正面 | 809.fail 英 [feɪl]美 [fel] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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背面 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 释义: 1. lay off 裁员.2. 规则的是位于、说谎,不规则的就是躺,躺过(过去式)就下蛋,下蛋放一边(放置).vi. 失败,不及格;破产;缺乏;衰退vt. 不及格;使失望;忘记;舍弃n. 不及格n. (Fail)人名;(葡、捷)法伊尔;(法)法伊 例句: 1. Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better.努力过,失败过,没关系,屡战屡败,屡败屡战,每一次失败都比上一次更好。 fail 失败来自拉丁语fallo, 欺骗,陷落,词源同fallacy, false, fault. 进一步来自PIE*ghwel, 欺骗。引申词义被骗,失败。 failfail: [13] Fail, fallacy [15], fallible, false, and fault all come ultimately from the same source – the Latin verb fallere. This originally meant ‘deceive’, but it developed semantically to ‘deceive someone’s hopes, disappoint someone’, and in its Vulgar Latin descendant *fallīre this meaning had progressed to ‘be defective, fail’. English acquired the word via Old French faillir. Its Anglo-Norman form, failer, came to be used as a noun, and is the source of English failure [17].=> faliacy, fallible, false, faultfail (v.)c. 1200, "be unsuccessful in accomplishing a purpose;" also "cease to exist or to function, come to an end;" early 13c. as "fail in expectation or performance," from Old French falir "be lacking, miss, not succeed; run out, come to an end; err, make a mistake; be dying; let down, disappoint" (11c., Modern French faillir), from Vulgar Latin *fallire, from Latin fallere "to trip, cause to fall;" figuratively "to deceive, trick, dupe, cheat, elude; fail, be lacking or defective." Related: Failed; failing. Replaced Old English abreoðan. From c. 1200 as "be unsuccessful in accomplishing a purpose;" also "cease to exist or to function, come to an end;" early 13c. as "fail in expectation or performance." From mid-13c. of food, goods, etc., "to run short in supply, be used up;" from c. 1300 of crops, seeds, land. From c. 1300 of strength, spirits, courage, etc., "suffer loss of vigor; grow feeble;" from mid-14c. of persons. From late 14c. of material objects, "break down, go to pieces."fail (n.)late 13c., "failure, deficiency" (as in without fail), from Old French faile "deficiency," from falir (see fail (v.)). The Anglo-French form of the verb, failer, also came to be used as a noun, hence failure." |
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