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 English ['ɪŋglɪʃ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 英语

a. 英文的, 英国人的


  1. Do you speak English?
    你会说英语吗?
  2. Have you brought your English book with you?
    你带英语书了吗?
  3. In English law, an accused man is presumed (to be) innocent until he is proved guilty.
    根据英国的法律, 被告未经证明有罪即认为是清白的.


english
[ noun ]
  1. an Indo-European language belonging to the West Germanic branch; the official language of Britain and the United States and most of the commonwealth countries

  2. <noun.communication>
  3. the people of England

  4. <noun.person>
  5. the discipline that studies the English language and literature

  6. <noun.cognition>
  7. (sports) the spin given to a ball by striking it on one side or releasing it with a sharp twist

  8. <noun.event>
[ adj ]
  1. of or relating to or characteristic of England or its culture or people

  2. <adj.pert>
    English history
    the English landed aristocracy
    English literature
  3. of or relating to the English language

  4. <adj.pert>


English \Eng"lish\, n.
1. Collectively, the people of England; English people or
persons.

2. The language of England or of the English nation, and of
their descendants in America, India, and other countries.

Note: The English language has been variously divided into
periods by different writers. In the division most
commonly recognized, the first period dates from about
450 to 1150. This is the period of full inflection, and
is called Anglo-Saxon, or, by many recent writers, Old
English. The second period dates from about 1150 to
1550 (or, if four periods be recognized, from about
1150 to 1350), and is called Early English, Middle
English, or more commonly (as in the usage of this
book), Old English. During this period most of the
inflections were dropped, and there was a great
addition of French words to the language. The third
period extends from about 1350 to 1550, and is Middle
English. During this period orthography became
comparatively fixed. The last period, from about 1550,
is called Modern English.

3. A kind of printing type, in size between Pica and Great
Primer. See {Type}.

Note: The type called English.

4. (Billiards) A twist or spinning motion given to a ball in
striking it that influences the direction it will take
after touching a cushion or another ball.

{The King's English} or {The Queen's English}. See under
{King}.


English \Eng"lish\, a. [AS. Englisc, fr. Engle, Angle, Engles,
Angles, a tribe of Germans from the southeast of Sleswick, in
Denmark, who settled in Britain and gave it the name of
England. Cf. {Anglican}.]
Of or pertaining to England, or to its inhabitants, or to the
present so-called Anglo-Saxon race.

{English bond} (Arch.) See 1st {Bond}, n., 8.

{English breakfast tea}. See {Congou}.

{English horn}. (Mus.) See {Corno Inglese}.

{English walnut}. (Bot.) See under {Walnut}.


English \Eng"lish\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Englished}; p. pr. &
vb. n. {Englishing}.]
1. To translate into the English language; to Anglicize;
hence, to interpret; to explain.

Those gracious acts . . . may be Englished more
properly, acts of fear and dissimulation. --Milton.

Caxton does not care to alter the French forms and
words in the book which he was Englishing. --T. L.
K. Oliphant.

2. (Billiards) To strike (the cue ball) in such a manner as
to give it in addition to its forward motion a spinning
motion, that influences its direction after impact on
another ball or the cushion. [U.S.]

  1. One day American tourists will arrive at Heathrow Airport and find that English taxi drivers no longer speak English, or know where to find back streets and the English bed and breakfast will call itself a motel.
  2. One day American tourists will arrive at Heathrow Airport and find that English taxi drivers no longer speak English, or know where to find back streets and the English bed and breakfast will call itself a motel.
  3. One day American tourists will arrive at Heathrow Airport and find that English taxi drivers no longer speak English, or know where to find back streets and the English bed and breakfast will call itself a motel.
  4. In this, medieval chivalry and the last hurrah of English military heroism are conjoined.
  5. Five minutes later his tutor was able to assure me that the sixth-former in question would be reading English at Cambridge. That academic intensity will deter some parents, and attract many.
  6. BRITAIN'S BIGGEST thread maker is to be created by the merger of Coats Viyella's J&P Coats division with English Sewing, which CV acquired last May, when it bought Tootal after a bitter takeover battle.
  7. He died in 1915 when he was halfway through the letter `S.' The new edition also has been computerized, with the vocabulary of English since 1150 A.D. on a single data base to be available by home computer.
  8. A successful touchdown on Santorini (Thira) would more than triple the exisiting record of 22.5 miles for straight-line human-powered flight, set by Bryan Allen piloting the Gossamer Albatross across the English channel in 1979.
  9. The English players face expulsion from international cricket for five years for taking part in the tour.
  10. Overcoming traditional English reserve, many suburbanites shared cars or were seen hitchhiking to work.
  11. Zoran is the more exotic American equivalent, available at Browns in London, and English Eccentrics has had a great success with its classical motif devore chiffon and velvet. Evening transparency need not be expensive.
  12. Likewise, the Jimmy Dean company is pushing English muffins topped with ham and cheese or sausage.
  13. Jack Lindsay, a prolific Australian man of letters and lifelong Marxist, died at his home in the English university city of Cambridge.
  14. The messages, in Arabic and English, were published by the leftist Beirut As-Safir newspaper as a paid advertisement, just a day after McCarthy started his fifth year as a hostage.
  15. The notebook was part of a sale Thursday of English literary and historical manuscripts and books that totaled $2.13 million, Sotheby's said.
  16. Oct. 31 NRC Handelsblad, Amsterdam, Netherlands, on the English Channel tunnel: The Channel Tunnel is a tangible proof of the unification of Europe.
  17. A lot of English wine should never have been made, admits the head of the English Vineyards Association.
  18. A lot of English wine should never have been made, admits the head of the English Vineyards Association.
  19. He joined the university's English faculty in 1953 and became a full professor in 1961.
  20. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Bates and taught English and history in Ashland, N.H., and Amesbury schools.
  21. Don't miss Paul Nash's painting of a typical scene in the battle _ contrails over the English countryside.
  22. We know we'll never meet again some sunny day, but we like to hear her promise, in pure Doris Day overlaid with a fine English intonation, that we will. Her position is clear.
  23. Rejected appeals by Hispanics challenging Florida's designation of English as the state's official language.
  24. "The Commies are our slaves now," said one Chinese merchant who learned his colloquial English from American GI customers during the war. "They need us more than we need them." But the change has not completely satisfied the Chinese.
  25. And there can be no surer sign of our sympathy than paying Summit Books, a subsidiary of Simon & Schuster Consumer Group, for a book by Paul Fussell, the University of Pennsylvania's Donald T. Regan professor of English.
  26. A Palestinian journalist who spoke on condition of anonymity said a Red Cross worker showed him one of two letters written in English by George.
  27. When Fanny, the beautiful teen-aged heroine, sails into Boston harbor, she hears church bells "very feeble, not like English bells."
  28. So now what is called for is an imaginative choice of chairman. Among those already on the board, one obvious candidate would be deputy chairman Herschel Post, an American so anglicised that a fellow board member had no idea Post was not English.
  29. "Right now, we have no job training or ESL (English as a Second Language) slots to put Armenian refugees in," said Joan Pinchuk, Los Angeles County's coordinator for refugee affairs.
  30. The desert town bloomed with cricket fields and English gardens.
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