransitive and transitive, "come next after, follow after another; take the place of another, be elected or chosen for" a position, from Old French succeder "to follow on" (14c.) and directly from Latin succedere "come after, follow after; go near to; come under; take the place of," also "go from under, mount up, ascend," hence "get on well, prosper, be victorious," from sub "next to, after" (see sub-) + cedere "go, move" (see cede).
Meaning "to continue, endure" is from early 15c. The sense of "turn out well, have a favorable result" in English is first recorded late 15c., with ellipsis of adverb (succeed well). Of persons, "to be successful," from c. 1500. Related: Succeeded; succeeding.
实用例句
1. I have a sneaking suspicion that they are going to succeed.
我隐隐觉得他们恐怕要成功了。
来自柯林斯例句
2. He was too inexperienced and too inexpert to succeed.
他太缺乏经验,太不熟练,难以成功。
来自柯林斯例句
3. They are waiting anxiously to see who will succeed him.
他们焦急地等待着看谁会接替他上任。
来自柯林斯例句
4. He sacrificed his own career so that his avaricious brother could succeed.
他牺牲了自己的事业,这样他贪婪的弟弟才能成功。
来自柯林斯例句
5. His natural shrewdness tells him what is needed to succeed.