shack
shack 英 [ʃæk] 美 [ʃæk]
n. 棚屋;小室 vi. 居住
进行时:shacking 过去式:shacked 过去分词:shacked 第三人称单数:shacks 名词复数:shacks
- A shack is a small, rundown building used as a shelter. To shack is to live somewhere. If you tell your parents you want to shack up with your best friend, prepare to get grounded.
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- n. 棚屋;小室
- vi. 居住
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1. Among those suffering is Fatima Booysen, 40, who has lived in shack J22 with her husband, Abraham, and two daughters for more than a year.
40岁的法蒂玛·布耶森也有同样的痛苦感受,她同丈夫亚伯拉罕以及两个女儿在J22棚屋住了一年多。
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2. He had friends in Lyme Regis, so moved there - first to a shack, then a yurt in a friend's garden,and then the clifftop home where he lives today.
他有朋友在莱姆·里吉斯,所以搬到那里——先是住在一个棚屋,然后住在朋友家花园的帐篷里,接着搬到悬崖上的家,一直住到今天。
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3. "Make it up with him," he advised Lizzie, at parting, as they stood in front of the workingman's shack in which she lived, near Sixth and Market.
“跟他和好吧,”分手时他劝丽齐,这时他俩已来到了六号路和市场街附近她所居住的工人棚屋前。
- shack (n.) 1878, American English and Canadian English, of unknown origin, perhaps from Mexican Spanish jacal, from Nahuatl (Aztecan) xacalli "wooden hut." Or perhaps a back-formation from dialectal English shackly "shaky, rickety" (1843), a derivative of shack, a dialectal variant of shake (v.). Another theory derives shack from ramshackle.
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