foul
- adj. 犯規(guī)的;邪惡的;污穢的;淤塞的
- vt. 犯規(guī);弄臟;淤塞;纏住,妨害
- vi. 犯規(guī);腐爛;纏結(jié)
- n. 犯規(guī);纏繞
- adv. 違反規(guī)則地,不正當(dāng)?shù)?/li>
詞態(tài)變化
助記提示
deep 深的 depth 深度
full 滿(mǎn)的 fill 裝滿(mǎn)
foul 臟的 filth 臟東西
hale 強(qiáng)壯的 heal 治愈
high 高的 height 高度
hot 熱的 heat 熱
long 長(zhǎng)的 length 長(zhǎng)度
proud 驕傲的 pride 驕傲
strong 強(qiáng)壯的,有力的 strength 強(qiáng)度,力
2. 諧音“犯哦,否哦”----犯規(guī)了哦,你犯了規(guī),裁判吹哨子,對(duì)你的行為表示否定、不認(rèn)可。
3. filth => foul.
中文詞源
來(lái)自PIE*pu, 腐爛,發(fā)臭,詞源同pus, putrid. 可能來(lái)自人們聞到臭味時(shí)發(fā)出的聲音。
英文詞源
- foul
- foul: [OE] The underlying meaning of foul is probably ‘rotten, putrid’, with overtones of ‘evilsmelling’. It goes back to an Indo-European *pu-, which may originally have been inspired by the same reaction as produced the English exclamation of disgust at a bad smell, pooh. Amongst its other off-spring were Latin pūs, source of English pus, purulent, and supurate, and Latin putridus, source of English putrid.
Its Germanic descendant was *fu-, on which the adjective *fūlaz was based. This produced German faul ‘rotten, lazy’, Dutch vuil ‘dirty’, and English foul, and also the derived noun filth [OE]. Defile ‘make dirty’ is not directly related, but its form was influenced by the now obsolete verb befile, which was connected with foul.
=> filth, pus, putrid, suppurate - foul (adj.)
- Old English ful "rotten, unclean, vile, corrupt, offensive to the senses," from Proto-Germanic *fulaz (cognates: Old Saxon and Old Frisian ful, Middle Dutch voul, Dutch vuil, Old High German fül, German faul, Gothic füls), from PIE *pu- (2) "to rot, decay," perhaps from the sound made in reaction to smelling something bad (see pus).
Old English ful occasionally meant "ugly" (as contrasted with f?ger (adj.), modern fair (adj.)), and this sense became frequent in Middle English. The cognate in Swedish is the usual word for "ugly." Of weather from mid-14c. In the sporting sense of "irregular, unfair, contrary to established rule or practice" it is first attested 1797, though foul play is recorded from mid-15c. Baseball sense of "out of play" attested by 1860. - foul (v.)
- Old English fulian "to become foul, rot, decay," from ful (see foul (adj.)). Transitive meaning "make foul, pollute" is from c. 1200. Meaning "become entangled" (chiefly nautical) is from 1832, probably from foul (adj.) in the sense "obstructed by anything fixed or attached" (late 15c.). "A term generally used in contrast to clear, and implies entangled, embarrassed or contrary to: e.g. to foul the helm, to find steerage impracticable owing to the rudder becoming entangled with rope or other gear" [Sir Geoffrey Callender, "Sea Passages," 1943]. Related: Fouled; fouling. Hence also foul anchor (1769), one with the slack of the cable twisted round the stock or a fluke; noted by 1832 as naval insignia.
雙語(yǔ)例句
- 1. A series of technical foul-ups delayed the launch of the new product.
- 一系列技術(shù)問(wèn)題延誤了新產(chǎn)品的上市。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
- 2. Collins was in a foul mood even before the interviews began.
- 柯林斯在采訪(fǎng)還沒(méi)開(kāi)始時(shí)就暴躁不安起來(lái)。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
- 3. One of the judges thought it was a foul throw.
- 有個(gè)裁判認(rèn)為投球犯規(guī).
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
- 4. He picked up his first booking for a 45th-minute foul on Bull.
- 他因?yàn)樵诒荣愡M(jìn)行到第45分鐘時(shí)對(duì)公牛隊(duì)犯規(guī)而被第一次記名警告。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
- 5. Steve Vickers was yellow-carded for a foul on Hunt.
- 史蒂夫·維克斯因?qū)嗵胤敢?guī)被出示黃牌。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句