ghetto
ghetto 英 [ˈgetəʊ] 美 [ˈgetoʊ]
n. 犹太人区;贫民区 vt. 使集中居住
名词复数:ghettos
- Ghetto means a crowded poor part of a city lived in by a specific ethnic group. The word is powerful, often associated with a rich cultural heritage or a sense of shame and a desire to escape.
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- n. 犹太人区;贫民区
- vt. 使集中居住
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1. He could have grown up with me in the ghetto of Malmo.
他可能是跟我一起在马尔默的贫民区长大的。
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2. In the scene where Mickey tries therapy, we love it when Mickey tells his rhino shrink, “I grew up behind the walls of a one-room hellhole in the ghetto.
在米奇尝试各种疗法的场景中,我们喜欢米奇抱怨他自己钱财短缺:“我从小就住在贫民区,那是一个脏兮兮的地方,只有一间房间。
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3. While Berger was living in a ghetto in his hometown, Debrecen, the Nazis gave him a job: Remove corpses and body parts from the streets by the railroad station.
当时伯杰住在他家乡德布勒森的犹太人区,纳粹曾交给他这样一个任务:把街头的火车站的尸体和尸块弄走。
- ghetto (n.) 1610s, "part of a city in which Jews are compelled to live," especially in Italy, from Italian ghetto "part of a city to which Jews are restricted," of unknown origin. The various theories trace it to: Yiddish get "deed of separation;" a special use of Venetian getto "foundry" (there was one near the site of that city's ghetto in 1516); a clipped form of Egitto "Egypt," from Latin Aegyptus (presumably in memory of the exile); or Italian borghetto "small section of a town" (diminutive of borgo, which is of Germanic origin; see borough). Extended by 1899 to crowded urban quarters of other minority groups (especially blacks in U.S. cities). As an adjective by 1903 (modern slang usage from 1999). Ghetto-blaster "large, portable stereo cassette-player" is from 1982.
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