toe
英 [təʊ]
美 [to]
- n. 脚趾;足尖
- vt. 用脚尖走;以趾踏触
- vi. 动脚尖;用足尖跳舞
- n. (Toe)人名;(布基)托埃;(缅)梭;(朝)堆;(日)土江 (姓)
CET4 TEM4 考 研 TOEFL CET6
1. 脚踝(ankle),脚后跟(heel),小腿(shin),大腿(thigh),膝盖(lap)。
toe 脚趾来自古英语 ta,脚趾,缩写自 Proto-Germanic*taihwo,脚趾,来自 PIE*deik,指出,展示,词源 同 digit,手指,数字。
- toe
- toe: [OE] Many European languages use the same word for ‘finger’ and ‘toe’ (Spanish dedo, for example, and Russian and Polish palec), and English toe may have originated in such a dualpurpose term. Its prehistoric Germanic ancestor was *taikhwōn, and it has been speculated that this may be related to Latin digitus ‘finger, toe’ (source of English digit). Other descendants of the Germanic form include German zehe, Dutch tee, Swedish tåa, and Danish taa.
=> digit - toe (n.)
- Old English ta "toe" (plural tan), contraction of *tahe (Mercian tahæ), from Proto-Germanic *taihwo (cognates: Old Norse ta, Old Frisian tane, Middle Dutch te, Dutch teen (perhaps originally a plural), Old High German zecha, German Zehe "toe"). Perhaps originally meaning "fingers" as well (many PIE languages still use one word to mean both fingers and toes), and thus from PIE root *deik- "to show" (see diction).
Þo stode hii I-armed fram heued to þe ton. [Robert of Gloucester, "Chronicle," c. 1300]
The old plural survived regionally into Middle English as tan, ton. To be on (one's) toes "alert, eager" is recorded from 1921. To step on (someone's) toes in the figurative sense "give offense" is from late 14c. Toe-hold "support for the toe of a boot in climbing" is from 1880. - toe (v.)
- "touch or reach with the toes," 1813, from toe (n.). First recorded in expression toe the mark, which seems to be nautical in origin.
The chief mate ... marked a line on the deck, brought the two boys up to it, making them "toe the mark." [R.H. Dana, "Two Years Before the Mast," 1840]
Related: Toed; toeing.
- 1. He's one of the politicians that wouldn't toe the party line.
- 他是不肯服从政党路线的几个政客之一。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. I kicked a dustbin very hard and broke my toe.
- 我狠狠地踢了一脚垃圾箱,结果脚趾骨折了。
来自柯林斯例句
- 3. They were sensibly dressed from top to toe in rain gear.
- 他们从头到脚都用雨具捂得严严实实,非常明智。
来自柯林斯例句
- 4. He was dressed in white from head to toe.
- 他从头到脚穿了一身白色。
来自柯林斯例句
- 5. Redman broke a toe in training.
- 雷德曼在训练中折断了一根脚趾。
来自柯林斯例句
[ toe 造句 ]