hermit 英 [ˈhɜ:mɪt]   美 [ˈhɜrmɪt]

hermit

hermit  英 [ˈhɜ:mɪt] 美 [ˈhɜrmɪt]

n. (尤指宗教原因的)隐士;隐居者 

名词复数:hermits 

The true hermit is a rare aberration. 真正的隐士是一种罕见的病。
Michael: They might be good for you, but I am a hermit and never meet new people. 迈克尔:它们对你来说可能是有用,不过我是个隐士,从不见新的人。

  • You hear about hermits more often than you meet one, and that’s because a hermit is someone who likes to be alone, far from people, sometimes because of their religious beliefs or maybe because they simply want some privacy.
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  • n. (尤指宗教原因的)隐士;隐居者
  • 1. The true hermit is a rare aberration.

    真正的隐士是一种罕见的病。

  • 2. Michael: They might be good for you, but I am a hermit and never meet new people.

    迈克尔:它们对你来说可能是有用,不过我是个隐士,从不见新的人。

  • 3. If you decide to be a hermit that never talks to clients and always decide to solve different problems with the same solution, you probably will not learn a lot.

    如果你决定成为永远不和客户交流的“隐士”,或者只采取同一种处理办法来解决不同的问题,你应该学不到太多东西。

  • hermit (n.) early 12c., "religious recluse, one who dwells apart in a solitary place for religious meditation," from Old French hermit, ermit "hermit, recluse," from Late Latin eremita, from Greek eremites, literally "person of the desert," from eremia "a solitude, an uninhabited region, a waste," from eremos "uninhabited, empty, desolate, bereft," from PIE *erem- "to rest, be quiet" (source also of Sanskrit ramate "to rest;" Lithuanian rimti "to be quiet," Gothic rimis "rest," Old Irish fo-rimim "to set, lay"). The unetymological h- first appeared in Medieval Latin heremite.
her·mit / ˈhɜːmɪt ; NAmE ˈhɜːrmɪt / noun a person who, usually for religious reasons, lives a very simple life alone and does not meet or talk to other people 隐士;隐修者;遁世者 hermit hermits her·mit / ˈhɜːmɪt ; NAmE ˈhɜːrmɪt /
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