shuck
英 [ʃʌk]
美 [ʃʌk]
- n. 壳;外皮;荚;毫无价值的东西
- vt. 剥去
- vi. 剥去
- n. (Shuck)人名;(英)沙克
GRE
1. shell => shuck.
2. shack => shuck.
- shuck (v.)
- "to remove the shucks from," 1819, from or related to shuck (n.). Related: Shucked; shucking.
Many extended senses are from the notion of "stripping" an ear of corn, or from the capers associated with husking frolics; such as "to strip (off) one's clothes" (1848) and "to deceive, swindle, cheat, fool" (1959); phrase shucking and jiving "fooling, deceiving" is suggested from 1966, in U.S. black English, but compare shuck (v.) a slang term among "cool musicians" for "to improvise chords, especially to a piece of music one does not know" (1957), and shuck (n.) "a theft or fraud," in use by 1950s among U.S. blacks.
[B]lack senses probably fr[om] the fact that black slaves sang and shouted gleefully during corn-shucking season, and this behavior, along with lying and teasing, became a part of the protective and evasive behavior normally adopted towards white people in "traditional" race relations; the sense of "swindle" is perhaps related to the mid-1800s term to be shucked out, "be defeated, be denied victory," which suggests that the notion of stripping someone as an ear of corn is stripped may be basic in the semantics. ["Dictionary of American Slang"]
- shuck (n.)
- "husk, pod, shell," 1670s, of unknown origin. Compare shuck (v.). Later used in reference to the shells of oysters and clams (1872). Figurative as a type of something worthless from 1836.
- 1. On a good day, each employee will shuck 3,500 oysters.
- 天气晴好的时候,每位雇员一天能剥3,500只牡蛎。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. Shuck wicker skin, connect body to show white, call white wicker.
- 把柳条剥去皮, 通体呈白色, 就叫白柳条.
来自互联网
- 3. You must shuck off the bad habits of the past.
- 你们必须去掉过去的不良习惯.
来自互联网
- 4. Shuck your dirty shirt and put on a new one.
- 把你的脏衬衣脱了,换一件干净的.
来自互联网
- 5. I kept kicking and shaking my arms shuck my head.
- 我不断地蹬踢,挥舞双臂,晃动头脑.
来自互联网