pose
pose 英 [pəʊz] 美 [poʊz]
vt. 造成,引起;提问;摆姿势, 招摇 n. 姿势,姿态
进行时:posing 过去式:posed 过去分词:posed 第三人称单数:poses 名词复数:poses
- To pose is to assume a particular stance. Like a runway model strutting to the end of the catwalk, posing with her hands on her hips, and then gracefully walking back.
- 请先登录
- vt. 造成,引起;提问;摆姿势, 招摇
- n. 姿势,姿态
-
1. to pose a threat, to pose a challenge, to pose a danger, to pose a risk
构成威胁╱挑战╱危险╱风险
-
2. The task poses no special problems.
这项任务不会造成特别的问题。
-
3. The delegates posed for a group photograph.
代表们摆好姿势准备拍集体照。
-
4. The gang entered the building posing as workmen.
这伙匪徒冒充工人混进了大楼。
-
5. I saw him out posing in his new sports car.
我看见他开着他的崭新跑车招摇过市。
-
6. He adopted a relaxed pose for the camera.
他摆了个悠闲的姿势拍照。
- pose (n.) "act of posing the body," 1818, from pose (v.1), in a sense developed in the French cognate. Figuratively from 1884.
- pose (v.1) late 14c., posen, "suggest (something is so), suppose, assume; grant, concede," from Old French poser "put, place, propose," a term in debating, from Late Latin pausare "to halt, rest, cease, pause" (source also of Italian posare, Spanish posar; see pause (v.)). The Late Latin verb also had a transitive sense, "cause to pause or rest," and hence the Old French verb (in common with cognates in Spanish, Italian, Portuguese) acquired the sense of Latin ponere "to put, place" (past participle positus; see position (n.)), by confusion of the similar stems. Meaning "put in a certain position" in English is from early 15c. Sense of "assume a certain attitude" is from 1840; the transitive sense (as an artist's model, etc.) is from 1859. Related: Posed; posing.
- pose (v.2) "to puzzle, confuse, perplex," 1590s, earlier "question, interrogate" (1520s), probably from Middle French poser "suppose, assume," from Old French poser "to put, place, set" (see pose (v.1)). Also in some cases a shortening of English appose "examine closely," and oppose. Related: Posed; posing.
- 请先登录
0 个回复