正面 | 5300.robe 英 [rəʊb]美 [rob] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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背面 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 释义: 1. rob => robe.2. Presumably the notion is of garments taken from the enemy as spoils, and the Old French word had a secondary sense of "plunder, booty".n. 长袍,礼服;制服vi. 穿长袍vt. 使穿长袍n. (Robe)人名;(德、罗、塞)罗贝;(英、法)罗布 例句: 1. He brought forth a small gold amulet from beneath his robe.他从袍子下面拿出一个不大的金护身符。 robe 袍服,礼袍词源同 rob,抢劫。代称,因过去衣服,特别是袍子是重要的战利品。 roberobe: [13] A robe is etymologically ‘something stolen’, hence a ‘looted garment’, and finally simply a ‘(long) garment’. The word comes ultimately from Vulgar Latin *rauba, which was borrowed from the same Germanic base as produced English bereave and rob. It passed into English via Old French robe. This still retained the ancestral meaning ‘stolen things, spoils’ as well as the new ‘garment’, and in that sense it has given English rubbish and rubble.=> robrobe (n.)"long, loose outer garment," late 13c., from Old French robe "long, loose outer garment" (12c.), from a Germanic source (compare Old High German rouba "vestments"), from West Germanic *raubo "booty" (cognate with Old High German roub "robbery, breakage"), which also yielded rob (v.). Presumably the notion is of garments taken from the enemy as spoils, and the Old French word had a secondary sense of "plunder, booty," while Germanic cognates had both senses; as in Old English reaf "plunder, booty, spoil; garment, armor, vestment." Meaning "dressing gown" is from 1854. Metonymic sense of "the legal profession" is attested from 1640s.robe (v.)late 14c., from robe (n.). Related: Robed; robing." |
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