stud

英 [stʌd] 美 [stʌd]
  • n. 种马;大头钉;饰纽;壁骨
  • vt. 散布;用许多饰钮等装饰
  • adj. 种马的;为配种而饲养的
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1. studding => 谐音“是大钉”----大头钉。
2. stand => stud.
3. "horse used for breeding, place where horses are kept for breeding".
4. like stallion.
5. from PIE root *sta- "to stand," with derivatives meaning "place or thing that is standing".
stud 耳钉,鼻钉,饰钉,鞋钉

来自古英语 studu,柱子,支撑,来自 Proto-Germanic*stud,柱子,来自 PIE*stu,变体形式自 PIE*sta,站立,词源同 stand,state.后用于指钉头,节,把,并引申词义耳钉,鼻钉等。

stud 种马

来自古英语 stod,种马,来自 Proto-Germanic*stodo,种马,来自 PIE*sta,站立,词源同 stand,stall.

stud
stud: Stud ‘place where horses are bred’ and stud ‘nail’ [OE] are different words. The former (like stable and stall) denotes etymologically a place where animals ‘stand’, in this case for breeding purposes. It comes from a prehistoric Germanic *stōtham, a derivative of the base *sta-, *stō- ‘stand’ (source also of English stand, and of steed [OE], which originally denoted a ‘male horse used for breeding’).

The use of the word for a ‘man who is highly active and proficient sexually’ dates from the end of the 19th century. The ancestry of stud ‘nail’ is not altogether clear, although it appears to be related to German stützen ‘support’. It originally meant ‘post, support’, a sense preserved in the building term stud ‘upright post to which boards are fixed’, and ‘nail’ (presumed to represent the same word) did not emerge until the 15th century.

=> stand, steed
stud (n.1)
"nailhead, knob," late 13c., from Old English studu "pillar, prop, post," from Proto-Germanic *stud- (cognates: Old Norse stoð "staff, stick," properly "stay," Middle High German stud, Old English stow "place"), from PIE *stu-, variant of root *sta- "to stand" (see stet). Sense expanded by late 14c. to include ornamental devices fixed in and projecting from a surface. From the Old English meaning comes the specific sense "one of the small beams of a building which form a basis for the walls."
stud (n.2)
"horse used for breeding," Old English stod "herd of horses, place where horses are kept for breeding," from Proto-Germanic *stodo (cognates: Old Norse stoð, Middle Low German stod, Old High German stuot "herd of horses," German Stute "mare"), from PIE root *sta- "to stand," with derivatives meaning "place or thing that is standing" (cognates: Old Church Slavonic stado "herd," Lithuanian stodas "a drove of horses;" see stet). Sense of "male horse kept for breeding" is first recorded 1803; meaning "man who is highly active and proficient sexually" is attested from 1895; that of "any young man" is from 1929. Stud-poker (1864) is said to be from stud-horse poker, but that phrase is not found earlier than 1879.
stud (v.)
c. 1500, "set with studs;" 1560s in studded with "as though sprinkled with nails with conspicuous heads;" from stud (n.1).
1. He runs stud farm in Ireland.
他在爱尔兰经营一家种马场.

来自《简明英汉词典》

2. He played only draw and stud.
他只玩抽牌(draw) 和沙蟹牌(stud)游戏.

来自互联网

3. He was voted horse of the year and then was retired to stud.
这匹马被评为年度冠军后就退役成了种马。

来自柯林斯例句

4. I'm going to put the horse out to stud.
我打算把这匹马用来配种.

来自辞典例句

5. Mark thinks he is a real stud.
马克认为自己是非常性感的男人.

来自辞典例句

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