grain

英 [ɡreɪn]      美 [ɡreɪn]
  • n. 粮食;颗粒;[作物] 谷物;纹理
  • vi. 成谷粒
  • vt. 使成谷粒
  • n. (Grain)人名;(法)格兰
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1. 天快下雨了,哥哥在下雨之前把谷物扫在一起并用薄膜遮住,以防被雨水淋湿。
grain 谷物,颗粒

来自PIE*gre-no, 生长,词源同grass, corn. 后指谷物。

grain
grain: [13] Grain comes via Old French from Latin grānum ‘seed’. Its prehistoric Indo- European ancestor was *grnóm, literally ‘worndown particle’, which also produced English corn, and it has given English a remarkably wide range of related forms: not just obvious derivatives like granary [16], granule [17], and ingrained [16], but also garner [12] (originally a noun derived from Latin grānārium ‘granary’), gram ‘chick-pea’ [18] (from the Portuguese descendant of grānum, now mainly encountered in ‘gram flour’), grange, granite, gravy, grenade, and the second halves of filigree and pomegranate.
=> filigree, garner, granary, granite, gravy, grenade, ingrained, pomegranate
grain (n.)
early 14c., "a small, hard seed," especially of one of the cereal plants, also as a collective singular, "seed of wheat and allied grasses used as food;" also "something resembling grain; a hard particle of other substances" (salt, sand, later gunpowder, etc.), from Old French grain, grein (12c.) "seed, grain; particle, drop; berry; grain as a unit of weight," from Latin granum "seed, a grain, small kernel," from PIE root *gre-no- "grain" (see corn (n.1)). From late 14c. as "a species of cereal plant." In the U.S., where corn has a specialized sense, it is the general word (used of wheat, rye, oats, barley, etc.).

Figuratively, "the smallest possible quantity," from late 14c. From early 15c. in English as the smallest unit of weight (originally the weight of a plump, dry grain of wheat or barley from the middle of the ear). From late 14c as "roughness of surface; a roughness as of grains." In reference to wood, "quality due to the character or arrangement of its fibers," 1560s; hence, against the grain (1650), a metaphor from carpentry: cutting across the fibers of the wood is more difficult than cutting along them.

Earliest sense of the word in English was "scarlet dye made from insects" (early 13c.), a sense also in the Old French collateral form graine; see kermes for the evolution of this sense, which was frequent in Middle English; also compare engrain. In Middle English grain also could mean "seed of flowers; pip of an apple, grape, etc.; a berry, legume, nut." Grain alcohol attested by 1854.
1. The firemen unwrapped their hoses and began dousing the scorched grain silos.
消防员展开水龙带,开始冲着烧焦的谷仓喷水。
2. From these ports the grain is freighted down to Addis Ababa.
粮食从这些港口运到亚的斯亚贝巴。
3. There's more than a grain of truth in that.
其中含有很深刻的道理。
4. ... grain sells at 10 times usual prices.
粮食售价是平常的10倍。
5. Any shortage could push up grain prices.
任何一种短缺都会抬高粮食价格。

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