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    1. pipe

      英 [pa?p] 美[pa?p]
      • n. 管;煙斗;笛
      • vi. 吹笛;尖叫
      • vt. 用管道輸送;尖聲唱;用管樂器演奏
      • n. (Pipe)人名;(匈)皮佩;(英)派普

      CET4TEM4考研CET6中頻詞核心詞匯

      詞態(tài)變化


      復數(shù):?pipes;第三人稱單數(shù):?pipes;過去式:?piped;過去分詞:?piped;現(xiàn)在分詞:?piping;

      中文詞源


      pipe 管子,管道,管樂器

      來自拉丁語pipare,管子發(fā)出的嘰嘰聲,砰砰聲,擬聲詞。引申詞義管子,管道,管樂器等。

      英文詞源


      pipe
      pipe: [OE] The etymological notion underlying pipe is of a ‘piping’ sound. The word goes back to a Common Romance *pīpa, a derivative of the Latin verb pīpāre ‘chirp’. This was formed from the base *pīp-, imitative of the sounds made by young birds, which also lies behind English pigeon. Prehistoric Germanic took over *pīpa, and it has since evolved to German pfeife, Dutch pijp, Swedish pipa, and English pipe. By the time it reached English it had broadened out semantically from its original ‘tubular wind instrument which makes a piping sound’ to ‘tube’ in general.
      => pigeon
      pipe (v.)
      Old English pipian "to play on a pipe," from Latin pipare "to peep, chirp" (see pipe (n.1)). Compare Dutch pijpen, German pfeifen. Meaning "convey through pipes" is first recorded 1887. Related: Piped; piping. Piping hot is in Chaucer, a reference to hissing of food in a frying pan; to pipe up (early 15c.) originally meant "to begin to play" (on a musical instrument); sense of "to speak out" is from 1856. Pipe down "be quiet" is from 1900, probably a reversal of this, but earlier (and concurrently) in nautical jargon it was a bo'sun's whistle signal to dismiss the men from duty (1833).
      pipe (n.1)
      Old English pipe "musical wind instrument," also "tube to convey water," from Vulgar Latin *pipa "a pipe, tube-shaped musical instrument" (source also of Italian pipa, French pipe, Old Frisian pipe, German Pfeife, Danish pibe, Swedish pipa, Dutch pijp), a back-formation from Latin pipare "to chirp or peep," of imitative origin. All tubular senses ultimately derive from "small reed, whistle." Meaning "device for smoking" first recorded 1590s. Pipe-bomb attested from 1960. Pipe-cleaner recorded from 1863.
      pipe (n.2)
      type of cask, early 14c., from Old French pipe "liquid measure, cask for wine," from a special use of Vulgar Latin *pipa "pipe" (see pipe (n.1)).

      雙語例句


      1. Just pipe down and I'll tell you what I want.
      別說了,我來告訴你我想要什么。

      來自柯林斯例句

      2. You could waste your whole life on a pipe-dream.
      白日夢會荒廢你一生。

      來自柯林斯例句

      3. He nodded and puffed on a stubby pipe as he listened.
      他邊聽邊點頭,還吸著一支粗短的煙斗。

      來自柯林斯例句

      4. He took a puff on his pipe and shook his head.
      他抽了口煙斗,搖了搖頭。

      來自柯林斯例句

      5. The room held the faint, sweet odour of pipe tobacco.
      房間內有煙斗煙絲的淡淡馨香。

      來自柯林斯例句