reptile
英 [ˈrep.taɪl]
美 [ˈrep.taɪl]
- adj. 爬虫类的;卑鄙的
- n. 爬行动物;卑鄙的人
reptile 爬行动物来自拉丁语 repere,爬行,-t,过去分词格,来自 PIE*rep,爬行。
- reptile (n.)
- late 14c., "creeping or crawling animal," from Old French reptile (early 14c.) and directly from Late Latin reptile, noun use of neuter of reptilis (adj.) "creping, crawling," from rept-, past participle stem of repere "to crawl, creep," from PIE root *rep- "to creep, crawl" (cognates: Lithuanian replioju "to creep"). Used of persons of low character from 1749.
Precise scientific use began to develop mid-18c., but the word was used as well at first of animals now known as amphibians, including toads, frogs, salamanders; separation of Reptilia (1835 as a distinct class) and Amphibia took place early 19c.; popular use lagged, and reptile still was used late 18c. with sense "An animal that creeps upon many feet" [Johnson, who calls the scorpion a reptile], sometimes excluding serpents.
And the terrestrial animals may be divided into quadrupeds or beasts, reptiles, which have many feet, and serpents, which have no feet at all. [Locke, "Elements of Natural Philosophy," 1689]
An inadvertent step may crush the snail
That crawls at ev'ning in the public path ;
But he that has humanity, forewarn'd,
Will tread aside, and let the reptile live.
[Cowper, "The Task," 1785]
The Old English word for "reptile" was slincend, related to slink.
- 1. Mammals arose from a fairly primitive reptile in the Mesozoic era.
- 哺乳类起源于中生代宛若原始的爬虫类.
- 2. Rise, and don't degrade youself into an abject reptile.
- 起来, 可别把你自己贬成一个下贱的爬虫.
- 3. The land is teeming with reptile life.
- 这片土地多爬行动物.
- 4. The frog is not a true reptile.
- 青蛙并非真正的爬行动物.
- 5. So you should not be surprised to see someone keep a reptile as a pet.
- 所以,你不必惊奇有人养了一只爬行动物作为宠物.