中文字幕精品视频在线|中文字幕在线观看|亚洲v日本v欧美v在线播放|伊人网中文字幕

<nav id="3u6n6"></nav><samp id="3u6n6"><tr id="3u6n6"><track id="3u6n6"></track></tr></samp>
    <legend id="3u6n6"><fieldset id="3u6n6"></fieldset></legend>

      
      

    1. bleak

      英 [bli?k] 美[blik]
      • adj. 陰冷的;荒涼的,無遮蔽的;黯淡的,無希望的;冷酷的;單調(diào)的

      CET6TEM4IELTSGRE考研TOEFL中低頻詞常用詞匯

      詞態(tài)變化


      比較級:?bleaker;最高級:?bleakest;副詞:?bleakly;名詞:?bleakness;

      助記提示


      1. 野外不露雨的亭子.

      【記】音:壁 + leak 墻壁露風(fēng)→寒冷;bleach 蒼白的 冬天是蒼白寒冷的

      中文詞源


      bleak 暗淡的

      詞源同bleach, 漂白,指蒼白的,暗淡的。

      英文詞源


      bleak
      bleak: [16] Bleak originally meant ‘pale’, and comes ultimately from an Indo-European base *bhleg-, possible source of black and a variant of *phleg-, which produced Greek phlégein ‘burn’ and Latin flagrāre ‘burn’ (whence English conflagration and flagrant; flame, fulminate, and refulgent are also closely related).

      From *bhlegcame the prehistoric Germanic adjective *blaikos ‘white’, from which Old English got blāc ‘pale’ (the sense relationship, as with the possibly related blaze, is between ‘burning’, ‘shining brightly’, ‘white’, and ‘pale’). This survived until the 15th century in southern English dialects as bloke, and until the 16th century in the North as blake.

      Its disappearance was no doubt hastened by its resemblance to black, both formally and semantically, since both ‘pale’ and ‘dark’ carry implications of colourlessness. Blake did however persist in Northern dialects until modern times in the sense ‘yellow’. Meanwhile, around the middle of the 16th century bleak had begun to put in an appearance, borrowed from a close relative of bloke/blake, Old Norse bleikr ‘shining, white’.

      The modern sense ‘bare’ is recorded from very early on. A derivative of the Germanic base *blaikwas the verb *blaikjōn, source of Old English bl?can ‘whiten’, the ancestor of modern English bleach (which may be related to blight). And a nasalized version of the stem may have produced blink [14].

      => bleach, blight, blink, conflagration, flagrant, flame, fulminate
      bleak (adj.)
      c. 1300, "pale," from Old Norse bleikr "pale, whitish, blond," from Proto-Germanic *blaika- "shining, white," from PIE root *bhel- (1) "to shine, flash, burn" (see bleach (v.)). Later "bare, windswept" (1530s). Sense of "cheerless" is c. 1719 figurative extension. The same Germanic root produced Old English blac "pale," but this died out, probably from confusion with bl?c "black;" however bleak persisted, with a sense of "bare" as well as "pale."

      雙語例句


      1. Her book paints a bleak picture of the problems women now face.
      她的書是女性當(dāng)下所面臨問題的凄涼寫照。

      來自柯林斯例句

      2. Many predicted a bleak future.
      很多人都預(yù)測前景暗淡。

      來自柯林斯例句

      3. Alberg gave him a bleak stare.
      阿爾伯格沮喪地凝視著他。

      來自柯林斯例句

      4. His face was bleak.
      他臉色陰郁。

      來自柯林斯例句

      5. a bleak and desolate landscape
      一片荒涼的景色

      來自《權(quán)威詞典》