英:[ˈbɒdkɪn]
美:[ ˈbɑːdkɪn]
英:[ˈbɒdkɪn]
美:[ ˈbɑːdkɪn]
bod·kin
bad kihn
约于1300年, badeken, boydekin,“短小的匕首,尖锐的武器”,一个起源不明的词。词尾表明这是一个小型化的形式,凯尔特语被认为是原始词的来源,“在找不到其他来源的情况下”[OED],但《世纪词典》否认了这一点。
球针
Middle English bodekin
The first known use of bodkin was in the 14th century
bog1 of 2noun
wet spongy groundespecially: a poorly drained acid area in which dead plant matter accumulates and sphagnum grows in abundance
bog2 of 2verb
to sink or become stuck in or as if in a bog
get bogged down in too much detail
bog1 of 2noun
wet spongy groundespecially: a poorly drained acid area in which dead plant matter accumulates and sphagnum grows in abundance
bog2 of 2verb
to sink or become stuck in or as if in a bog
get bogged down in too much detail
bogeymannoun
an imaginary monster used in threatening children
a terrifying or dreaded person or thing
bogeynoun
ˈbu̇g-ē,ˈbō-gē,ˈbü-gēghost, phantom
ˈbō-gē, also ˈbu̇g-ē, or ˈbü-gēsomething one is afraid of especially without reason
bog1 of 2noun
wet spongy groundespecially: a poorly drained acid area in which dead plant matter accumulates and sphagnum grows in abundance
bog2 of 2verb
to sink or become stuck in or as if in a bog
get bogged down in too much detail
bodyguardnoun
a person or group of persons whose job is to protect someone
bodybuildingnoun
the developing of the body through exercise and diet
bodybuildingnoun
the developing of the body through exercise and diet
bodkinnoun
dagger sense 1, stiletto
a sharp slender instrument for making holes in cloth
a blunt needle with a large eye for drawing tape or ribbon through a loop or hem
1 Then there are the cheap magazines, which tender a half dozen stories for the price of a cigar or a bodkin.
2 Faith said she would when she'd got time, but when she'd got time she hadn't got any tape, and when we remembered to buy some tape we couldn't find a bodkin.
3 Hamlet's mind overleaps the interval of his princely life, and the weapon which is most naturally suggested by his youthful career is "a bare bodkin."
4 He's too big to travel bodkin between you and me.
他个子太大了,无法挤在你我中间。
5 Bodkin is a small, sharply pointed instrument for making holes in fabric or leather.
锥子是一种在纺织品和皮革上钻洞的小而有尖头的工具。
6 For when Cicero lay dead, she went to the orator's bier and thrust a bodkin through the once magic tongue; thus punishing the tongue, she explained, for its calumnies against her beloved husband.
7 O yes, I'm his man—I'll show you a lawyer's challenge, sticks and staves, guns, swords, daggers, poinards, knives, scissors and bodkins.
8 In fact, that “serpent of old Nile” — Shakespeare’s phrase — probably used Egyptian cobra venom, possibly secreted in a hollow bodkin that she carried wound in her hair.
9 "Unless thou or some other of Agrippa's friends disable him permanently with a bodkin, or a storm deliver him up to the Nereids."
10 So you can easily crushed by a bodkin!
你这样很容易一锥子砸死!
11 Bodkin is a small, sharply pointed instrument for making holes in fabric or leather.
锥子是一种在纺织品和皮革上钻洞的小而有尖头的工具。
12 "If it was an old bodkin that was given me by one I loved, I 'd go through fire and water to get possession of it."
13 Besides, I wanted to show them how poor Tiki "took arms against a sea of troubles," and for the want of a "bare bodkin" made shift with a carronade.
14 Bodkin, bod′kin, n. a small dagger: a small instrument for pricking holes or for dressing the hair: a large blunt needle.—To sit, or ride, bodkin, to be wedged in tight between two others.
15 She became an austere grumbler, forever pricking her sweet-tempered lord with a tireless little bodkin of reproach.
16 It wasn’t what you might call lively, for Jim had to sit bodkin between us, and Anne never spoke a word the whole way!”
17 The chaise was as roomy a one as could be procured, but still, as there was but one seat, I had to assume the position of "bodkin" between my two companions.
18 To sit, ride, or travel bodkin, to sit closely wedged between two persons.
19 But his powerful understanding soon saw through the sophistry of that species of dramatic heroism, by which a man escapes "with a bare bodkin" all the duties and responsibilities of his being.
20 "Whom would fardels bear under such a weary and long life.... when he could his quietus make with a bare bodkin?"