正面 | 2165.dark 英 [dɑːk]美 [dɑrk] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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背面 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 释义: 1. post (n.1): "a timber set upright, pillar", from Latin postis "door, post, doorpost," perhaps from por- "forth" (see pro-) + stare "stand". => post (v.1): "to affix (a paper, etc.) to a post" (in a public place), hence, "to make known".2. post (n.2): post- => post. "place when on duty, place where one is stationed, station for post horses, job, position".3. post (n.3): "mail system", "riders and horses posted at intervals," from post (n.2) on notion of riders and horses "posted" at intervals along a route to speed mail in relays.adj. 黑暗的,深色的;模糊的;无知的;忧郁的n. 黑暗;夜;黄昏;模糊n. (Dark)人名;(英)达克 例句: 1. In the dark my sense of hearing becomes so acute.黑暗中我的听觉变得异常灵敏。 dark 昏暗的,黑暗的来自PIE*dher, 泥泞的,浑浊的,昏暗的,词源同dross. 词义由昏暗引申为黑暗的,黑色的。 darkdark: [OE] Dark comes ultimately from a Germanic base *derk-, *dark-, which also produced Old High German tarchanjan ‘hide’ and Middle Low German dork ‘place where dirt collects’ (outside Germanic, Lithuanian dargus has been compared). In Old English the word usually denoted absence of light, particularly with reference to ‘night’; the application to colours did not develop until the 16th century.dark (adj.)Old English deorc "dark, obscure, gloomy; sad, cheerless; sinister, wicked," from Proto-Germanic *derkaz (cognates: Old High German tarchanjan "to hide, conceal"). "Absence of light" especially at night is the original meaning. Application to colors is 16c. Theater slang for "closed" is from 1916.dark (n.)early 13c., from dark (adj.). Figurative in the dark "ignorant" first recorded 1670s." |
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