wicked
英 [ˈwɪk.ɪd]
美 [ˈwɪk.ɪd]
1. ck tch.
2. witch => wicked.
wicked 邪恶的来自古英语wicca的形容词形式,巫师的,巫术的,邪恶的。
- wicked
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wicked: [13] Wicked and witch are closely related. Wicked is an extension, using the suffix -ed, of the now obsolete adjective wick ‘wicked’. And this in turn originated as an adjectival use of Old English wicca ‘wizard’, whose feminine form is the ancestor of modern English witch.
=> witch
- wicked (adj.)
- c. 1200, extended form of earlier wick "bad, wicked, false" (12c.), which apparently is an adjectival use of Old English wicca "wizard" (see wicca). Formed as if a past participle, but there is no corresponding verb. For evolution, compare wretched from wretch. Slang ironic sense of "wonderful" first attested 1920, in F. Scott Fitzgerald. As an adverb from early 15c. Related: Wickedly.
- 1. She had a wicked sense of humour.
- 她有种古灵精怪的幽默感。
- 2. All her fault, the wicked little so-and-so.
- 都是她的错,这个小坏东西。
- 3. She described the shooting as a wicked attack.
- 她称那次枪击为恶意袭击。
- 4. stories about a wicked witch
- 关于邪恶女巫的故事
- 5. From beginning to end his conduct had been despicable and wicked.
- 从头到尾他的行为既卑鄙又可恶.