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    1. lap

      英 [l?p] 美[l?p]
      • n. 一圈;膝蓋;下擺;山坳
      • vt. 使重疊;拍打;包圍
      • vi. 重疊;輕拍;圍住
      • n. (Lap)人名;(越)立

      CET4TEM4IELTSGRE考研CET6中頻詞核心詞匯

      詞態(tài)變化


      復(fù)數(shù):?laps;第三人稱單數(shù):?laps;過去式:?lapped;過去分詞:?lapped;現(xiàn)在分詞:?lapping;

      助記提示


      1. overlap => lap.
      2. 諧音“來(lái)拍”。

      中文詞源


      lap 大腿,一圈,舔食

      1.來(lái)自古英語(yǔ)laeppa,掛布,衣擺,裙擺,詞源同label,lapel,后用來(lái)指遮膝蓋的裙擺,膝蓋,大腿。

      2.來(lái)自古英語(yǔ)*wlappan,圍,裹,來(lái)自PIE*wel,轉(zhuǎn),彎,詞源同envelop,involve.引申詞義一圈。

      3.來(lái)自PIE*lab,舔,擬聲詞,詞源同labial,lip.

      英文詞源


      lap
      lap: English now has three distinct words lap, but probably two of them are ultimately related. Lap ‘upper legs of a seated person’ [OE] originally meant ‘flap of a garment’, and it goes back to a prehistoric Germanic source which also produced German lappen ‘rag, cloth, flap, lobe’, and which may lie behind label [14]. It seems likely that lap in the sense ‘folds of a garment’ was the basis of the Middle English verb lap, which meant ‘wrap’, and hence ‘extend beyond’.

      From this come both the verb overlap [18] and the noun lap [18], whose modern meaning ‘one circuit of a course’ emerged in the 19th century. Lap ‘lick up’ [OE] comes from a prehistoric Germanic base *lap-, which was related to Latin lambēre ‘lick’ (source of English lambent [17], and possibly responsible also for lamprey and limpet).

      => label; lambent
      lap (n.)
      Old English l?ppa (plural l?ppan) "skirt or flap of a garment," from Proto-Germanic *lapp- (cognates: Old Frisian lappa, Old Saxon lappo, Middle Dutch lappe, Dutch lap, Old High German lappa, German Lappen "rag, shred," Old Norse leppr "patch, rag"), from PIE root *leb- "be loose, hang down."

      Sense of "lower part of a shirt" led to that of "upper legs of seated person" (c. 1300). Used figuratively ("bosom, breast") from late 14c., as in lap of luxury, first recorded 1802. From 15c.-In 17c. the word (often in plural) was a euphemism for "female pudendum," but this is not the source of lap dance, which is first recorded 1993.
      To lap dance, you undress, sit your client down, order him to stay still and fully clothed, then hover over him, making a motion that you have perfected by watching Mister Softee ice cream dispensers. [Anthony Lane, review of "Showgirls," "New Yorker," Oct. 16, 1995]
      That this is pleasure and not torment for the client is something survivors of the late 20c. will have to explain to their youngers.
      lap (v.1)
      "take up liquid with the tongue," from Old English lapian "to lap up, drink," from Proto-Germanic *lapojan (cognates: Old High German laffen "to lick," Old Saxon lepil, Dutch lepel, German L?ffel "spoon"), from PIE imitative base *lab- (cognates: Greek laptein "to sip, lick," Latin lambere "to lick"), indicative of licking, lapping, smacking lips. Meaning "splash gently" first recorded 1823, based on similarity of sound. Related: Lapped; lapping.
      lap (v.2)
      "to lay one part over another," early 14c., "to surround (something with something else)," from lap (n.). Figurative use, "to envelop (in love, sin, desire, etc.)" is from mid-14c. The sense of "to get a lap ahead (of someone) on a track" is from 1847, on notion of "overlapping." The noun in this sense is 1670s, originally "something coiled or wrapped up;" meaning "a turn around a track" (1861) also is from this sense. Related: Lapped; lapping; laps.

      雙語(yǔ)例句


      1. We don't live in the lap of luxury, but we're comfortable.
      我們的生活雖然并非錦衣玉食,也算是衣食無(wú)憂。

      來(lái)自柯林斯例句

      2. Politicians want a lap-dog press which will uncritically report their propaganda.
      政客們想要的是不問是非、甘為他們搞宣傳的哈巴狗一樣的新聞媒體。

      來(lái)自柯林斯例句

      3. By half distance we held a comfortable two-lap lead.
      到半程時(shí),我們輕松領(lǐng)先兩圈。

      來(lái)自柯林斯例句

      4. Hugh glanced at the child on her mother's lap.
      休瞥了一眼坐在她媽媽膝上的小女孩。

      來(lái)自柯林斯例句

      5. By the third lap Kinkead had touched 289 m.p.h.
      到第三圈時(shí),金基德的車速達(dá)到了每小時(shí)289英里。

      來(lái)自柯林斯例句