英:['heɪkɒk]
美:['heɪkɒk]
英:['heɪkɒk]
美:['heɪkɒk]
hay·cock
heI kak
The first known use of haycock was in the 13th century
hazelnoun
any of a genus of shrubs or small trees related to birches and bearing edible nuts enclosed in a leafy case
a light brown to a strong yellowish brown
haze1 of 3noun
fine dust, smoke, or light vapor causing lack of transparency in the air
unclearness of mind or perception : daze
haze2 of 3verb
to make or become hazy or cloudy
haze3 of 3verb
to play unpleasant and humiliating tricks on (as new members of a college fraternity) or force to perform humiliating tasks or stunts
hazard1 of 2noun
a game of chance played with two dice
chance entry 1 sense 1, accident
a source of danger
an obstacle on a golf course
hazard2 of 2verb
venture entry 1 sense 1, risk
hazard a guess
hazardousadjective
dangerous sense 1, risky
haywireadverb or adjective
being out of order : not working
the radio went haywire
emotionally or mentally upset or out of control
haystacknoun
a stack of hay
hayricknoun
a large sometimes thatched outdoor stack of hay
hayloftnoun
the upper part of a barn where hay is stored
haycocknoun
a cone-shaped pile of hay
1 The grass was heavy, and a good many fresh haycocks were made and standing already, as if in July.
2 Now it happened that my way led me near a haycock, and as I neared this haycock I heard voices from the other side of it.
3 The haycock he built was about the size of a bucket—I have since seen them as large as bushel baskets.
4 Her two little boys, Billy and Tommy, who would really have enjoyed haycocks, were left sternly at home.
5 It is a strip of rough grass out of which I shall make haycocks, with three apple-trees in it.
6 The hut was a structure made of poles and a thatch of brush and grass that was of about the shape of a Yankee haycock, and only a little larger.
7 Fortunato raised his left hand at the same time, and pointed with his thumb over his shoulder to the haycock against which he was leaning.
8 He's under the haycock, fast asleep.
在干草堆下,睡熟了。
9 The window at the head of the bed was open, the hay outside was new cut and piled into little haycocks.
10 We were struck with the sight of haycocks fastened down with aprons, sheets, p. 16pieces of sacking—as we supposed, to prevent the wind from blowing them away.
11 One day she took her tiny rake and began to make a haycock, but before it was done something else interested her, and she dropped the rake.
12 The top piece of the hill is curiously symmetrical, and resembles a haycock or a thimble.
13 The long, wintry fields before them sloped down to a wide stretch of marshes covered with ice, and dotted here and there with an abandoned haycock.
14 In the morning, when the sun had shone on the haycocks long enough to dry off the dew, Uncle John got out the old oxen.
15 The little haycock houses of musk-rats offer the trapper easy prey when frost freezes the sloughs, shutting off retreat below, and heavy snow-fall has not yet hidden the little creatures' winter home.
16 Only you must imagine these brocade flowers are real red field poppies, and this sofa is a haycock, just at the back of Copthorne Farm.
17 Range of view and air, most free and delightful; hill-side garden, delicious; field, stupendous; speculations in haycocks already effected by the undersigned, with the view to the keeping up of a "home" at rounders.
18 Mountain Billy grazed near me till it occurred to him that stubble was unsatisfactory, when he betook him to my haycock.
19 He's under the haycock, fast asleep.
他在干草堆下,睡熟了。
20 Wordsworth never forgets the blackness, though he is, above all, the bard of mountain light and sweetness, of warbling birds and maiden's haycocks.