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fledge

英 [fled?] 美[fl?d?]
  • vi. 長(zhǎng)羽毛
  • vt. 裝上羽毛

暢通詞匯GRE

詞態(tài)變化


第三人稱單數(shù):?fledges;過(guò)去式:?fledged;過(guò)去分詞:?fledged;現(xiàn)在分詞:?fledging;

助記提示


1、fly => fledge. lay => ledge.
2、1、fly + -edge => fledge. lay + -edge => ledge.
3、含義:having the feathers, fit to fly.

英文詞源


fledge
fledge: [16] The notion underlying fledge is the ‘a(chǎn)bility to fly’. Historically, the idea of ‘having feathers’ is simply a secondary development of that underlying notion. The verb comes from an obsolete adjective fledge ‘feathered’, which goes back ultimately to a pre-historic West Germanic *fluggja (source also of German flügge ‘fledged’). This was derived from a variant of the base which produced English fly.

There is no immediate connection with fletcher ‘a(chǎn)rrowmaker’ [14], despite the formal resemblance and the semantic connection with ‘putting feathered flights on arrows’, but further back in time there may be a link. Fletcher came from Old French flechier, a derivative of fleche ‘a(chǎn)rrow’. A possible source for this was an unrecorded Frankish *fliugika, which, like fledge, could be traceable back to the same Germanic ancestor as that of English fly.

=> fly
fledge (v.)
"to acquire feathers," 1560s, from Old English adjective *-flycge (Kentish -flecge; in unfligge "featherless," glossing Latin implumes) "having the feathers developed, fit to fly," from Proto-Germanic *flugja- "ready to fly" (cognates: Middle Dutch vlugge, Low German flügge), from PIE *pleuk- "to fly" (see fletcher). Meaning "bring up a bird" (until it can fly on its own) is from 1580s. Related: Fledged; fledging.

雙語(yǔ)例句


1. Those people should accuse of using living animals like chickens or rabbits fledge boa.
用活的動(dòng)物,例如小雞或者兔子來(lái)喂養(yǎng)蟒蛇的人應(yīng)該被譴責(zé)。

來(lái)自辭典例句