英:[veɪn]
美:[ven]
英:[veɪn]
美:[ven]
n.
叶
风向标
瞄准板
反复无常的人
复数:vanes
vaned (adj.)
词根:vane
adj.vaned 有叶片的
noun
a movable device attached to an elevated object (such as a spire) for showing the direction of the wind
one that is changeable or inconstant
a thin flat or curved object that is rotated about an axis by a flow of fluid or that rotates to cause a fluid to flow or that redirects a flow of fluid
the vanes of a windmill
the web or flat expanded part of a feather see feather illustration
a feather fastened to the shaft near the nock of an arrow
biographical name
Sir Henry 1613–1662 the Younger English statesman
guide vane导流叶片;导向叶片
vane pump叶片泵,叶轮泵
rotary vane旋叶;回转片
vane wheel叶轮
wind vane风标,风向标
vane compressor叶片式压缩机
weather vane风标;风向计
vane shear test十字板剪切试验
stay vane固定导叶
“板金风向指示器”,15世纪初,英格兰南部改编自“fane”(见 V),意为“旗帜,旗帜”。
风向标
羽片
风向针
Middle English fane, vane "flag, pennant, weather vane," going back to Old English fana, fane (masculine or feminine weak noun) "banner, standard, kind of iris," going back to Germanic *fanōn (whence also Old Frisian fona, fana "flag," Old Saxon fano "cloth, cloak, flag," Middle Dutch vane, vaen "flag," Old High German fano "cloth, cloak, ribbon, flag," Old Icelandic fani "banner," Gothic fana "piece of cloth, rag"), perhaps a borrowing from the same source as Latin pannus "piece of cloth, rag" Note: In the sense "banner, flag" Old English fana, Old Saxon fano, etc., are probably shortenings of Old English gūþfana, Old Saxon gūthfano, etc., "battle standard, banner"—see gonfalon. —The Germanic and Latin etyma have also been associated with Greek pḗnē "thread on the spool or bobbin that will form the weft" (also pēníon, Doric pāníon "spool, bobbin," and pênos, glossed "web" by Hesychius), though the senses appear too remote to be comparable. G. Kroonen suggests that the forms might be unified by positing an original ablauting n-stem *p(é)h2-ōn, genitive *ph2-n-ós, with the Germanic word being the outcome of a generalized stem *ph2-no- or *peh2-nó-, with shortening by Dybo's Law (shortening of long vowels before an accented syllable beginning with a resonant). Latin pannum could be relatable if it was the outcome of the littera-rule (V:C > VCC). A problem here, however, is that there appear to be no other cases of the littera-rule operating in Latin before a nasal consonant—and, in any case, there are no examples of *pānus. Germanic *fanōn and Latin pannus are perhaps to be considered loanwords from an unknown source.
The first known use of vane was in the 14th century
vanishverb
to pass from sight or existence
vanishverb
to pass from sight or existence
vanillanoun
a flavoring made from the long pods of a tropical American climbing orchidalso: this orchid or one of the same genus
vanguardnoun
the troops moving at the head of an army
the forefront of an action or movement
vanenoun
a movable device attached to something high to show which way the wind is blowing
a thin flat or curved object that is rotated about an axis by a flow of fluid (as air or water) or that rotates to cause a fluid to flow or that changes the direction of a flow of fluid
the vanes of a windmill
the web or flat expanded part of a feather
vanenoun
a movable device attached to something high to show which way the wind is blowing
a thin flat or curved object that is rotated about an axis by a flow of fluid (as air or water) or that rotates to cause a fluid to flow or that changes the direction of a flow of fluid
the vanes of a windmill
the web or flat expanded part of a feather
1 I was checking out the brass eagle weather vane on top when something caught my eye, a shadow in the uppermost window of the attic gable.
2 This paper introduces structure and regulation theory of flexible guide vane.
本文介绍了柔性导叶的结构及调节原理。
3 He straddled it with both feet, gazing straight ahead at the north point of the weather vane.
4 Behind the house loomed an immense brown barn, at least five stories tall, topped by a weather vane.
5 I see her take in the white fence and the messy garden, then the rusted weather vane atop the ever so slightly lopsided roof.
6 There is a vane on top of the building.
在大楼的顶端有一只风信旗。
7 The third heart is just pretty and represents your beauty, not the vane kind but the inside and out kind.
第三颗心非常漂亮,它代表着你的美丽,不是浮于表面,而是秀外慧中的美。
8 The Object lived on Tonnacour, in a gray stone and clapboard house with a weather vane.
9 The wind [ vane ] has veered round to the east.
风向 [ 风向标 ] 已转东了.
10 Bracing himself against the weather vane, Matthias shielded his eyes and peered down into the Abbey grounds.
11 Plastic flowers were planted around the edge, and a weather vane topped by a spouting whale stood in the center.
12 As he drew nearer, he saw it was a massive golden weather vane, signalling to him.
13 On the arm of a weather vane, pointing north!
14 It rustles the leaves of apple trees and sets a rooster on a weather vane spinning.
15 It was the vane on the roof turning round and this change in the wind was the signal for a disastrous rain.
这是房顶上的风标在转动,风向的这种变化,就是一场特大暴雨的信号。
16 One of them is a real clock; the other looks like a clock but is really a weather vane, and the hands swing in the wind.
17 There is a vane on top of the building.
在大楼的顶端有一只风信旗。
18 Music is a vane to a party.
音乐是一个宴会的风向标。
19 The prevalence of blogs has become the new weather vane of the internet age.
博客热已经成为网络时代新的风向标。
20 Joseph had never been this close to a weather vane, and he was surprised by how large it was.