vein
vein 英 [veɪn] 美 [ven]
n. 血管;叶脉;[地质] 岩脉;纹理;翅脉;性情 vt. 使成脉络;象脉络般分布于
进行时:veining 过去式:veined 过去分词:veined 第三人称单数:veins 名词复数:veins
- A vein is a blood vessel. If you've ever donated blood, you know that having a needle put in your vein by a health care worker is not nearly as scary as it sounds.
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- n. 血管;叶脉;[地质] 岩脉;纹理;翅脉;性情
- vt. 使成脉络;象脉络般分布于
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1. My ankle was as red as the sky with a perfect globe, right on the bone where there is absolutely no flesh but just a huge vein under the skin.
我的脚踝就像天空一样红,还有着一个个完美的地球(这里指蚊子叮咬的包——译者注)。 骨头右边是绝对没有肉的,只有许多皮肤下的血管。
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2. Here you can even make out a vein on the hand of the twin in the foreground.
在这里你甚至可以清晰辨认出画面前方这个双胞胎胎儿手上的一根血管。
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3. His adversary had fallen senseless with excessive pain and the flow of blood, that gushed from an artery or a large vein.
他的敌手已经由于过度的疼痛,又由于从一条动脉或是一条大血管里涌出了大量的鲜血,而倒下来失去知觉了。
- vein (n.) c. 1300, from Old French veine "vein, artery, pulse" (12c.), from Latin vena "a blood vessel," also "a water course, a vein of metal, a person's natural ability or interest," of unknown origin. The mining sense is attested in English from late 14c. (Greek phleps "vein" had the same secondary sense). Figurative sense of "strain or intermixture" (of some quality) is recorded from 1560s; that of "a humor or mood, natural tendency" is first recorded 1570s.
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