英:[məˈʃeti]
美:[məˈʃɛti, -ˈtʃɛti]
英:[məˈʃeti]
美:[məˈʃɛti, -ˈtʃɛti]
ma·chet·e
m she ti [or] m che ti
复数:machetes
"heavy knife or cutlass," 西班牙人在美洲作为武器和工具使用的,1590年代的(以伪西班牙形式 macheto ),源自西班牙语 machete "劈刀",可能是 macho "大锤"的减小形式,变形自 mazo "棒子",这可能是[巴恩哈特] maza "木槌"的方言变体,源自俗拉丁文 *mattea "战斗棍棒"(见 mace (n.1))。另一种解释将 macho 追溯到拉丁语 marculus "小锤",是由 marcus "锤子"形式减小而来的,源自于拉丁语 malleus (见 mallet )。
Spanish
The first known use of machete was in 1575
machinateverb
plot entry 2 sense 2especially: to scheme to do harm
machine1 of 2noun
vehicle sense 2especially: automobile entry 2
a combination of parts that transmit forces, motion, and energy to do some desired work
a sewing machine
an instrument (as a lever or pulley) designed to transmit or change slightly the application of power, force, or motion
an organized group that controls a political party
machine2 of 2verb
to shape or finish by machine-operated tools
machine1 of 2noun
vehicle sense 2especially: automobile entry 2
a combination of parts that transmit forces, motion, and energy to do some desired work
a sewing machine
an instrument (as a lever or pulley) designed to transmit or change slightly the application of power, force, or motion
an organized group that controls a political party
machine2 of 2verb
to shape or finish by machine-operated tools
machetenoun
a large heavy knife used especially for cutting sugarcane and underbrush and as a weapon
1 I ask Lorenzo hopefully, and in Spanish, when the lady goes inside for the machetes.
2 “Tiara grabbed the machete and started going all women’s prison movie on her hair,” Miss Ohio informed her.
3 She talked about how Martí charged up a hill in Cuba, a machete in his hand, demanding freedom for his people.
4 At the morgue were bodies of people who had been hacked to death; a woman had both her breasts cut off with a machete.
5 He feinted with his own shorter knife, trying to slash inside the machete, but his father anticipated him and this time the machete caught Nailer across the cheek.
6 Enrique and the gangsters ran past a group of Mexican men standing by the tracks, machetes at their sides.
7 So I splash that on my jacket, hands, and the machete.
8 At last they took the right leg and put it on the same log and cut it off with a machete.
最后他们把他的右腿放在同样的木块上拿过砍刀开始切。
9 After using his machete to hack his way through the dense foliage—all while getting stung and bitten by wasps and ants—Kermit would set up the sighting rod.
10 The kids at C Average wouldn’t share their innermost feelings if you held a machete to their throats.
11 When it neared, I saw that the back was clogged with shirtless men with guns and machetes.
12 I just shrug and raise my machete like I’m going to kill them.
13 Afterward, the men yanked our torn crapes off our feet, untied us, and chased us out of their village, waving their spears and machetes, and screaming after us.
14 He was still there, huddled in the same place with his carbine in hand, his machete in a sheath that hung from his belt, when darkness fell four hours later.
15 She was badly wounded by a machete and left for dead.
她被一把弯刀砍得严重受伤,凶手以为她死了就没管她.
16 “Jennifer gave me a cool haircut, too. With a machete,” Tiara said.
17 The old policemen were replaced by hired assassins with machetes.
18 That summer, after hearing one of Smith’s sermons, over three thousand slaves grabbed their machetes, their long poles, and rose up against their masters.
19 Sometimes when we swung the machetes and axes, their weight would send us flying into the bushes, where we would lie for a bit and rub our aching shoulders.
20 The men pulled their dugout canoes onto the river’s sandy bank and started chopping through the thick vegetation with machetes and knives to make their way around the main rapids.