medal 英 [ˈmedl]   美 [ˈmɛdl]

medal

medal  英 [ˈmedl] 美 [ˈmɛdl]

n. 奖章  v. 获奖牌 

名词复数:medals 

to win a gold medal in the Olympics 在奥林匹克运动会上赢得一枚金牌
to award a medal for bravery 奖赏一枚英勇勋章

  • A medal is an award for some contest or achievement. You might win a medal for coming in third place at the cupcake baking championship.
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  • n. 奖章
  • v. 获奖牌
  • 1. to win a gold medal in the Olympics

    在奥林匹克运动会上赢得一枚金牌

  • 2. to award a medal for bravery

    奖赏一枚英勇勋章

  • 3. Evans has medalled at several international events.

    埃文斯已经多次在国际比赛中获奖。

  • medal (n.) 1580s, from Middle French médaille (15c.), from Italian medaglia "a medal," according to OED from Vulgar Latin *metallea (moneta) "metal (coin)," from Latin metallum (see metal). The other theory [Klein, Barnhart, Watkins] is that medaglia originally meant "coin worth half a denarius," and is from Vulgar Latin *medalia, from Late Latin medialia "little halves," neuter plural of medialis "of the middle" (from PIE root *medhyo- "middle"). Originally a trinket or charm; as a reward for merit, proficiency, etc., attested from 1751.
  • medal (v.) 1845, "stamped onto a medal," from medal (n.). From 1857 as "to award (someone or something) a medal;" intransitive sense is 20c. Related: Medaled; medalled; medaling; medalling.
medal / ˈmedl ; NAmE ˈmedl / noun , verb medal medals noun a flat piece of metal, usually shaped like a coin, that is given to the winner of a competition or to sb who has been brave, for example in war 奖章;勋章 to win a gold medal in the Olympics 在奥林匹克运动会上赢得一枚金牌 to award a medal for bravery 奖赏一枚英勇勋章 IDIOMsee deserve verb ( -ll- , especially US -l- ) [intransitive ] to win a medalin a competition (在比赛中)获得奖牌(或奖章) Evans has medalled at several international events. 埃文斯已经多次在国际比赛中获奖。 medal / ˈmedl ; NAmE ˈmedl /
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