ring
ring 英 [rɪŋ] 美 [rɪŋ]
v. 打电话; 按铃;响玲;充满;成环形 n. 戒指;铃声,钟声;
进行时:ringing 过去式:rang 过去分词:rung 第三人称单数:rings 名词复数:rings
- A ring is a circular or oval shape, like the rings around Saturn or a ring of trees surrounding an open field, or the ring of delicious fried pastry that we call a doughnut.
- 请先登录
- v. 打电话; 按铃;响玲;充满;成环形
- n. 戒指;铃声,钟声;
-
1. curtain rings
窗帘环
-
2. a key ring
钥匙环
-
3. a spy ring
间谍网
-
4. a drugs ring
贩毒集团
-
5. a gold ring
金戒指
-
6. His words rang with pride.
他的话充满了骄傲。
-
7. I'll ring you up later.
我稍后再给你打电话。
-
8. Someone was ringing the doorbell.
有人在按门铃。
-
9. Could you ring for a cab?
你打电话叫辆出租车来好吗?
-
10. Just ring if you need anything.
需要什么东西,你就按铃。
-
11. Ring the correct answer in pencil.
用铅笔圈出正确答案。
-
12. Will you answer the telephone if it rings?
电话铃响时你接一下好吗?
-
13. ring the bell
按响玲铛
- ring (n.1) "circular band," Old English hring "small circlet, especially one of metal for wearing on the finger or as part of a mail coat; anything circular," from Proto-Germanic *hringaz "something curved, circle" (source also of Old Norse hringr, Old Frisian hring, Danish, Swedish, Dutch ring, Old High German hring, German Ring), from nasalized form of PIE root *sker- (2) "to turn, bend."
- ring (n.2) 1540s, "set of church bells," from ring (v.1). Meaning "a call on the telephone" is from 1900; to give (someone) a ring "call on the telephone" was in use by 1910. Meaning "a ringing tone" is from 1620s; specifically "the ringing sound made by a telephone" by 1951. Meaning "resonance of coin or glass as a test of genuineness" is from 1850, with transferred use (ring of truth, etc.).
- ring (v.1) "sound a bell," Old English hringan "sound, give a certain resonant sound when struck; announce by bells," from Proto-Germanic *khrengan (source also of Old Norse hringja, Swedish ringa, Middle Dutch ringen), probably of imitative origin. Related: Rang; rung. Originally a weak verb, strong inflection began in early Middle English by influence of sing, etc. To ring down a theatrical curtain is from 1772, from the custom of signaling for it by ringing a bell. To ring up a purchase on a cash register is by 1937, from the bell that sounded. Specialized sense "give a resonant sound when struck as an indication of genuineness or purity," with transferred use (as in to ring hollow) is from 1610s.
- ring (v.2) "make a circle around," Old English ymbhringan, from the root of ring (n.1). Intransitive sense "gather in a ring" is mid-15c. Sense of "provide or attach a ring" is late 14c. Meaning "move in a circle around" is from 1825. Related: Ringed; ringing. Compare Frisian ringje, Middle Dutch and Dutch ringen, Old High German ringan, German ringen, Old Norse hringa, hringja.
- 请先登录
0 个回复