| 正面 | 2447.belt 英 [belt]美 [bɛlt] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|---|---|
| 背面 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 释义: 1、de- "out" + sign- + -er.n. 带;腰带;地带vt. 用带子系住;用皮带抽打vi. 猛击n. (Belt)人名;(英、法、德、西)贝尔特 例句: 1. Philippe was in uniform, wearing a pistol holster on his belt.菲利普身着制服,腰带上别着手枪皮套。 belt 带子来自PIE *bhel, 膨胀,鼓起,词源同ball. 指鼓起来的一圈,绕一圈的带子。 beltbelt: [OE] Old English belt and related Germanic forms such as Swedish bälte point to a source in Germanic *baltjaz, which was borrowed from Latin balteus, possibly a word of Etruscan origin. The verbal idiom belt up ‘be quiet’ appears to date from just before World War II.belt (n.)Old English belt "belt, girdle," from Proto-Germanic *baltjaz (cognates: Old High German balz, Old Norse balti, Swedish bälte), an early Germanic borrowing from Latin balteus "girdle, sword belt," said by Varro to be an Etruscan word. As a mark of rank or distinction, mid-14c.; references to boxing championship belts date from 1812. Mechanical sense is from 1795. Transferred sense of "broad stripe encircling something" is from 1660s. Below the belt "unfair" (1889) is from pugilism. To get something under (one's) belt is to get it into one's stomach. To tighten (one's) belt "endure privation" is from 1887.belt (v.)early 14c., "to fasten or gird with a belt," from belt (n.). Meaning "to thrash as with a belt" is 1640s; general sense of "to hit, thrash" is attested from 1838. Colloquial meaning "to sing or speak vigorously" is from 1949. Related: Belted; belting. Hence (from the "thrash with a belt" sense) the noun meaning "a blow or stroke" (1899)." |
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