spit
英 [sp?t]
美[sp?t]
- vi. 吐痰;吐口水;發(fā)出劈啪聲
- vt. 吐,吐出;發(fā)出;發(fā)射
- n. 唾液
CET4TEM4考研CET6IELTS中低頻詞常用詞匯
詞態(tài)變化
第三人稱單數(shù):?spits;過去式:?spat;過去分詞:?spat;現(xiàn)在分詞:?spitting;
助記提示
1. 專家把它吐出來了。
中文詞源
spit 吐,唾,怒斥
來自擬聲詞根輔音叢 sp-,吐,噴出,比較 spate,spew,spit,spout,sputter.
spit 烤肉扦來自古英語 spitu,烤肉扦,來自 Proto-Germanic*spituz,尖刺,來自 PIE*spei,尖刺,尖點(diǎn),詞 源同 spike,spire.
英文詞源
- spit
- spit: English has two words spit in current usage. Spit ‘eject saliva’ [OE] is one of a sizable group of English words beginning sp- which denote ‘ejecting or discharging liquid’. Others include spew [OE], spout [14], spurt [16], and sputter [16]. They all go back ultimately to an Indo- European base *spyēu-, *spyū-, etc, imitative of the sound of spitting, which also produced Latin spuere ‘spit’ (source of English cuspidor [18] and sputum [17]).
The immediate source of spit itself was the prehistoric Germanic base *spit-, a variant of which, *spāt-, produced English spittle [15] (originally spattle, but changed through association with spit). Spit for roasting things on [OE] comes from a prehistoric Germanic *spituz, which also produced German spiess and Dutch spit.
=> cuspidor, spew, spout, spurt, sputter, sputum - spit (v.1)
- "expel saliva," Old English spittan (Anglian), sp?tan (West Saxon), transitive and intransitive, past tense *spytte, from Proto-Germanic *spitjan, from PIE *sp(y)eu-, of imitative origin (see spew (v.)). Not the usual Old English word for this; sp?tlan (see spittle) and spiwan are more common; all are from the same root. To spit as a gesture of contempt (especially at someone) is in Old English. Related: Spat; spitting.
- spit (n.1)
- "saliva," early 14c., from spit (v.1). Meaning "the very likeness" in modern use is attested from 1825 (as in spitting image, attested from 1887); compare French craché in same sense. Spit-curl (1831) was originally considered colloquial or vulgar. Military phrase spit and polish first recorded 1895.
- spit (n.2)
- "sharp-pointed rod for roasting meat," late Old English spitu "a spit," from Proto-Germanic *spituz (cognates: Middle Dutch and Dutch spit, Swedish spett (which perhaps is from Low German), Old High German spiz, German Spie? "roasting spit," German spitz "pointed"), from PIE *spei- "sharp point" (see spike (n.1)). This is also the source of the word meaning "sandy point" (1670s). Old French espois, Spanish espeto "spit" are Germanic loan-words. The verb meaning "to put on a spit" is recorded from c. 1200.
- spit (v.2)
- c. 1200, "put on a spit, thrust with a spit," from late Old English sputtian "to spit" (for cooking), from spit (n.2). Meaning "pierce with a weapon, transfix, impale" is from early 15c. Related: Spitted; spitting. Nares' Glossary has spit-frog "a small sword."
雙語例句
- 1. The gang thought of hitting him too, but decided just to spit.
- 那伙人也想過要揍他,但最后只是啐了他一口。
來自柯林斯例句
- 2. Notices in the waiting room requested that you neither smoke nor spit.
- 候車室的公告牌要求人們不要吸煙和隨地吐痰。
來自柯林斯例句
- 3. She roasted the meat on a spit.
- 她用烤肉叉子烤肉。
來自柯林斯例句
- 4. The travellers looked weather - beaten , there was little spit and polish.
- 旅客們滿面風(fēng)塵, 儀容不整.
來自《簡明英漢詞典》
- 5. If you must spit at all, please spit in the bucket provided.
- 如果你非吐不可, 就請吐到備好的痰桶里.
來自《簡明英漢詞典》