hang
hang 英 [hæŋ] 美 [hæŋ]
vt. 悬挂,垂下;悬而不决 n. 悬挂;
进行时:hanging 过去式:hung 过去分词:hung 第三人称单数:hangs 名词复数:hangs
- When you hang something, you dangle or suspend it. You can hang a piñata from a tree, hang a picture on the wall, or hang a wind chime on your porch.
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- vt. 悬挂,垂下;悬而不决
- n. 悬挂;
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1. Hang your coat on the hook.
把你的大衣挂在衣钩上。
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2. Shall I hang your coat up?
我把你的大衣挂起来好吗?
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3. Have you hung out the washing?
你把洗好的衣服晾在外面了吗?
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4. Her hair hung down to her waist.
她的长发垂及腰际。
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5. The dog's tongue was hanging out.
狗的舌头耷拉在外面。
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6. A cigarette hung from her lips.
她嘴唇上叼着香烟。
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7. At that time you could hang for stealing.
那时犯盗窃罪可被绞死。
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8. Several of his paintings hang in the Tate Gallery.
他的几幅油画挂在塔特美术馆。
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9. It's not difficult once you get the hang of it.
你掌握了要领就不难了。(掌握了悬挂的方法)
- hang (n.) late 15c., "a sling," from hang (v.). Meaning "a curtain" is from c. 1500; that of "the way in which a thing (especially cloth) hangs" is from 1797. To get the hang of (something) "become capable" is from 1834, American English, perhaps originally in reference to a certain tool or feat, but, if so, its origin has been forgotten. It doesn't seem to have been originally associated with drapery or any other special use of hang; the connecting notion might be "general bent or tendency."
- hang (v.) a fusion of Old English hon "suspend" (transitive, class VII strong verb; past tense heng, past participle hangen), and Old English hangian "be suspended" (intransitive, weak, past tense hangode); also probably influenced by Old Norse hengja "suspend," and hanga "be suspended." All from Proto-Germanic *hanhan (transitive), *hangen (intransitive) "to hang" (source also of Old Frisian hangia, Dutch hangen, German hängen), from PIE *konk- "to hang" (source also of Gothic hahan, Hittite gang- "to hang," Sanskrit sankate "wavers," Latin cunctari "to delay;" see also second element in Stonehenge).
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