beetle
英 ['biːt(ə)l]
- vi. 急忙来回;突出
- vt. 用槌打
- n. 甲虫;大槌
- n. (Beetle)人名;(英)比特尔
CET6+ TEM4 CET6
1. 披头士乐队(The Beatles)就是甲壳虫乐队。
- beetle
- beetle: English has three separate words beetle. The commonest, beetle the insect, comes from Old English bitula, which was a derivative of the verb bītan ‘bite’: beetle hence means etymologically ‘the biter’. Beetle ‘hammer’, now largely restricted to various technical contexts, is also Old English: the earliest English form, bētel, goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *bautilaz, a derivative of the verb *bautan, from which English gets beat (the cognate Old Norse beytill meant ‘penis’).
The adjective beetle [14], as in ‘beetle brows’, and its related verb are of unknown origin, although it has been speculated that there is some connection with the tufted antennae of certain species of beetle, which may suggest eyebrows.
=> bite; beat - beetle (n.1)
- type of insect, Old English bitela "beetle," literally "little biter," from bitel "biting," related to bitan "to bite" (see bite). As a nickname for the original Volkswagen car, 1946, translating German Käfer.
- beetle (v.)
- "project, overhang," c. 1600, back-formation from bitelbrouwed "grim-browed, sullen" (mid-14c.), from bitel "sharp-edged, sharp" (c. 1200), probably a compound from Old English *bitol "biting, sharp," related to bite, + brow, which in Middle English meant "eyebrow," not "forehead." Meaning "to overhang dangerously" (of cliffs, etc.) is from c. 1600. Related: Beetled; beetling.
- beetle (n.2)
- beating tool, Old English bietel, from Proto-Germanic *bautilo-z, from *bautan "to beat" (see beat (v.)).
- 1. a rare species of beetle
- 一种稀有甲虫
来自《权威词典》
- 2. He saw a shiny green beetle on a leaf.
- 我看见树叶上有一只闪闪发光的绿色甲虫.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 3. A firefly is a type of beetle.
- 萤火虫是一种甲虫.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 4. Look at the beautiful beetle!
- 看那只漂亮的甲虫!
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 5. He trod the golden beetle underfoot.
- 他把一只金色的甲虫踩在脚下.
来自《简明英汉词典》