英:[ˈəʊgə(r)]
美:[ˈoʊgə(r)]
英:[ˈəʊgə(r)]
美:[ˈoʊgə(r)]
o·gre
o gr
复数:ogres
ogreish (adj.), ogreishly (adv.)
词根:ogre
n.ogress 食人女妖;连珠形浮雕图案
"妖怪故事和流行传说中的食人巨人",1713年, hogre(在阿拉伯之夜的法语版本的翻译中),源自法语 ogre,首次出现在佩罗的 "Contes," 1697年的作品中,可能是由他从意大利方言变体 orco "恶魔,怪物"中创造出来的,源自拉丁语 Orcus "冥界",其起源不详。在英语中,更多用于文学作品而非口语。关于它源自拜占庭 Ogur "匈牙利人"或该民族名称的其他版本(可能是通过与嗜血的匈奴人混淆而来),缺乏历史证据。相关词汇: Ogrish; ogreish; ogrishness; ogreishness。
French, probably ultimately from Latin Orcus, god of the underworld
The first known use of ogre was in 1713
oilyadjective
of, relating to, or consisting of oil
covered or soaked with oil
high in oils that are naturally produced
oily skin
oilernoun
a person (as a worker) who oils something
a device for applying oil
oilclothnoun
cloth treated with oil or paint so as to be waterproof and used for table and shelf coverings
oil1 of 2noun
any of numerous greasy flammable usually liquid substances from plant, animal, or mineral sources that do not dissolve in water and are used especially as lubricants, fuels, and food
petroleum
something (as a cosmetic) like oil or containing an oil suntan oil
bath oil
artist's paints made of pigments and oil
a painting done in oils
oil2 of 2verb
to put oil in or on
ohmmeternoun
an instrument for indicating resistance in ohms directly
ohmnoun
a unit of electric resistance equal to the resistance of a circuit in which a potential difference of one volt produces a current of one ampere
ohmnoun
a unit of electric resistance equal to the resistance of a circuit in which a potential difference of one volt produces a current of one ampere
oh1 of 2interjection
—used to express an emotion (as astonishment or desire) or in response to a physical sensation (as pain)
—used in direct address
Oh sir, you forgot your change
—used to express understanding of a statement
oh, that's what you mean
—used to introduce an example or a guess
there are probably, oh, six or seven different ways to do that
oh2 of 2noun
zero entry 1 sense 1
ogrenoun
an ugly giant of fairy tales and folklore that eats people
a dreaded person or object
ogrenoun
an ugly giant of fairy tales and folklore that eats people
a dreaded person or object
1 Science can be an ogre or an angel, depending on how one looks at it.
科学能够成为魔鬼或成为天使,这要取决于人们如何对待科学。
2 "You shall see, " replied the Ogre, and in an instant, he became a mouse and began to scamper about the floor.
“让你见识一下。”怪物回答说,不一会儿,他就变成了一只老鼠,开始在地上快速地跑着。
3 Down in the yard, the ogres were milling around, shoving each other, occasionally yelling at the house, and throwing bronze cannonballs that exploded in midair.
4 “I think the ogre lady picked some up.”
5 The ogre put the dog collar down on a pile of dog collars and began to plait another.
6 Next to the ogres sat several mesh bags filled with bronze spheres like cannonballs.
7 Char was talking to three of the soldiers who had been in the ogres’ guard at the menagerie.
8 I look at the throng of revelers, trying to build up the daring of someone who would rob an ogre right under his nose.
9 “I could get the ogres to chase me.”
10 The largest ogre reached toward me, and I batted its monstrous, hairless paw aside.
11 When I was done, my ogre spat at me.
12 The Roman ranks moved forward, impaling centaurs and trampling wounded ogres under their bronze-tipped boots.
13 The ogres slept soundly, but they were not unconscious.
14 He shot three more arrows as fast as he could, blasting enormous craters in the ogres’ ranks.
15 The knight twisted away, gaining a few seconds, but the ogre was turning toward him.
16 He was a shock to me after the ogre of the lunch counter.
17 He swiveled the barrel, took aim at the lead ogre, and pressed the trigger.
18 You will see Gar'gol, a large blue skinned ogre, sitting on a small rise.
你会发现伽格尔,一个蓝皮肤的大食人魔,坐在小斜坡上。
19 “I have Thor's hammer,” the ogre told Loki.
20 “To begin with, I could teach these boorish ogres how to eat properly.”