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Enormous Latin English Norma 2005.Enormous 英 ɪ'Nɔːməs]美 ɪ'Nɔrməs

正面 2005.enormous
英 [ɪ'nɔːməs]美 [ɪ'nɔrməs]

背面
释义:
adj. 庞大的,巨大的;凶暴的,极恶的
例句:
1. She was a shy, delicately pretty girl with enormous blue eyes.她是一个害羞、娇美的女孩,长着一双大大的蓝眼睛。

1. 谐音“爆么、爆吗”。
enormous 巨大的e-, 向外。-norm, 正常,见normal. 即超出正常的,巨大的。
enormousenormous: [16] Etymologically, enormous is a parallel formation to abnormal and extraordinary. It comes from Latin ēnormis, a compound adjective formed from the prefix ex- ‘out of’ and norma ‘pattern, rule’ – hence literally ‘out of the usual pattern’. It originally had a range of meanings in English, including ‘abnormal, unusual’ (‘entered the choir in a military habit, and other enormous disguises’, Thomas Warton, History of English Poetry 1774) and ‘outrageous’.By the beginning of the 19th century these had mostly died out, leaving the field clear for modern English ‘huge’, although the notion of ‘outrageousness’ remains in the noun derivative enormity [15].=> abnormal, normalenormous (adj.)1530s, "abnormal" (usually in a bad sense), from Latin enormis "out of rule, irregular, shapeless; extraordinary, very large," from assimilated form of ex- "out of" (see ex-) + norma "rule, norm" (see norm), with English -ous substituted for Latin -is. Meaning "extraordinary in size" is attested from 1540s; original sense of "outrageous" is more clearly preserved in enormity. Earlier was enormyous (mid-15c.) "exceedingly great, monstrous." Related: Enormously; enormousness."

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