gore
gore 英 [gɔ:(r)] 美 [ɡɔr]
vt. 刺伤;缝以补裆;顶 n. 淤血;三角形布;流出的血
进行时:goring 过去式:gored 过去分词:gored 第三人称单数:gores 名词复数:gores
- Do you like horror movies? Then you probably like gore: bloody, yucky, violent action.
- 请先登录
- vt. 刺伤;缝以补裆;顶
- n. 淤血;三角形布;流出的血
-
1. And Andrew Sullivan sounded like he wanted to round up "decadent" gore voters on both coasts for the crime of having voted for the guy who actually got the most votes.
安德鲁沙利文听起来像他想围捕在两个海岸的“颓废的”戈尔支持者,由于已经投票给他这个事实已经拥有最多票数的家伙的罪行。
-
2. Nobody that we have dealt with has ever taken as much time to understand the subtlety of the science and all the different complications and what it all means as Al gore.
我们曾经遇到过的人当中,没有谁会花如此多的时间去理解科学的细枝末节和所有各式各样的复杂事物,直到我们遇见阿尔·戈尔”。
-
3. The Nobel Peace Prize is the latest honor for gore in a year that began with Hollywood honoring his documentary on climate change.
自从上次在好莱坞凭借关于气侯变化的记录片获奖后,诺贝尔和平奖是戈尔这一年来最近的一个荣誉。
- gore (n.1) "thick, clotted blood," Old English gor "dirt, dung, filth, shit," a Germanic word (cognates: Middle Dutch goor "filth, mud;" Old Norse gor "cud;" Old High German gor "animal dung"), of uncertain origin. Sense of "clotted blood" (especially shed in battle) developed by 1560s (gore-blood is from 1550s).
- gore (n.2) "triangular piece of ground," Old English gara "corner, point of land, cape, promontory," from Proto-Germanic *gaizon- (source also of Old Frisian gare "a gore of cloth; a garment," Dutch geer, German gehre "a wedge, a gore"), from PIE *ghaiso- "a stick, spear" (see gar). The connecting sense is "triangularity." Hence also the senses "front of a skirt" (mid-13c.), and "triangular piece of cloth" (early 14c.). In New England, the word applied to a strip of land left out of any property by an error when tracts are surveyed (1640s).
- gore (v.) "to pierce, stab," c. 1400, from Middle English gore (n.) "spear," from Old English gar "spear" (see gar, also gore (n.2) "triangular piece of ground"). Related: Gored; goring.
- 请先登录
0 个回复