shank
shank 英 [ʃæŋk] 美 [ʃæŋk]
n. 柄;小腿;[解剖][脊椎] 胫
进行时:shanking 过去式:shanked 过去分词:shanked 第三人称单数:shanks 名词复数:shanks
- 请先登录
- n. 柄;小腿;[解剖][脊椎] 胫
-
1. He felt a bullet hit his shank.
他感到有粒子弹击中了他的小腿。
-
2. This year, think shank when you think Easter lamb.
今年,就用羊小腿来做你的复活节羊肉吧!
-
3. Sucre tells Michael to look under the table; Michael reaches under it and finds a well-crafted metal shank.
Sucre叫Michael去处理桌下的东西,Michael摸到桌下,发现了一柄精心制作的金属小刀。
- shank (n.) Old English sceanca "leg, shank, shinbone," specifically, the part of the leg from the knee to the ankle, from Proto-Germanic *skankon- (source also of Middle Low German schenke, German schenkel "shank, leg"), perhaps literally "that which bends," from PIE root *skeng- "crooked" (source also of Old Norse skakkr "wry, distorted," Greek skazein "to limp"). Shank's mare "one's own legs as a means of transportation" is attested from 1774 (shanks-naig).
- shank (v.) 1927, in golf, "to strike (the ball) with the heel of the club," from shank (n.). Related: Shanked; shanking. Earlier as "to take to one's legs" (1774, Scottish); "to send off without ceremony" (1816).
- 请先登录
0 个回复