Vampire
['væmpaɪə]
解释:
(noun.) (folklore) a corpse that rises at night to drink the blood of the living.
录入:欧文--From WordNet
解释:
(n.) A blood-sucking ghost; a soul of a dead person superstitiously believed to come from the grave and wander about by night sucking the blood of persons asleep, thus causing their death. This superstition is now prevalent in parts of Eastern Europe, and was especially current in Hungary about the year 1730.
(n.) Fig.: One who lives by preying on others; an extortioner; a bloodsucker.
(n.) Either one of two or more species of South American blood-sucking bats belonging to the genera Desmodus and Diphylla. These bats are destitute of molar teeth, but have strong, sharp cutting incisors with which they make punctured wounds from which they suck the blood of horses, cattle, and other animals, as well as man, chiefly during sleep. They have a caecal appendage to the stomach, in which the blood with which they gorge themselves is stored.
(n.) Any one of several species of harmless tropical American bats of the genus Vampyrus, especially V. spectrum. These bats feed upon insects and fruit, but were formerly erroneously supposed to suck the blood of man and animals. Called also false vampire.
录入:索尔
同义词及近义词:
n. [1]. Parasite, bloodsucker.[2]. (Zoöl.) Vampire-bat.
编辑:鲁弗斯
解释:
n. in eastern Europe an accursed body which cannot rest in the kindly earth but nightly leaves its grave to suck the blood of sleeping men: an extortioner.—n. Vam′pire-bat the name of several species of bats all supposed to suck blood—the real blood-suckers only in Central and South America attacking cattle horses and sometimes human beings asleep.—adj. Vampir′ic.—n. Vam′pirism the actions of a vampire or the practice of blood-sucking: extortion.
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