Bunch
Fish are swimming against the current in a river, making them easy targets. This hunter is trying to catch them with a spear, but after a few minutes, he says, "Looks like they wisened up." What does it mean? And why I couldn't find this verb 'wisen' in dictionaries?
2023年7月24日 14:44
解答 · 7
3
"Wisen" is antiquated. It's a remnant of Middle English (by way of Proto-Germanic) that is sometimes still heard in some dialects of the southern US and the Appalachian mountain region. The phrasal verb "wise up" is also used in lots of other places, but in most dialects the past form would be "wised up."
2023年7月24日
3
They "wisened up" means they got smarter. In this context, it means the fish have learned how to avoid getting speared.
2023年7月24日
1
In colloquial English people often manufacture words based on suffixes and patterns from other words. One common pattern is [adjective] + -en = to become more [adjective]. "To redden" means "to become redder." "To loosen" means "to become looser." "To weaken" means "to become weaker." "To ripen" means "to become riper," and so on. Based on this pattern, if someone who isn't bookish wanted to say "to become wiser," they might manufacture the word "wisen" by following that pattern. And they will be understood. Whether it's a "real word" or not, when a native English speaker here's "wisen," they will understand it to mean "to become wiser." I'll trust Jonathan Kimball on the word history. But variations like this are common. "To wise up" is an informal phrasal verb meaning "to stop being fooled by something." At first, the fish were caught by the hunter. Then they learned not to be. You could say "they wised up." It appears that this hunter, for whatever reason, uses a nonstandard form, "they wisened up."
2023年7月25日
To fasten something is to make it secure, or to attach it. A runner improves his speed with practice, but doesn't "fasten", in context.
2023年7月25日
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