kick
kick 英 [kɪk] 美 [kɪk]
v. 踢 n. 踢
进行时:kicking 过去式:kicked 过去分词:kicked 第三人称单数:kicks 名词复数:kicks
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- v. 踢
- n. 踢
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1. Stop kicking—it hurts!
别踢了,好痛!
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2. She was punched and kicked by her attackers.
她遭到袭击者的拳打脚踢。
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3. The boys were kicking a ball around in the yard.
男孩们在院子里踢球。
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4. The dancers kicked their legs in the air.
舞蹈员做了空中踢腿的动作。
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5. He'll kick himself when he finds out he could have had the job.
一旦发现他本可以得到这个工作,他会感到懊恼的。
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6. to kick a goal
射门得分
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7. the first kick of the game
比赛的开球
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8. She gave him a kick on the shin.
她朝他的小腿踢了一脚。
- kick (n.) 1520s, "a blow or thrust with the foot," from kick (v.). Meaning "recoil (of a gun) when fired" is from 1826. Meaning "surge or fit of pleasure" (often as kicks) is from 1941; originally "stimulation from liquor or drugs" (1844). Hence kickster "one who lives for kicks" (1963). The kick "the fashion" is from c. 1700. Kicks in slang also has meant "trousers" (1700), "shoes" (1904).
- kick (v.) late 14c., "to strike out with the foot," of uncertain origin, perhaps from Old Norse kikna "bend backwards, sink at the knees." "The doubts OED has about the Scandinavian origin of kick are probably unfounded" [Liberman]. Older sources guessed it to be from Celtic. Earliest in the biblical phrase that is now usually rendered as kick against the pricks. Related: Kicked; kicking.
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