short
short 英 [ʃɔ:t] 美 [ʃɔrt]
adj. 短的;矮的, n. 短;缺乏;短裤 adv. 不足;缺少
进行时:shorting 过去式:shorted 过去分词:shorted 第三人称单数:shorts 名词复数:shorts 比较级:shorter 最高级:shortest
- Short describes something that is not as long as usual. If your childhood bed is too short for you, your feet will dangle over the edge, and if a school day is short, you'll get out early.
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- adj. 短的;矮的,
- n. 短;缺乏;短裤
- adv. 不足;缺少
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1. a short skirt
短裙
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2. a short break.
一个短假。
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3. He is short and fat.
他又矮又胖。
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4. They are, in short, old-fashioned.
他们,一句话,已经过时了。
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5. Money was short at that time.
那时候,钱紧缺。
- short (adj.) Old English sceort, scort "short, not long, not tall; brief," probably from Proto-Germanic *skurta- (source also of Old Norse skorta "to be short of," skort "shortness;" Old High German scurz "short"), from PIE root *sker- (1) "to cut," on the notion of "something cut off" (compare Sanskrit krdhuh "shortened, maimed, small;" Latin curtus "short," cordus "late-born," originally "stunted in growth;" Old Church Slavonic kratuku, Russian korotkij "short;" Lithuanian skursti "to be stunted," skardus "steep;" Old Irish cert "small," Middle Irish corr "stunted, dwarfish," all from the same root).
- short (n.) 1580s, the short "the result, the total," from short (adj.). Meaning "electrical short circuit" first recorded 1906 (see short circuit). Meaning "contraction of a name or phrase" is from 1873 (as in for short). Slang meaning "car" is attested from 1897; originally "street car," so called because street cars (or the rides taken in them) were "shorter" than railroad cars.
- short (v.) Old English sceortian "to grow short, become short; run short, fail," from the source of short (adj.). Transitive meaning "make short" is from late 12c. Meaning "to short-circuit" is by 1904. Related: Shorted; shorting.
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