英:[stəʊl]
美:[stoʊl]
英:[stəʊl]
美:[stoʊl]
复数:stoles
词根:steal
adj.stolen 偷走的
stealing 有偷窃行为的
n.stealing 偷窃;贼赃;偷垒(棒球比赛中的犯规行为)
stealer 偷窃者;偷干者
v.stolen 偷窃;剽窃(steal的过去分词)
stealing 偷盗;抄袭(steal的ing形式)
vt.steal 剽窃;偷偷地做;偷窃;vi. 窃取;偷偷地行动;偷垒;n. 偷窃;便宜货;偷垒;断球
noun
a long loose garment : robe
an ecclesiastical vestment consisting of a long usually silk band worn traditionally around the neck by bishops and priests and over the left shoulder by deacons
a long wide scarf or similar covering worn by women usually across the shoulders
steal away(把某物)偷走;溜掉
steal over(感情等)渐渐控制…;渐渐弥漫;悄悄地呈现;不知不觉地袭来
古英语 stole “长袍,神职人员穿的类似围巾的衣服”,源自拉丁语 stola “长袍,礼服”(也是古法语 estole,现代法语 étole,西班牙语 estola,意大利语 stola 的来源),源自希腊语 stole “一件长袍”,最初是“衣服,装备”的意思,源自 stellein “放置,排列”的词根,具有“穿上”长袍等的次要意义,源自 PIE 词根 *stel- “放置,站立,整理”,具有指代站立的物体或地方的派生词。意思是“女性的长毛皮或羽毛衣服”,始于1889年。
Noun Middle English, from Old English, from Latin stola, from Greek stolē equipment, robe, from stellein to set up, make ready
The first known use of stole was before the 12th century
stomachachenoun
pain in or near the stomach
stomach1 of 2noun
a pouch of the vertebrate digestive system into which food passes from the esophagus for mixing and digestion before passing to the duodenum of the small intestine
a cavity with a similar function in an invertebrate animal
the part of the body that contains the stomach : belly, abdomen
desire for food caused by hunger : appetite
desire entry 2 sense 1, inclination
had no stomach for an argument
stomach2 of 2verb
tolerate sense 1
could not stomach the smell
stomanoun
a small opening which is surrounded by two guard cells and through which moisture and gases pass in and out of the epidermis of a leaf
stolonnoun
a horizontal branch from the base of a plant that produces new plants from buds at its tip or nodes (as in the strawberry) called alsorunner
stolidadjective
having or expressing little or no feeling : not easily stirred or excited
a stolid person
stolidadjective
having or expressing little or no feeling : not easily stirred or excited
a stolid person
stolidadjective
having or expressing little or no feeling : not easily stirred or excited
a stolid person
stole1 of 2
stolen
stole1 of 2
1 The two young men stole something expensive.
两个年轻人偷了贵重的东西。
2 I stole a penny from my mother’s purse.
3 “Well, I suppose we just figured out why she stole those pages from your notebook.”
4 Cursing her incompetence, she stole one of Trotter’s magazines and cut from it a picture of a tall, beautiful black woman in an Afro.
5 “It’s almost like it’s good that we stole.”
6 He stole the corn, he upset the milk-pails, he broke the eggs, he trampled the seedbeds, he gnawed the bark off the fruit trees.
7 I remember choking on nectar and pulp as the horrible bliss of the everapple stole over me, robbing me of caring even that I was dying.
8 “It wasn’t. If I lost it? If someone stole it? There’d be nothing else.”
9 Feelings of infinite melancholy stole over him.
无限的哀情愁思向他悄悄袭来.
10 It had been her wish when she was little, before her gift manifested and stole her last hope of it.
11 "Here, I stole a macaroon for you. It’s so sticky you'll be tasting it all day; I must have six strands of coconut between my upper molars."
12 “But I’ll bet that man who was just in here stole that necklace.”
13 “A shirt and breeches. We stole a shirt and breeches. You killed him?”
14 He stole cautiously around to the back door.
他小心翼翼地悄悄绕过后门.
15 “I think I know who stole your money,” Angel says.
16 After the house had gotten quiet, we stole night-lanterns and dragged them to the back of the house.
17 “Anyway, even if we stole it and convinced people to read it,” said Reynie, “they’d think it was a hoax. Mr. Curtain’s messages have made sure of that.”
18 Even if they hated you for it after, and punished you for it, and stole from you, and lied and mocked you?
19 “I’m sorry I slammed your fingers in the door, and I’m sorry I didn’t tell my godparents that I stole the notebook. I was mad at you for taking my key.”
20 I tell him the usual sins and then, I stole fish and chips from a drunken man.