arch
arch 英 [ɑ:tʃ] 美 [ɑrtʃ]
n. 拱形;拱门 v. 使…弯成弓形;使成弓形
进行时:arching 过去式:arched 过去分词:arched 第三人称单数:arches 名词复数:arches
- An arch is a shape that resembles an upside down "U." You may find this shape in a carefully tweezed eyebrow or in the famous golden pair that make you hunger for a Big Mac.
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- n. 拱形;拱门
- v. 使…弯成弓形;使成弓形
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1. Go through the arch and follow the path.
穿过拱门沿小径往前走。
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2. Marble Arch is a famous London landmark.
大理石拱门是伦敦著名的地标。
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3. the delicate arch of her eyebrows
她那弯弯的柳眉
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4. The cat arched its back and hissed.
猫弓起背发出嘶嘶声。
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5. Tall trees arched over the path.
大树呈拱形遮阴了小道。
- arch (adj.) 1540s, "chief, principal," from separate use of the prefix arch-, which is attested from late Old English (in archangel, archbishop, etc.). The prefix figured in so many derogatory uses (arch-rogue, arch-knave, etc.) that by mid-17c. it had acquired a meaning of "roguish, mischievous," softened by 19c. to "saucy." The shifting sense is exemplified by archwife (late 14c.), variously defined as "a wife of a superior order" or "a dominating woman, virago." Related: Archly; archness.
- arch (n.) "structure (in a building, bridge, etc.) in the shape of a curve that stands when supported only a the extremities," c. 1300, from Old French arche "arch of a bridge, arcade" (12c.), from Latin arcus "a bow" (see arc (n.)). Replaced native bow (n.1).
- arch (v.) early 14c., "to form an arch" (implied in arched); c. 1400 in transitive sense "furnish with an arch," from arch (n.). Related: Arching.
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