crock
英 [krɒk]
美 [krɑːk]
- n. 瓦罐;碎瓦片;老朽的人
- vt. 使衰弱;使身体垮掉
- vi. 变得衰弱;身体垮掉
- n. (Crock)人名;(英)克罗克
crock 陶器,胡说来自PIE*sker, 弯,转,词源同cruse, crucible. 即制造陶器,通过不断的旋转使土坯更均匀。俚语义,尿壶,胡说。
- crock
-
crock: English has two words crock. The one meaning ‘earthenware pot’ [OE] is now almost never heard on its own, except perhaps in the phrase ‘crock of gold’, but it is familiar from its derivative crockery [18]. Its immediate antecedents appear to be Germanic (Dutch, for instance, has the related kruik), but cognate forms appear in other Indo-European languages, including Welsh crochan and Greek krōssós. Cruet [13] comes from Anglo-Norman *cruet, a diminutive frorm of Old French crue ‘pot’, which was borrowed from Old Saxon krūka, a relative of English crock. Crock ‘decrepit person, car, etc’ [15] is earliest encountered (in Scottish English) in the sense ‘old ewe’.
The connotation of being ‘broken-down’, and the existence of near synonyms such as Dutch krak, Flemish krake, and Swedish krake, all meaning ‘wornout old horse’, suggest some kind of link with the word crack.
=> crockery, cruet
- crock (n.)
- Old English crocc, crocca "pot, vessel," from Proto-Germanic *krogu "pitcher, pot" (cognates: Old Frisian krocha "pot," Old Saxon kruka, Middle Dutch cruke, Dutch kruik, Old High German kruog "pitcher," German Krug, Old Norse krukka "pot"). Perhaps from the same source as Middle Irish crocan "pot," Greek krossos "pitcher," Old Church Slavonic krugla "cup." Used as an image of worthless rubbish since 19c., perhaps from the use of crockery as chamberpots.
- 1. But you don't want some old crock like me.
- 但你不需要像我这样的老家伙。
- 2. The crock isfilled with wine.
- 缸里盛满了酒.
- 3. There are five big fish in the crock.
- 在瓦罐里有五条大鱼.
- 4. Colonel Slade: This is such a crock of shit!
- 史雷德中校: 这场听证会简直是胡闹(一团狗屎)!
- 5. If you go, also be this one crock only.
- 你若去, 也只是这一壶.