| 正面 | 7216.awe 英 [ɔː]美 [ɔ] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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| 背面 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 释义: 1、com- "together" + mun- + -ism.2、字面含义:people together to use or share services or duties. => make services or duties publicly. => literally "that which is common". => make common, share.3、解读:大家一起使用、享用各种服务、职能。也就是使各种服务、职能公共化。所以,由此,引申为:公社、社区;包括分享、共享想法、心得等;=> 谈心、亲密交谈。4、people together to use or share services or duties. => make services or duties publicly. => 大家一起使用、享用各种服务、职能。也就是使各种服务、职能公共化。5、说通俗点儿就像是:同呼吸共命运,风雨同舟,有福同享有难同当。6、=> commun-: make common, share. 包括:share about information.vt. 使敬畏;使畏怯n. 敬畏n. (Awe)人名;(德)阿韦 例句: 1. The higher we climbed, the more awe-inspiring the scenery became.我们爬得越高,风景越是让人叹绝。 awe 敬畏来自PIE *agh, 害怕。此处词义褒义化。词源同ail, ugly. aweawe: [13] Old English had the word ege, meaning ‘awe’, but modern English awe is a Scandinavian borrowing; the related Old Norse agi steadily infiltrated the language from the northeast southwards during the Middle Ages. Agi came, like ege, from a hypothetical Germanic form *agon, which in turn goes back to an Indo-European base *agh- (whence also Greek ákhos ‘pain’). The guttural g sound of the 13th-century English word (technically a voiced velar spirant) was changed to w during the Middle English period. This was a general change, but it is not always reflected in spelling – as in owe and ought, for instance, which were originally the same word.awe (n.)c. 1300, aue, "fear, terror, great reverence," earlier aghe, c. 1200, from a Scandinavian source, such as Old Norse agi "fright;" from Proto-Germanic *agiz- (cognates: Old English ege "fear," Old High German agiso "fright, terror," Gothic agis "fear, anguish"), from PIE *agh-es- (cognates: Greek akhos "pain, grief"), from root *agh- "to be depressed, be afraid" (see ail). Current sense of "dread mixed with admiration or veneration" is due to biblical use with reference to the Supreme Being. To stand in awe (early 15c.) originally was simply to stand awe. Awe-inspiring is recorded from 1814. Al engelond of him stod awe. ["The Lay of Havelok the Dane," c. 1300] awe (v.)c. 1300, from awe (n.); Old English had egan (v.). Related: Awed; awing." |
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