elephant

英 [ˈel.ɪ.fənt]      美 [ˈel.ə.fənt]
  • n. 象;大号图画纸
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为了记忆单词“elephant”,可以采用以下简单方法:

1. 联想图像:想象一个巨大的“elephant”(象)的形象,比如大象的耳朵、长长的鼻子和巨大的身体。
2. 抽象化:将“elephant”拆分为“ele”和“phant”,联想“ele”像“e”字,然后“phant”像是“phantom”(幻影),可以想象一个巨大的幻影大象。
3. 谐音:虽然“elephant”没有直接的谐音可以记忆,但可以联想其拼写和中文谐音的相似性,如“伊蕾虎”,帮助记忆拼写。

选择其中一种方法,结合自己的记忆习惯,重复练习,直到能够自然地回忆起这个单词。

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elephant

来自拉丁语elephantus,象。

elephant
elephant: [13] Elephants were named from their tusks. Greek eléphās (probably a borrowing from a non-Indo-European language) meant originally ‘ivory’ (hence chryselephantine ‘of gold and ivory’ [19]). Only later did it come to denote the animal itself, and it passed in this sense into Latin as elephantus. By post-classical times this had become *olifantus, and it is a measure of the unfamiliarity of the beast in northern Europe in the first millenium AD that when Old English acquired the word, as olfend, it was used for the ‘camel’.

Old French also had olifant (referring to the ‘elephant’ this time) and passed it on to English as olifaunt. It was not until the 14th century that, under the influence of the classical Latin form, this began to change to elephant. In the 16th and 17th centuries there was a learned revival of the sense ‘ivory’: Alexander Pope, for instance, in his translation of the Odyssey 1725, refers to ‘the handle … with steel and polish’d elephant adorn’d’.

The notion of the white elephant as ‘something unwanted’ arose apparently from the practice of the kings of Siam presenting courtiers who had incurred their displeasure with real white elephants, the cost of whose proper upkeep was ruinously high.

elephant (n.)
c. 1300, olyfaunt, from Old French olifant (12c., Modern French éléphant), from Latin elephantus, from Greek elephas (genitive elephantos) "elephant; ivory," probably from a non-Indo-European language, likely via Phoenician (compare Hamitic elu "elephant," source of the word for it in many Semitic languages, or possibly from Sanskrit ibhah "elephant").

Re-spelled after 1550 on Latin model. Cognate with the common term for the animal in Romanic and Germanic; Slavic words (for example Polish slon', Russian slonu are from a different word. Old English had it as elpend, and compare elpendban, elpentoð "ivory," but a confusion of exotic animals led to olfend "camel."

As an emblem of the Republican Party in U.S. politics, 1860. To see the elephant "be acquainted with life, gain knowledge by experience" is an American English colloquialism from 1835. The elephant joke was popular 1960s-70s.
1. The pavilion has become a £4 million steel and glass white elephant.
这个耗资400万英镑、用钢与玻璃所构筑起的亭子已经成了一个华而不实的摆设。
2. His tour de force is an elephant sculpture.
他的精心之作是一件大象雕塑。
3. The new office block has become an expensive white elephant.
这座新办公大楼成了昂贵的摆设。
4. The hunter was trampled to death by a wild elephant.
那猎人被一头野象踩死了.
5. The animal in the picture was a female elephant.
照片上的动物是头母象.

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