Gore
[gɔː] or [ɡɔr]
解釋/意思:
(noun.) a piece of cloth that is generally triangular or tapering; used in making garments or umbrellas or sails.
(noun.) coagulated blood from a wound.
(noun.) Vice President of the United States under Bill Clinton (born in 1948).
(verb.) wound by piercing with a sharp or penetrating object or instrument.
(verb.) cut into gores; 'gore a skirt'.
汉娜錄入--From WordNet
解釋/意思:
(n.) Dirt; mud.
(n.) Blood; especially, blood that after effusion has become thick or clotted.
(v.) A wedgeshaped or triangular piece of cloth, canvas, etc., sewed into a garment, sail, etc., to give greater width at a particular part.
(v.) A small traingular piece of land.
(v.) One of the abatements. It is made of two curved lines, meeting in an acute angle in the fesse point.
(v. t.) To pierce or wound, as with a horn; to penetrate with a pointed instrument, as a spear; to stab.
(v. t.) To cut in a traingular form; to piece with a gore; to provide with a gore; as, to gore an apron.
卡特編輯
同義詞及近義詞:
n. [1]. Blood, clotted blood.[2]. Gusset, triangular piece (of cloth, &c.).
v. a. [1]. Stab, pierce.[2]. Piece with a gore.
整理:苏西
解釋/意思:
n. a triangular piece let into a garment to widen it: a triangular piece of land.—v.t. to shape like or furnish with gores: to pierce with anything pointed as a spear or horns.—n. Gor′ing a piece of cloth cut diagonally to increase its apparent width.—adj. cut gradually sloping so as to be broader at the clew than at the earing—of a sail.
n. clotted blood: blood.—adv. Gor′ily (Tenn.) in a gory or bloody manner or state.—adj. Gor′y covered with gore: bloody.—Gory dew a dark-red slimy film sometimes seen on damp walls and in shady places.
編輯:汤姆
娱乐性解釋/意思:
Blood. Shed daily in Chicago abattoirs but never spilled in French duels.
校對:洛丽塔
例句/造句/用法:
- Gore, Hilliard, and Lee, with whose conversation I was much pleased, and wished for more of it; but their stay with us was too short. 本傑明·佛蘭克林. 佛蘭克林自傳.
- There were traces of his gore in that spot, and I covered them with garden-mould from the eye of man. 查理斯·狄更斯. 遠大前程.
- I must dip my hand again and again in the basin of blood and water, and wipe away the trickling gore. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特. 簡·愛.
- His face turned black, the gore rushed from his mouth and nose, and dyed the grass a deep, dark red, as he staggered and fell. 查理斯·狄更斯. 匹克威克外傳.
- She happened this afternoon to be specially bilious and morose--as much disposed to gore as any vicious mother of the herd. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特. 雪麗.
- I think Captain Gore, and Lieutenant Judah, of the 4th infantry, were the others. 尤利西斯·格蘭特. U.S.格蘭特的個人回憶錄.
- He was surely not gored by a bull? 亞瑟·柯南·道爾. 福爾摩斯歸來記.
- Until he is gored, the woman said bitterly. 歐尼斯特·海明威. 喪鐘為誰而鳴.
- They are worse than a goring, for the injury is internal and it does not heal. 歐尼斯特·海明威. 喪鐘為誰而鳴.
- Always do they talk that way in their arrogance before a goring. 歐尼斯特·海明威. 喪鐘為誰而鳴.
- How many times have I heard matadors talk like that before they took a goring. 歐尼斯特·海明威. 喪鐘為誰而鳴.
- There is no doctor to operate if you take a goring. 歐尼斯特·海明威. 喪鐘為誰而鳴.
- But as to these terms, semi-family and semi-stranger, semi-goring and semi-boring, they form a state of things quite amusing in its impracticability. 查理斯·狄更斯. 小杜麗.
康斯坦丁校對