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English Draw Place German Sense Modern Dragan Verb

正面 7122.draw
英 [drɔː]美 [drɔ]

背面
释义:
vt. 画;拉;吸引vi. 拉;拖n. 平局;抽签n. (Draw)人名;(英)德劳
例句:
1. He was waving his arms to draw their attention.他正挥手以引起他们的注意。

1. place 其字面含义差不多是一个、一块比较平的用于放置东西的地方。2. place => plac- => plaq- + -ue => plaque.3. plague里面居然藏着一个gre词汇:ague疟疾。可是有些G友似乎要抱怨:ague?记不住!早就和argue(争论)混了。别怕!argue(争论)不就比ague(疟疾)多了一个r吗?新东方的悍妇讲师赵丽告诉我们:见到r就联想到人(拼音ren的首字母)或者一朵花(r本身就像一朵玫瑰花rose)记法:有人(r)的argue在争论,争论(ague)无人是疟疾,因为人都得了疟疾死光光了。plague读作:铺雷哥。plaque读作:扑来客。看来,除非发音帝关靖华老师出来解释一番字母的读音规律,否则我只能用无耻下流的谐音法来记发音了。越南丛林里铺地雷的哥哥染上了瘟疫。洗浴城里向小姐扑来的嫖客露出了满嘴的牙斑。谐音口诀:铺雷哥,染瘟疫。扑来客,露牙斑。谐音“牌来刻”----用来刻上文字的牌子---牌匾。
draw 拉动,描绘来自PIE*dhragh, 拉,吸出,词源同drag. 引申义画画,描绘。
drawdraw: [OE] The Old English ancestor of modern English draw was dragan, which came from a prehistoric Germanic verb *dragan (source also of English drag). This seems to have meant originally ‘carry’ (which is what its German and Dutch descendants tragen and dragen still mean). In English and the Scandinavian languages, however (Swedish draga, for instance), it has evolved to ‘pull’. ‘Sketch’, perhaps the word’s most common modern English sense, developed in Middle English from the notion of ‘drawing’ or ‘pulling’ a pencil, brush, etc across a surface. Dray ‘wagon’ [14] is related to, and perhaps originally came from, Old English dragan.=> drag, draught, draydraw (v.)c. 1200, spelling alteration of Old English dragan "to drag, to draw, protract" (class VI strong verb; past tense drog, past participle dragen), from Proto-Germanic *dragan "to draw, pull" (cognates: Old Norse draga "to draw," Old Saxon dragan, Old Frisian draga, Middle Dutch draghen, Old High German tragen, German tragen "to carry, bear"), from PIE root *dhragh- (see drag (v.)). Sense of "make a line or figure" (by "drawing" a pencil across paper) is c. 1200. Meaning "pull out a weapon" is c. 1200. To draw a criminal (drag him from a horse to place of execution) is from early 14c. To draw a blank "come up with nothing" (1825) is an image from lotteries. As a noun, from 1660s; colloquial sense of "anything that can draw a crowd" is from 1881 (the verb in this sense is 1580s).draw (n.)game or contest that ends without a winner, attested first in drawn match (1610s), of uncertain origin; some speculate it is from withdraw. Draw-game is from 1825. As a verb, "to leave undecided," from 1837."

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