| 正面 | 7201.fry 英 [fraɪ]美 [fraɪ] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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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.n. 鱼苗;油炸食物vt. 油炸;油煎vi. 油炸;油煎n. (Fry)人名;(芬)弗吕;(英)弗赖伊;(德、英、法、西)弗里 例句: 1. Fry remaining peppers, adding a little more dressing if necessary.用油炸一下剩下的辣椒,如果需要再加点调味汁。 fry 油煎,油炸来自拉丁语frigere, 烤,煎,来自PIE*bher, 燃烧,烤,煎,词源同burn, brew.fry 鱼苗可能来自fricare, 刮,摩擦,词源同friction. 或来自PIE*sper, 播,撒,词源同spread, sprout. fryfry: Fry ‘cook in fat’ [13] and fry ‘young fish’ [14] are quite distinct words. The former comes via Old French frire from Latin frīgere, a cooking term which covered what we would now distinguish as ‘roasting’ and ‘frying’. It goes back ultimately to Indo-European *bhreu-, which also produced Latin fervēre ‘boil’ (source of English fervent).Its past participle frictus formed the basis of Vulgar Latin *frīctūra, from which, via Old French, English gets fritter [14]; and the past participial stem of the French verb, fris-, may lie behind English frizz [17]. Fry ‘small fish’ may come from Anglo-Norman frie, a derivative of Old French freier ‘rub, spawn’, which in turn goes back to Latin frīgere ‘rub’.=> fervent, fritter, frizzfry (v.)late 13c., "cook (something) in a shallow pan over a fire," from Old French frire "to fry" (13c.), from Latin frigere "to roast or fry," from PIE *bher- (4) "to cook, bake" (cognates: Sanskrit bhrjjati "roasts," bharjanah "roasting;" Persian birishtan "to roast;" Greek phrygein "to roast, bake"). Intransitive sense is from late 14c. U.S. slang meaning "execute in the electric chair" is U.S. slang from 1929. As a noun, "fried meat," from 1630s. Related: Fried; frying. Frying pan recorded from mid-14c.fry (n.)early 14c. (late 13c. in Anglo-Latin), "young fish," probably from an Anglo-French noun from Old French frier, froier "to rub, spawn (by rubbing abdomen on sand)," from Vulgar Latin *frictiare. First applied to human offspring c. 1400, in Scottish. Some sources trace this usage, or the whole of the word, to Old Norse frjo, fræ "seed, offspring."" |
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