big

英 [bɪɡ]      美 [bɪɡ]
  • adj. 大的;重要的;量大的
  • adv. 大量地;顺利;夸大地
  • n. (Big)人名;(土)比格
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记忆“big”这个单词,可以将其与“biggest”的“est”末尾联系起来。想象一个不断扩展、最终变得非常大的“B”形状,就像“biggest”中“est”的不断升级,代表“大”。这样,通过视觉联想,“big”这个词的大小感就会更加深刻。

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big 大的

词源不详。

big
big: [13] Big is one of the notorious mystery words of English etymology – extremely common in the modern language, but of highly dubious origin. In its earliest use in English it meant ‘powerful, strong’, and it is not really until the 16th century that we get unequivocal examples of it in the modern sense ‘large’. It occurs originally in northern texts, only slowly spreading south, which suggests that it may be of Scandinavian origin; some have compared Norwegian dialect bugge ‘important man’.
big (adj.)
c. 1300, northern England dialect, "powerful, strong," of obscure origin, possibly from a Scandinavian source (compare Norwegian dialectal bugge "great man"). Old English used micel in many of the same senses. Meaning "of great size" is late 14c.; that of "grown up" is attested from 1550s. Sense of "important" is from 1570s. Meaning "generous" is U.S. colloquial by 1913.

Big band as a musical style is from 1926. Slang big head "conceit" is first recorded 1850. Big business "large commercial firms collectively" is 1905; big house "penitentiary" is U.S. underworld slang first attested 1915 (in London, "a workhouse," 1851). In financial journalism, big ticket items so called from 1956. Big lie is from Hitler's grosse Lüge.
1. In this sentence, the word BIG is in capitals.
本句中BIG一词用的是大写字母.
2. The wind was bouncing the branches of the big oak trees.
一棵棵高大橡树的枝条随风摇摆。
3. Big credits were given to East Germany by successive West German governments.
历届西德政府给予东德大量的贷款。
4. Bake some big red peppers and hollow them out.
将几个大红甜椒烤一烤,再把它们掏空。
5. Leather jeans that are too big will make you look larger.
过于肥大的皮裤会让你看起来块头更大。

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