hole
hole 英 [həʊl] 美 [hoʊl]
n. 洞,孔;
进行时:holing 过去式:holed 过去分词:holed 第三人称单数:holes 名词复数:holes
- A hole isn't just a hollow space dug out of the ground or punched out of something. When you're talking casually with friends, you can also call a place that's small or dumpy a hole, like a rundown town or a really tiny apartment.
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- n. 洞,孔;
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1. He dug adeep holein the garden.
他在花园里挖了个深坑。
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2. There were holes in the knees of his trousers.
他裤子的膝部有破洞。
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3. a bullet hole
枪眼
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4. a rabbit hole,a mouse hole,
兔窝、老鼠洞等
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5. The ball rolled into the hole and she had won.
球滚进了洞,她赢了。
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6. I don't believe what she says—her story is full of holes.
我不相信她的话,她的说法漏洞百出。
- hole (n.) Old English hol (adj.) "hollow, concave;" as a noun, "hollow place; cave; orifice; perforation," from Proto-Germanic *hul- (source also of Old Saxon, Old Frisian, Old High German hol, Middle Dutch hool, Old Norse holr, German hohl "hollow," Gothic us-hulon "to hollow out"), from PIE root *kel-(1) "to cover, conceal, save." As an adjective, it has been displaced by hollow, which in Old English was only a noun, meaning "excavated habitation of certain wild animals."
- hole (v.) "to make a hole," Old English holian "to hollow out, scoop out," from source of hole (n.). Related: Holed; holing. To hole up "seek a temporary shelter or hiding place" is from 1875.
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