英:[ˈpɒntʃəʊ]
美:[ˈpɑntʃoʊ]
英:[ˈpɒntʃəʊ]
美:[ˈpɑntʃoʊ]
pon·cho
pan cho
复数:ponchos
noun
a wrap resembling a blanket with a hole in the center for the head.
a similarly shaped cape, usu. of waterproof material, worn as a raincoat.
"Poncho"是一种南美洲的类似毯子的披风或宽松服装,始于1717年,源自美洲西班牙语 poncho,来自阿劳卡尼亚(智利)的 pontho “羊毛织品”,可能受到西班牙语 poncho(形容词)的影响,变体为 pocho “褪色的,褪色的”。
American Spanish, from Mapuche
The first known use of poncho was in 1717
pondweednoun
any of several water plants with leaves that float or are under the water and spikes of greenish flowers
pondnoun
a body of water usually smaller than a lake
pondnoun
a body of water usually smaller than a lake
ponderousadjective
very heavy
unpleasantly dull
fell asleep during the ponderous speech
ponderousadjective
very heavy
unpleasantly dull
fell asleep during the ponderous speech
ponderousadjective
very heavy
unpleasantly dull
fell asleep during the ponderous speech
ponderverb
to consider carefully
ponderverb
to consider carefully
pondnoun
a body of water usually smaller than a lake
ponchonoun
a cloak like a blanket with a slit in the middle for the head
a waterproof garment like a poncho
1 The sour smells of wood smoke and wool and cows cling to him, saturating his poncho, his rough skin.
2 The poncho is made of nylon.
这雨披是用尼龙制造的.
3 She hadn’t given her poncho to anybody to wrap a body in, or stepped over a dying kid.
4 Santiago wears white pants, a white shirt, blue poncho, and a stiff new sombrero.
5 In his hooded poncho, everything caked with mud, the boy’s face was impossible to make out.
6 There was a single breath of stillness before a soldier in a black rain poncho rapped on the bus door.
7 Some of the bodies were wrapped in ponchos, some weren’t.
8 It reminded her of the time in fourth grade when Bethany Williams had said her poncho was “really cool” before dissolving into mean- spirited giggles with the other girls.
9 Because the nights were cold, and because the monsoons were wet, each carried a green plastic poncho that could be used as a raincoat or groundsheet or makeshift tent.
10 They carry ponchos, duffels, crates; a few tote brightly colored suitcases claimed from who knows where.
11 When it came time to leave, little Miguel put on a poncho and held tight to his sister’s hand.
12 It was mid-tide, so I was not much wet when I made land and was otherwise dry inside my poncho.
13 Another simple lean-to shelter can be made by tying two opposite corners of the poncho to trees.
把斗篷的两个对角系到树上,可以建一个单坡屋顶容身之处。
14 When the sun was only a band of burning red seen through the trees, Dicey took out the ponchos and spread them on the ground, rolling on them to crush the undergrowth beneath.
15 Inside the barn, we shed our ponchos and, armed with a curry comb and a dandy brush, each took a horse, Cinders for me, a roan named Clover, in the next stall, for Miss Maggie.
16 Useful items include comfortable walking shoes, a rain poncho if viewing near a fall’s base, cloths to dry lenses and cameras, a tripod for longer camera or smartphone exposures and a headlamp or flashlight (red-light settings are preferable for not disrupting night vision).
17 When the fire died out, Lieutenant Cross pulled his poncho over his shoulders and ate breakfast from a can.
18 But it was a war, and he had his orders, so they’d set up a perimeter and crawled under their ponchos and tried to settle in for the night.
19 Both were dressed as Muggles, though very inexpertly: The man with the watch wore a tweed suit with thigh-length galoshes; his colleague, a kilt and a poncho.
20 He wasn’t wearing no dress or nothing like that, but he had on some skin-tight black leggings and a black kind-of poncho.