noose
英 [nuːs]
美 [nus]
- n. 套索;束缚;绞刑
- vt. 用套索捉;使落入圈套
GRE
noose 套索来自拉丁语nodus,节,结,词源同net.引申词义网,套索。
- noose
- noose: [15] The notion underlying the word noose is of a ‘knot’, rather than of a ‘loop of rope made with a knot’. The word comes from nos or nous, the Old French descendant of Latin nodus ‘knot’. This was the source of English node [16], of course, and of the diminutive form nodule [16], but it has also made a couple of less obvious contributions to English: dénouement [18], which comes via a French word denoting literally the ‘untying of a knot’, and newel [14] ‘staircase post’, which was borrowed from Old French nouel ‘knob’, a descendant of the medieval Latin diminutive nōdellus.
=> dénouement, newel, node, nodule - noose (n.)
- mid-15c., perhaps from Old French nos or cognate Old Provençal nous "knot," from Latin nodus "knot" (see net (n.)). Rare before c. 1600.
- 1. The rebels are tightening the noose around the capital.
- 叛乱分子正在收紧对首都的包围。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. His debts were a noose around his neck.
- 债务就像套在他脖子上的一条套索。
来自《权威词典》
- 3. Put one's head in a noose.
- 自套绞索.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 4. They tied a noose round her neck.
- 他们在她脖子上系了一个活扣.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 5. He cut the rope then and went astern to noose the tail.
- 然后他割下一截绳子,走到船梢去套住鱼尾巴.
来自英汉文学 - 老人与海
[ noose 造句 ]