wing
wing 英 [wɪŋ] 美 [wɪŋ]
n. 翼;翅膀 v. 飞行
进行时:winging 过去式:winged 过去分词:winged 第三人称单数:wings 名词复数:wings
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- n. 翼;翅膀
- v. 飞行
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1. The wing of the plane
架飞机的机翼
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2. The views of the left wing
左翼的观点
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3. wing feathers
翅膀上的羽毛
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4. The swan flapped its wings noisily.
天鹅大声地拍打着翅膀。
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5. the radical wing of the party
这个政党中的激进派
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6. He plays on the wing.
他踢边锋。
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7. An application form will be winging its way to you soon.
申请表不久将送达你处。
- wing (n.) late 12c., wenge, from Old Norse vængr "wing of a bird, aisle, etc." (cognate with Danish and Swedish vinge "wing"), of unknown origin, perhaps from a Proto-Germanic *we-ingjaz, suffixed form of PIE root *we- "blow" (source of Old English wawan "to blow;" see wind (n.1)). Replaced Old English feðra (plural) "wings" (see feather). The meaning "either of two divisions of a political party, army, etc." is first recorded c. 1400; theatrical sense is from 1790.
- wing (v.) c. 1600, "take flight;" 1610s, "fit with wings," from wing (n.). Meaning "shoot a bird in the wing" is from 1802, with figurative extensions to wounds suffered in non-essential parts. Verbal phrase wing it (1885) is said to be from a theatrical slang sense of an actor learning his lines in the wings before going onstage, or else not learning them at all and being fed by a prompter in the wings; but perhaps it is simply an image of a baby bird taking flight from the nest for the first time (the phrase is attested in this sense from 1875). Related: Winged; winging.
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