英:[ˈbɒrəʊ]
美:[ˈbɔːroʊ]
英:[ˈbɒrəʊ]
美:[ˈbɔːroʊ]
bor·row
ba ro [or] baw ro
第三人称单数:borrows
现在分词:borrowing
过去式:borrowed
过去分词:borrowed
borrower (n.)
词根:borrow
n.borrower 剽窃者,借用人
borrowing 借款;借用
v.borrowing 借入;采用(borrow的ing形式)
verb
transitive verb
to receive with the implied or expressed intention of returning the same or an equivalent borrowed a dollar borrowing a cup of sugar from a neighbor
borrow a book from the library
finance to borrow (money) with the intention of returning the same plus interest (see interest entry 1 sense 3a)
borrow money from the bank
to appropriate for one's own use
borrow a metaphor from Shakespeare
derive, adopt
traditions borrowed from African polytheism
mathematics to take (one) from a digit of the minuend in arithmetical subtraction in order to add as 10 to the digit holding the next lower place
to adopt into one language from another
The English word "entrepreneur" was borrowed from French.
dialect lend
Borrow me your pencil.
intransitive verb
to borrow something
borrows heavily from Nietzsche
biographical name
George Henry 1803–1881 English author
borrow money借钱;借债
borrow from向……借
borrow trouble自找麻烦,杞人忧天
ability to borrow借款能力;借债能力
borrow ideas from借鉴
lend把……借给。如:Can you lend me your bike?
borrow借入。如:Can I borrow your pen for a moment?
以上来源于网络
这组词都有“借”的意思,其区别是:
loan指通过正式的手续,借数目较大的贷款。在美国也可指借出东西。
lend指将自己的东西借出给别人,也可用于借喻意义。
borrow指从某人或某处借来某物,也可用作比喻。
以上来源于网络
古英语 borgian"借出,担保",源自原始日耳曼语 *burg- "抵押"(也指古英语 borg"抵押,担保,保释,债务",古弗里西亚语 borgia"借款,借钱",古诺尔斯语 borga"为...担保",中古荷兰语 borghen"保护,担保",古高地德语 boragen"小心,提防",德语 borgen"借出; 借入"),根据沃金斯的说法,这源自原始印欧语根 *bhergh- (1) "隐藏,保护"。
在古英语中,这个意义反转为“拿走或获得(某物)作为抵押品或担保”,显然是基于抵押品作为借入某物的担保而存放的想法。比较 sell (v.) 中的意义演变。比喻用法始于13世纪初。作为减法运算,始于1590年代。相关词汇: Borrowed; borrowing。短语 borrowed time 来自1848年。
击球略偏
担保物
Middle English borwen, from Old English borgian; akin to Old English beorgan to preserve — more at bury
The first known use of borrow was before the 12th century
boss1 of 5noun
a raised rounded part often used ornamentally (as on a shield or a ceiling) : stud
boss2 of 5verb
to ornament with bosses : emboss
boss3 of 5noun
the person (as an employer or supervisor) who tells workers what to do
the head of a groupespecially: a powerful politician who controls party business
boss4 of 5verb
to be in charge of
boss a job
to give orders to
don't boss me around
boss5 of 5adjective
excellent, first-rate
bosom1 of 2noun
the front of the human chestespecially: a woman's breasts
the chest thought of as the center of secret thoughts and feelings
a close and comforting relationship
in the bosom of her family
the part of a garment covering the breast
bosom2 of 2adjective
intimate entry 2 sense 3a, close
bosom friends
borzoinoun
any of a breed of large long-haired dogs developed in Russia especially for hunting wolves
borschtnoun
a beet soup often served with sour cream
borrowingnoun
something borrowedespecially: a word or phrase adopted from one language into another
borrowverb
to take or receive something with the promise or intention of returning it
to take for one's own use something begun or thought up by another : adopt
borrow an idea
to take 1 from the digit in a minuend and add it as 10 to the digit in the next lower place
borrowverb
to take or receive something with the promise or intention of returning it
to take for one's own use something begun or thought up by another : adopt
borrow an idea
to take 1 from the digit in a minuend and add it as 10 to the digit in the next lower place
borrowverb
to take or receive something with the promise or intention of returning it
to take for one's own use something begun or thought up by another : adopt
borrow an idea
to take 1 from the digit in a minuend and add it as 10 to the digit in the next lower place
1 I ask her if I can borrow her car and run some errands.
2 He must have borrowed it from her room.
3 My mind wandered to the last book I had borrowed.
4 “You want to come inside and check out our reference section? Maybe borrow a thesaurus?”
5 The speech was peppered with phrases borrowed from Winston Churchill.
6 Morgan borrowed £5,000 from his father to form the company 20 years ago...
20年前摩根从他父亲那里借了5,000英镑,成立了这家公司。
7 I took the liberty of borrowing your computer while you away on holiday.
在你外出度假的时我冒昧地借用了你电脑.
8 With borrowed money, Father bought us more food, including a giant can of Nido Nestle powdered milk, which Mother struggled to keep away from our hungry hands.
9 Kabuo remembered trolling for cutthroat with Carl— they were twelve years old, long before the war—in a borrowed, weathered rowboat.
10 “That muskrat was dead a while. When was the last time your neighbor got the boat out? Oh right, you have no idea. Awesome. Okay, then when was the last time you borrowed it?”
11 Then she borrowed five hundred dollars from Felix so she wouldn’t go bankrupt.
12 Although each of those systems used distinctive sets of signs not borrowed from Egypt or Sumer, the peoples involved could hardly have been unaware of the writing of their neighboring trade partners.
13 I’d borrowed the car I was driving from Drew, so I told Mother something had come up unexpectedly, that Drew needed his car in Salt Lake.
14 “Mine still beat the borrowed wand. Do you know why that is?”
15 So I called on you and asked if I could borrow some jeweler.
所以我去拜访你,问我能否借些首饰.
16 She asked to borrow a phone to call her babcia, so he brought her that, too, waving off her offer to pay them back.
17 I stand in front of her at the desk and she tells me I can borrow any book I want with a library card.
18 In her borrowed bed in the dark interior of the caravan the star slept on, unaware how close she had come to her doom, nor by how slim a margin she had escaped it.
19 John Henry and I waited, him holding the hammer in both hands, me with my fists clenched inside my borrowed gloves.
20 I'm borrowing a friend's car for the weekend.
3 借来的
6 剽窃
plagiarism crib plagiarize lift piratical piratic piracy plagiary pirate pick steal hog cribbing cabbage
8 乔治
cantor grosz chapman best sand fox Bush Wade Canning Foreman Washington George Moore Burns Lucas Berkeley Meredith Harrison Herbert Eliot Romney Carey Eastman Vancouver Custer Armani Gershwin Westinghouse Stephenson Stubbs Farquhar Crabbe Jeffreys Grenville Vasari Danton Orwell Braque Pompidou Balanchine Simenon Bizet Monck Clemenceau Feydeau Santayana Formby Cruikshank Hepplewhite Gissing Gamow Rouault Gurdjieff Boole Grivas Nepia Du Maurier
9 借贷
10 采用
introduction adoption borrowing uptake introduce adopt resort apply employ bring in take follow assume naturalize adhibit go on to embrace
11 模仿
impersonative mimic simulate slavish imitative mimetic after imitation mockery impersonation mimicry mimesis copy play echo imitate impersonate me-too transcriptive derivative simulated burlesque imitated simulative impression simulation takeoff emulation spoof patterning apery counterfeit model pattern mock emulate ape mime feign after the fashion of take color from make like
12 取
15 借钱
17 采纳