pound
pound 英 [paʊnd] 美 [paʊnd]
n. 英镑;镑(重量单位) v. 重击,击碎
进行时:pounding 过去式:pounded 过去分词:pounded 第三人称单数:pounds 名词复数:pounds
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- n. 英镑;镑(重量单位)
- v. 重击,击碎
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1. a ten-pound note
一张十英镑的钞票
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2. a pound coin
一英镑的硬币
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3. I've spent £25 on food today.
我今天的餐费花了 25 英镑。
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4. the strength of the pound against other currencies
英镑强势
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5. The pound closed slightly down at $1.534.
英镑的汇价略跌,收盘时为 1.534 美元。
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6. half a pound of butter
半磅黄油
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7. They cost two dollars a pound.
这些东西每磅两元。
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8. Heavy rain pounded on the roof.
暴雨 地砸在屋顶上。
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9. The factory's machinery pounded away day and night.
工厂的机器昼夜轰隆个不停。
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10. She pounded him with her fists.
她用拳头一个劲地擂他。
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11. a pounding headache
锤击般的头痛
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12. The seeds were pounded to a fine powder.
籽粒被捣成了细粉。
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13. The area is still being pounded by rebel guns.
这个地区仍然遭受着叛军炮火的轰击。
- pound (n.1) measure of weight, Old English pund "pound" (in weight or money), also "pint," from Proto-Germanic *punda- "pound" as a measure of weight (source of Gothic pund, Old High German phunt, German Pfund, Middle Dutch pont, Old Frisian and Old Norse pund), early borrowing from Latin pondo "pound," originally in libra pondo "a pound by weight," from pondo (adv.) "by weight," ablative of pondus "weight," from stem of pendere "to hang, cause to hang; weigh" (from PIE root *(s)pen- "to draw, stretch, spin"). Perhaps the notion is the weight of a thing measured by how much it stretches a cord. Meaning "unit of money" was in Old English, originally "pound of silver."
- pound (n.2) "enclosed place for animals," late 14c., from a late Old English word attested in compounds (such as pundfald "penfold, pound"), related to pyndan "to dam up, enclose (water)," and thus from the same root as pond. Ultimate origin unknown; some sources indicate a possible root *bend meaning "protruding point" found only in Celtic and Germanic.
- pound (v.) "hit repeatedly," from Middle English pounen, from Old English punian "crush, pulverize, beat, bruise," from West Germanic *puno- (source also of Low German pun, Dutch puin "fragments"). With unetymological -d- from 16c. Sense of "beat, thrash" is from 1790. Related: Pounded; pounding.
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