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    1. holocaust

      英 ['h?l?k??st] 美['hɑl?k?st]
      • n. 大屠殺;毀滅

      TEM8IELTSGRE低頻詞擴(kuò)展詞匯

      詞態(tài)變化


      復(fù)數(shù):?holocausts;

      中文詞源


      holocaust 大災(zāi)難,大毀滅

      holo-,整個(gè)的,整體的,-caust,燃燒,詞源同caustic,cauterize.引申詞義大災(zāi)難,大毀滅。

      英文詞源


      holocaust
      holocaust: [13] Etymologically, a holocaust is a ‘complete burning’, and the word was originally used in English for a ‘burnt offering’, a ‘sacrifice completely consumed by fire’ (Mark 12, 33, ‘more than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices’ in the Authorized Version, was translated by William Tindale in 1526 as ‘a(chǎn) greater thing than all holocausts and sacrifices’).

      It comes via Old French and Latin from Greek holókauston, a compound formed from hólos ‘whole’ (as in English holograph [17] and holism [20], a coinage of the South African statesman Jan Smuts) and kaustós, a relative of Greek kaúein ‘burn’ (from which English gets caustic [14] and cauterize [14]). John Milton was the first English writer to use the word in the wider sense ‘complete destruction by fire’, in the late 17th century, and in the succeeding centuries several precedents were set for its modern application to ‘nuclear destruction’ and ‘mass murder’ – Bishop Ken, for instance, wrote in 1711 ‘Should general Flame this World consume … An Holocaust for Fontal Sin’, and Leitch Ritchie in Wanderings by the Loire 1833 refers to Louis VII making ‘a(chǎn) holocaust of thirteen hundred persons in a church’.

      => caustic, cauterize, holism
      holocaust (n.)
      mid-13c., "sacrifice by fire, burnt offering," from Greek holokauston "a thing wholly burnt," neuter of holokaustos "burned whole," from holos "whole" (see holo-) + kaustos, verbal adjective of kaiein "to burn." Originally a Bible word for "burnt offerings," given wider sense of "massacre, destruction of a large number of persons" from 1833. The Holocaust "Nazi genocide of European Jews in World War II," first recorded 1957, earlier known in Hebrew as Shoah "catastrophe." The word itself was used in English in reference to Hitler's Jewish policies from 1942, but not as a proper name for them.
      Auschwitz makes all too clear the principle that the human psyche can create meaning out of anything. [Robert Jay Lifton, "The Nazi Doctors"]

      雙語例句


      1. The Auschwitz concentration camp always remind the world of the holocaust.
      奧辛威茨集中營(yíng)總是讓世人想起大屠殺.

      來自《簡(jiǎn)明英漢詞典》

      2. Viewing this holocaust , they gave up any hope of living.
      看見這個(gè)奇異的景象, 眾人對(duì)自己的命運(yùn)不能夠再有絲毫的疑惑了.

      來自漢英文學(xué) - 家(1-26) - 家(1-26)

      3. A nuclear holocaust seemed a very real possibility in the 1950s.
      核災(zāi)難在20世紀(jì)50年代似乎真的非??赡馨l(fā)生。

      來自辭典例句

      4. It is unthinkable that we shall allow a nuclear holocaust to occur.
      我們?nèi)艟棺尯宋淦鞔笸罋⒌膽K劇發(fā)生,簡(jiǎn)直是匪夷所思。

      來自辭典例句

      5. A nuclear holocaust seemed a very real possibility in the '50s.
      核災(zāi)難在20世紀(jì)50年代似乎真的非??赡馨l(fā)生。

      來自辭典例句