sail
sail 英 [seɪl] 美 [sel]
n. 帆;航行 v. 航行
进行时:sailing 过去式:sailed 过去分词:sailed 第三人称单数:sails 名词复数:sails
- A sail is the big piece of cloth attached to a mast that propels a sailboat through the water by catching the wind. Part of learning to sail a boat is learning how to use the sails.
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- n. 帆;航行
- v. 航行
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1. to sail into harbour
驶入海港
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2. The ferry sails from Newhaven to Dieppe.
渡船行驶于纽黑文和迪耶普之间。
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3. sail around the world
最早进行环球航行的人之一
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4. to sail the Atlantic
在大西洋上航行
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5. Do you go sailing often?
你常去驾帆船玩吗?
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6. We sail at 2 p.m. tomorrow.
我们明天下午两点起航。
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7. clouds sailing across the sky
飘过天空的云彩
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8. a ship under sail
张帆行驶的船
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9. in the days of sail
在帆船时代
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10. We went for a sail.
我们乘船兜了一趟风。
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11. a two-hour sail across the bay
横渡海湾的两小时航程
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12. a liner setting sail from New York
自纽约起航的邮轮
- sail (n.) Old English segl "sail, veil, curtain," from Proto-Germanic *seglom (source also of Old Saxon, Swedish segel, Old Norse segl, Old Frisian seil, Dutch zeil, Old High German segal, German Segel), of obscure origin with no known cognates outside Germanic (Irish seol, Welsh hwyl "sail" are Germanic loan-words). In some sources (Klein, OED) referred to PIE root *sek- "to cut," as if meaning "a cut piece of cloth." To take the wind out of (someone's) sails (1888) is to deprive (someone) of the means of progress, especially by sudden and unexpected action, "as by one vessel sailing between the wind and another vessel," ["The Encyclopaedic Dictionary," 1888].
- sail (v.) Old English segilan "travel on water in a ship; equip with a sail," from the same Germanic source as sail (n.); cognate with Old Norse sigla, Middle Dutch seghelen, Dutch zeilen, Middle Low German segelen, German segeln. Meaning "to set out on a sea voyage, leave port" is from c. 1200. Related: Sailed; sailing.
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