การใช้ภาษาอังกฤษ ที่ถือว่า ถูกต้อง ในที่นี้ เป็นไป ตามมาตรฐาน ของภาษา
การใช้ภาษาอังกฤษ ไม่กำหนดมาตฐาน ถือตามส่วนใหญ่ที่ใช้แต่ละท้องถิ่น
ความหมาย อาจยืดหยุ่น ขึ้นอยู่กับ ตำแหน่ง/หน้าที่ ในประโยค
Dictionary.com
ออกเสียง Kidnap = ‘KID-nap’
ออกเสียง hijack = ‘HAHY-jak’
NECTEC’s Lexitron-2 Dictionary
ให้คำแปล Kidnap = (vt) ลักพาตัว พาหนี
ให้คำแปล hijack = (vt) จี้เครื่องบิน เรือ รถ หักหลัง
ให้คำแปล terrorism = (n) การใช้ความรุนแรงเพื่อเรียกร้องทางการเมือง
Nontri Dictionary
ให้คำแปล terrorism (n) การทำให้ตกใจกลัว
Dictionary.com
Hijack and terrorism
The nation marked 17 years since the terrorist attacks of 9/11
claimed thousands of lives and changed America for good.
This year marked the first time that
the majority of school children in American
were not yet born when the terrorist attack happened,
and many schools devoted lessons to covering
what to kids is a historical event.
Searches for the meaning of hijack climbed 668%
on the 11th, while searches for
the meaning of terrorism were up 262%.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
'Nap' in 'Kidnap'
Meaning "to arrest" or "to seize unexpectedly," both nab and nap originated in 17th-century slang
—in particular, criminal slang.
Nab, which islikely an alteration of nap,
is still commonly used today in its original sense.
Nap, on the other hand, fell into disuse by the 20th century,
surviving only in the word kidnap.
The kid in that word refers to a child,
and that sense of kid also began as slang.
Kidnap originally referred to the practice in the 1600s and 1700s of stealing impoverished children from large cities in Great Britain
and taking them to British colonies in North America and the Caribbean,
where they were sold into servitude.
The word was formed in the late 17th century
possibly as a back-formation of kidnapper,
which is attested a few years earlier.
Napper itself was also used at the time
as a slang word for "thief."
Etymologists aren't exactly sure
where nap, meaning "to seize," originated,
though they do suspect it may have Scandinavian origins.
They do know, however, that nap
referring to a short sleep taken during the day is unrelated:
it comes from Old English hnappian, "to sleep,"
and has Germanic roots.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
Hijack
Hijack can sometimes be spelled highjack,
but despite the perceived connection of high with flying,
the word originally referred to
the seizing of any kind of goods in transit,
whether by car, boat, or plane.
It later came to refer to
forcing a pilot to flyto an unintended destination,
also called skyjacking.
Hijack has influenced other words
that refer to a specified thing taken by threat or force,
such as carjacking.
In the electronic age it has come to mean
taking over and controlling something
(such as a medium) that is not yours:
Hijacking
This word surged in use during the 1970s
when airplanes became a frequent target.
(The more specific skyjack never fully caught on.)
Who commandeered planes in the '70s?
Among others, Cubans, Syrians, Soviets, South Vietnamese, Palestinians, and Americans.
Motivations ranged from religion to politics to cash.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language,
kid′nap·pee′, kid′nap·ee′ (kĭd′nă-pē′) n.
kid′nap′ n.
kid′nap′per, kid′nap′er n.
Word History:
Kidnapper seems to have originated among those
whoperpetrate this crime.
We know this because kid and napper,
the two parts of the compound,
were slang of the sort that criminals used.
Kid, which still has an informal air,
was considered low slang when kidnapper wasformed,
and napper is obsolete slang for a thief,
coming from the verb nap, "to steal."
Nap is possibly a variant of nab,
which also still has a slangy ring. In the second half of the 1600s,
when the word kidnapper begins to appear in English,
kidnappers plied their trade to secure laborers
for plantations in colonies
such as the ones in North America.
The term later took on the broader sense
that it has today.
The verb kidnap begins to beattested a bit later than kidnapper
and is possibly a back-formation from kidnapper
—that is, the suffix -er was removed from kidnapper
to create a new verb kidnap.