cope

英 [kəʊp] 美 [kop]
  • vi. 处理;对付;竞争
  • n. 长袍
  • n. (Cope)人名;(英)科普;(西)科佩
CET4 TEM4 考 研 CET6
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1. 谐音“靠谱”----她处理事情很靠谱。
2. coup <=====> cope.
3. cap, cape, chapel => cope.
4. cap => cape.
5. => 'come to blows with' and 'contend with' to 'handle successfully'.
6. It may ultimately be descended from Latin caput 'head'.
7. literally, "hit, punch, blow".
8. 他办事,我放心。
cope 对付,处理

来自拉丁词colp, 击,打,来自PIE*skel, 砍,劈,词源同scissor, cleave. 词义由击,打到对付,处理。

cope
cope: There are two distinct words cope in English. The now more familiar one, ‘deal with’ [14], comes from Old French coper, and originally meant ‘hit, punch’. The Old French verb was a derivative of the noun cop ‘blow’, which in turn was a variant of colp (from which modern French gets coup, borrowed into English in the 18th century). This came via medieval Latin colpus (ultimate source of English coppice) and Latin colaphus from Greek kólaphos ‘blow, punch’.

The modern English sense of the verb developed via ‘come to blows with’ and ‘contend with’ to ‘handle successfully’. Cope ‘cloak’ [13] was borrowed from medieval Latin cāpa, a variant of cappa, which produced English cap and cape as well as chapel and chaperone. It may ultimately be descended from Latin caput ‘head’.

=> coppice, coup; cap, cape, chapel, chaperon
cope (v.)
late 14c., "come to blows with," from Old French couper, earlier colper "hit, punch," from colp "a blow" (see coup). Meaning evolved 17c. into "handle successfully," perhaps influenced by obsolete cope "to traffic" (15c.-17c.), a word in North Sea trade, from the Flemish version of the Germanic source of English cheap. Related: Coped; coping.
1. Somehow Karin managed to cope with the demands of her career.
卡琳设法达到了其职业的要求。

来自柯林斯例句

2. Depression lowers the human ability to cope with disease.
抑郁症会降低人体对疾病的抵抗力。

来自柯林斯例句

3. We needed to reskill our workforce to cope with massive technological change.
我们得让工人学习新技能,以应对巨大的技术变革。

来自柯林斯例句

4. When the children misbehaved she was unable to cope.
孩子们调皮捣蛋的时候她管不了。

来自柯林斯例句

5. He was thick-skinned enough to cope with her taunts.
他脸皮厚,不怕她嘲弄。

来自柯林斯例句