ogre
英 [ˈəʊ.ɡər]
美 [ˈoʊ.ɡɚ]
- n. 食人魔鬼,怪物(童话等中的);令人害怕的人
- n. (Ogre)人名;(法)奥格尔
ogre 食人恶魔来自法语ogre,来自拉丁语Orcus,魔鬼,地狱食人魔,词源同orc,半兽人。
- ogre (n.)
- "man-eating giant," 1713, hogre (in a translation of a French version of the Arabian Nights), from French ogre, first used in Perrault's "Contes," 1697, and perhaps formed by him from Italian orco "demon, monster," from Latin Orcus "Hades," perhaps via an Italian dialect. In English, more literary than colloquial. The conjecture that it is from Byzantine Ogur "Hungarian" or some other version of that people's name (perhaps via confusion with the bloodthirsty Huns), lacks historical evidence. Related: Ogrish; ogrishness.
- 1. My boss is a real ogre.
- 我的上司是个十足的恶魔。
- 2. The ogre demanded the annual sacrifice of a young village lass to satisfy his blood lust.
- 这个食人巨妖要求村里每年献祭一个少女来满足他的嗜血欲.
- 3. Ogre that he was, he spoke like an epicure.
- 他虽是个吃人恶魔, 说话倒像个美食家.
- 4. My man is an ogre - a great big tremendous ogre.
- 我男人是个吃人妖魔 —— 又大又可怕的吃人妖魔.
- 5. The Ogre did not at once retort.
- “吃人精”当时没有立即吭声.