skid
英 [skɪd]
美 [skɪd]
- n. 打滑;[车辆] 刹车;滑轨,滑动垫木
- vt. 刹住,使减速;滚滑
- vi. 打滑
1. 可能同源词:skid, ski, skate.
2. shed => sheath, skid, ski.
3. skid row 贫民窟.
4. ski => skid.
5. 谐音“ski的”。
skid 滑轨,滑动垫木,侧滑,打滑可能来自古诺斯语 skith,小木棍,木条,词源同 ski.用于指伐木场用木头铺设的滑道,用于 把山上砍伐的树木运下山,引申词义滑轨,滑动垫木等,后用于动词词义侧滑,打滑。
- skid (n.)
- c. 1600, "beam or plank on which something rests," especially on which something heavy can be rolled from place to place (1782), of uncertain origin, probably from a Scandinavian source akin to Old Norse skið "stick of wood" (see ski (n.)). As "a sliding along" from 1890; specifically of motor vehicles from 1903. Skid-mark is from 1914.
In the timber regions of the American West, skids laid down one after another to form a road were "a poor thing for pleasure walks, but admirably adapted for hauling logs on the ground with a minimum of friction" ["Out West" magazine, October 1903]. A skid as something used to facilitate downhill motion led to figurative phrases such as hit the skids "go into rapid decline" (1909), and see skid row.
- skid (v.)
- 1670s, "apply a skid to (a wheel, to keep it from turning)," from skid (n.). Meaning "slide along" first recorded 1838; extended sense of "slip sideways" (on a wet road, etc.) first recorded 1884. The original notion is of a block of wood for stopping a wheel; the modern senses are from the notion of a wheel slipping when blocked from revolving.
- 1. I slammed the brakes on and went into a skid.
- 我猛地一踩刹车,结果车子打滑了。
- 2. He became a skid row type of drunkard.
- 他变成了那种贫民区里常见的醉鬼。
- 3. to be on skid row
- 住在贫民区
- 4. He braked suddenly, causing the front wheels to skid.
- 他猛然刹车,使得前车轮打滑了。
- 5. He braked suddenly, causing the front wheels to skid.
- 他突然剎车, 使得前轮打了滑.