bombast
英 [ˈbɒm.bæst]
美 [ˈbɑːm.bæst]
bombast 吹嘘来自拉丁词bombyx, 丝,丝棉。吹嘘义可能来自bomb。
- bombast
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bombast: [16] Bombast originally meant ‘cotton-wool’, especially as used for stuffing or padding clothes, upholstery, etc; hence, before the end of the 16th century, it had been transferred metaphorically to ‘pompous or turgid language’. The ultimate source of the word was Greek bómbux ‘silk, silkworm’, which came into English via Latin bombyx, bombax (source also of English bombazine [16]) and Old French bombace. The earliest English form was bombace, but it soon developed an additional final -t.
=> bombazine
- bombast (n.)
- 1560s, "cotton padding," corrupted from earlier bombace (1550s), from Old French bombace "cotton, cotton wadding," from Late Latin bombacem, accusative of bombax "cotton, 'linteorum aut aliae quaevis quisquiliae,' " a corruption and transferred use of Latin bombyx "silk," from Greek bombyx "silk, silkworm" (which also came to mean "cotton" in Medieval Greek), from some oriental word, perhaps related to Iranian pambak (modern panba) or Armenian bambok, perhaps ultimately from a PIE root meaning "to twist, wind." From stuffing and padding for clothes or upholstery, meaning extended to "pompous, empty speech" (1580s).
Also from the same source are Swedish bomull, Danish bomuld "cotton," and, via Turkish forms, Modern Greek mpampaki, Rumanian bumbac, Serbo-Croatian pamuk. German baumwolle "cotton" is probably from the Latin word but altered by folk-etymology to look like "tree wool." Polish bawełna, Lithuanian bovelna are partial translations from German.
- 1. There was no bombast or conceit in his speech.
- 他的演讲并没有夸大其词和自吹自擂。
- 2. But Yasha realized that Wolsky's bombast was unnecessary.
- 但是雅夏看出沃尔斯基是在无中生有地吹嘘.
- 3. And even Watts, for all his bombast, can be quite self - critical.
- 这使得瓦特对他自己的夸大言辞也做了 自我批评 .
- 4. His speech was full of bombast.
- 他的讲演通篇是夸夸其谈.
- 5. He also knows that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's threat wipe Israel off the map is bombast.
- 他还知道伊朗总统内贾德威胁把以色列从地图上抹掉的说法只是吹牛.