poop
poop 英 [puːp] 美 [pup]
n. 船尾;傻子;内幕消息 vt. 使精疲力尽;使船尾受击 vi. 疲乏;排便
名词复数:poops
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- n. 船尾;傻子;内幕消息
- vt. 使精疲力尽;使船尾受击
- vi. 疲乏;排便
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1. How does Roman know whales poop at the surface?
罗曼怎么知道鲸鱼在海面排便?
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2. Avast! Belay the port jib, and scupper the mains'l on the poop deck!
停住!把绳拴在港口上,用排水管排掉甲板和船尾的水!
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3. "And we were following the whales and collecting feces whenever there was poop at the surface, " he says.
“无论鲸鱼何时在海面排便,我们都跟着它,并收集其粪便,”他说。
- poop (n.1) "stern deck of a ship," c. 1400, from Middle French poupe "stern of a ship" (14c.), from Old Provençal or Italian poppa, from Latin puppis "poop, stern," of uncertain origin. Poop deck attested by 1779.
- poop (n.2) "excrement," 1744, a children's euphemism, probably of imitative origin. The verb in this sense is from 1903. The same word in the sense "to break wind softly" is attested from 1721; earlier "to make a short blast on a horn" (late 14c.). Meaning "stupid or dull person" is from 1915. Pooper-scooper attested from 1970.
- poop (n.3) "up-to-date information," 1941, in poop sheet, U.S. Army slang, of unknown origin, perhaps from poop (n.2).
- poop (v.) "become tired," 1931, of unknown origin (see pooped). Related: Pooping.
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