久青草国产手机视频免费观看_毛片网站是多少_亚洲视频中文_一区二区高清在线

wallop

英 ['w?l?p] 美['wɑl?p]
  • vt. 猛擊;痛打;擊潰
  • vi. 猛沖;顛簸;沸騰
  • n. 沖擊力;重擊;快感
  • n. (Wallop)人名;(泰)旺洛;(英)沃洛普

暢通詞匯GRE

詞態變化


復數:?wallops;第三人稱單數:?wallops;過去式:?walloped;過去分詞:?walloped;現在分詞:?walloping;

助記提示


1. well + lope, leap => wallop, literally "jump well, run well".
2. 聯想記憶:wall + lope => wallop: 跑著撞向墻。

中文詞源


wallop 猛擊

來自短語well leap,快跑,奔馳,該詞義見其拼寫異體詞gallop,由快跑引申詞義濺水的聲音,猛擊。

英文詞源


wallop
wallop: [14] Wallop and gallop are doublets – that is to say, they began life as the same word, but have gradually drifted apart. Their ultimate common source was Frankish *walahlaupan ‘jump well’. This was a compound verb formed from *wala ‘well’ and *hlaupan ‘jump’, a relative of English leap. This was borrowed into Old French as galoper, which gave English gallop.

But the northern dialect of Old French took it over as waloper, which is where English wallop comes from. This was originally used for ‘gallop’ (‘Came there king Charlemagne, as fast as his horse might wallop’. William Caxton, Four Sons of Aymon 1489), but after the acquisition of gallop it began to go steadily downhill semantically, helped on its way perhaps by its sound, suggestive of hitting.

=> gallop
wallop (v.)
late 14c., "to gallop," possibly from Old North French *waloper (13c., Old French galoper), from Frankish compound *walalaupan "to run well" (compare Old High German wela "well," see well (adv.); and Old Low Franconian loupon "to run, leap," from Proto-Germanic *hlaupan; see leap (v.)). The meaning "to thrash" (1820) and the noun meaning "heavy blow" (1823) may be separate developments, of imitative origin. Related: Walloped; walloping.

雙語例句


1. Grenville took another wallop plumb on the jaw.
格倫維爾又受了一拳,正中下巴。

來自柯林斯例句

2. Down he went with a wallop!
他轟隆一聲摔倒了!

來自《現代英漢綜合大詞典》

3. With one brutal wallop, Clarke flattened him.
克拉克毫不留情地一拳把他打翻在地。

來自辭典例句

4. Phoenix: sign like a phoenix head on fly, a strong vision wallop.
鳳凰: 標志猶如一只鳳凰迎面飛來, 有很強的視覺沖擊力.

來自互聯網

5. It was Vodka, and it packed quite a wallop.
那是伏特加, 勁很足.

來自互聯網