hub
英 [hʌb]
美 [hʌb]
- n. 中心;毂;木片
- n. (Hub)人名;(捷)胡布
集线器
hub 轮轴,中心车轮工匠行话,可能来自hubbe,大块,来自PIE*kap,抓住,持,握,词源同capable,heave,hob.引申词义轮轴,中心。
- hub
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hub: [17] Hub is one of those words that emerge unheralded from the undergrowth of language, its forbears uncertain. It seems originally to have meant ‘lump’, and is probably ultimately the same word as hob [16]. This was at first spelled hub and may have denoted a lump of clay used as a bakestone, or a brick or clay projection at the back of a fire on which things were placed to keep warm. And hobnail [16] is etymologically a nail with a large ‘lumpy’ head.
=> hob
- hub (n.)
- "solid center of a wheel," 1640s, perhaps from hubbe, originally "lump," the source of hob of a fireplace and hobnail, as in boots. A wheelwright's word, not generally known or used until c. 1828; it reached wider currency in connection with bicycles. Meaning "center of interest or activity or importance" first recorded 1858 in writings of Oliver W. Holmes, and originally especially of Boston.
"Boston State-House is the hub of the solar system." [O.W. Holmes, "Autocrat of the Breakfast Table"]
"[E]verybody knows that Boston used to be called the Hub, meaning the hub of the universe. It may still be the hub, because the center of a wheel moves slowly." [J.P. Marquand, "Life," March 24, 1941]
- 1. the commercial hub of the city
- 城市的商业中心
- 2. Chicago is a hub of airline traffic.
- 芝加哥是航运中心.
- 3. As a hub of finance and communications, Paris is now almost equal to London.
- 作为一个金融和交通中心,巴黎现在几乎可媲美伦敦。
- 4. Lee was at the hub of some incisive attacks in the second half.
- 在下半场,李组织了几次快速进攻。
- 5. London was on the rise, starting to replace Amsterdam as the hub of world trade.
- 伦敦正在崛起,开始取代阿姆斯特丹成为世界贸易的中心。