date
date 英 [deɪt] 美 [det]
n. 日期;约会 v. 注明日期;和…约会
进行时:dating 过去式:dated 过去分词:dated 第三人称单数:dates 名词复数:dates
- A date is a particular day of the month, and to date is to go out with someone. You might have the date of your first date with a special someone marked on your calendar. Awwwwwwww.
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- n. 日期;约会
- v. 注明日期;和…约会
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1. ‘What's the date today?’ ‘The 10th.’
“今天几号?”“ 10 号。”
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2. Write today's date at the top of the page.
在页面顶端写上今天的日期。
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3. I can't come on that date.
那个日子我来不了。
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4. The details can be added at a later date.
细节可过些时候再补充进去。
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5. I've got a date with Lucy tomorrow night.
明天晚上我与露西有个约会。
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6. Thank you for your letter dated 24th March.
你 3 月 24 日来函收悉,谢谢。
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7. She designs classic clothes which do not date.
她设计的典雅式样服装不会过时。
- date (n.1) "time," early 14c., from Old French date (13c.) "date, day; time," from Medieval Latin data, noun use of fem. singular of Latin datus "given," past participle of dare "to give, grant, offer," from PIE root *do- "to give."
- date (n.2) the fruit, late 13c., from Old French date, from Old Provençal datil, from Latin dactylus, from Greek daktylos "date," originally "finger, toe;" so called because of fancied resemblance between oblong fruit of the date palm and human digits. Possibly from a Semitic source (compare Hebrew deqel, Aramaic diqla, Arabic daqal "date palm") and assimilated to the Greek word for "finger."
- date (n.3) "liaison," 1885, gradually evolving from date (n.1) in its general sense of "appointment;" romantic sense by 1890s. Meaning "person one has a date with" is from 1925.
- date (v.1) "to mark (a document) with the date," late 14c., from date (n.1). Meaning "to assign to or indicate a date" (of an event) is from c. 1400. Meaning "to mark as old-fashioned" is from 1895. Related: Dated; dating.
- date (v.2) "have a romantic liaison;" 1902, from date (n.3). Related: Dated; dating.
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