cannon
英 [ˈkæn.ən]
美 [ˈkæn.ən]
- n. 大炮;加农炮;榴弹炮;机关炮
- vi. 炮轰;开炮
- vt. 炮轰
- n. (Cannon)人名;(英、葡)坎农
音译“加农炮”。
cannon 大炮来自cane, 芦苇。-on, 大词后缀。因形如大芦苇而得名。
- cannon
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cannon: English has two different words cannon, neither of which can for certain be connected with canon. The earlier, ‘large gun’ [16], comes via French canon from Italian cannone ‘large tube’, which was a derivative of canna ‘tube, pipe’, from Latin canna (source of English cane). Cannon as in ‘cannon off something’ [19] is originally a billiards term, and was an alteration (by association with cannon the gun) of an earlier carom (the form still used in American English).
This came from Spanish carombola, a kind of fruit fancifully held to resemble a billiard ball, whose ultimate source was probably an unrecorded *karambal in the Marathi language of south central India.
=> cane; carom
- cannon (n.)
- c. 1400, "tube for projectiles," from Anglo-French canon, Old French canon (14c.), from Italian cannone "large tube, barrel," augmentative of Latin canna "reed, tube" (see cane (n.)). Meaning "large ordnance piece," the main modern sense, is from 1520s. Spelling not differentiated from canon till c. 1800. Cannon fodder (1891) translates German kanonenfutter (compare Shakespeare's food for powder in "I Hen. IV").
- 1. The stillness of night was broken by the boom of a cannon.
- 夜晚的寂静被隆隆的炮声打破。
- 2. Max is a loose cannon politically.
- 马克斯在政治上我行我素。
- 3. The conscripts were treated as cannon fodder.
- 应征入伍者被当做炮灰。
- 4. Many cynical managers see employees as cannon fodder.
- 许多自私自利的经理视员工如草芥。
- 5. The bullets and cannon - balls were flying in all directions.
- 子弹和炮弹到处乱飞.