sirloin
英 ['sɜːlɒɪn]
美 ['sɝlɔɪn]
1. sur- "upper" => sir- + loin => sirloin.
2. => upper loin.
sirloin 牛上腰肉sir-,改写自 sur-,在上,loin,腰部,腰肉。来自民间传说,据说因这块牛肉味道鲜美,17 世纪 英格兰国王詹姆士一世手指长剑,将这块牛肉封为爵士,因而拼写也随之俗化。
- sirloin
- sirloin: [16] One of the oldest of etymological chestnuts is that sirloin got its name because a particular English king found the joint of beef so excellent that he knighted it. The monarch in question has been variously identified as Henry VIII, James I, and Charles II, but while the first of these is chronologically possible, in fact the story has no truth in it at all. The more sober facts are that the word was borrowed from Old French *surloigne, a compound formed from sur ‘above’ and loigne ‘loin’ (source of English loin). The spelling sir- (first recorded in the 18th century) no doubt owes something to the ‘knighting’ story.
=> loin, lumbar - sirloin (n.)
- early 15c., surloine, from Middle French surlonge, literally "upper part of the loin," from sur "over, above" (see sur-) + longe "loin," from Old French loigne (see loin).
English spelling with sir- dates from 1620s, by folk-etymology supposed to be because the cut of beef was "knighted" by an English king for its superiority, a tale variously told of Henry VIII, James I, and Charles II. The story dates to 1655.
- 1. I order black pepper sirloin without any paprika.
- 我叫的是黑椒牛腰肉,不要放红椒.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 2. 'sirloin steak is twenty - two cents. "
- " 牛腰肉2毛5分1镑. ”
来自英汉文学 - 嘉莉妹妹
- 3. Sirloin steak with mushrooms -- one twenty - five. "
- 嫩牛排配蘑菇 --1 美元2角5分.
来自英汉文学 - 嘉莉妹妹
- 4. 'sirloin with mushrooms,'said Drouet.'stuffed tomatoes. "
- “ 嫩牛排配蘑菇, "杜洛埃说道, " 西红柿塞肉. ”
来自英汉文学 - 嘉莉妹妹
- 5. I will have sirloin steak and salmon for the lady.
- 我要沙朗牛排,姐要鲑鱼.
来自辞典例句
[ sirloin 造句 ]