knight
knight 英 [naɪt] 美 [naɪt]
n. 骑士,武士;爵士 vt. 授以爵位
进行时:knighting 过去式:knighted 过去分词:knighted 第三人称单数:knights 名词复数:knights
- Traditionally the noun knight means someone born of the nobility and trained to fight, usually in heavy metal armor. As a verb, if a king decides to knight you, that means the king wants to make you into a knight.
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- n. 骑士,武士;爵士
- vt. 授以爵位
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1. Father, for my sake, knight him this day.
父王,看我的薄面,今日册封他为骑士吧。
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2. The knight felt no fear in the midst of battle.
那武士在战斗中毫不感到惧怕。
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3. The Sword split the knight's helmet and bit him fatally.
剑劈开了骑士的头盔并致命地刺进他。
- knight (n.) Old English cniht "boy, youth; servant, attendant," a word common to the nearby Germanic languages (Old Frisian kniucht, Dutch knecht, Middle High German kneht "boy, youth, lad," German Knecht "servant, bondman, vassal"), of unknown origin. For pronunciation, see kn-. The plural in Middle English sometimes was knighten.
- knight (v.) "to make a knight of (someone), to dub or create a knight," early 13c., from knight (n.). Related: Knighted; knighting.
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