molar
molar 英 [ˈməʊlə(r)] 美 [ˈmoʊlə(r)]
adj. 臼齿的;摩尔的;磨碎的 n. 臼齿,[解剖] 磨牙
名词复数:molars
- The big strong teeth in the back of your mouth are molars. Molars make it possible for you to chew and grind the food you eat. If you don't have molars, don't order the steak.
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- adj. 臼齿的;摩尔的;磨碎的
- n. 臼齿,[解剖] 磨牙
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1. The little spot of gold in the dirt is a molar with a gold filling.
泥土里那小小的金光是一颗用金子补过的磨牙。
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2. The tooth, a molar, is bigger than any modern human tooth and is even bigger than the biggest Neanderthal tooth.
这是一颗臼齿,比任何现代人的牙齿都要大,甚至比最大的尼安德特人的牙齿还大。
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3. "That milk molar was like no other hominid baby tooth I'd ever seen, and I'd seen them all, " White told me. "Gen and I just looked at each other.
“那颗乳齿臼齿和我以前见到过的所有古人类乳齿都不一样,”怀特告诉我说,“我和诹访元当时只能目瞪口呆的看着彼此,一句话都说不出来。
- molar (adj.) in chemistry, "pertaining to one mole," 1902, from mole (n.4) + -ar.
- molar (n.) "grinding tooth," mid-14c., from Latin molaris dens "grinding tooth," from mola "millstone," from PIE root *mele- "to crush, grind." As an adjective in this sense from 1620s. In Old English they were cweornteð "quern-teeth."
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