搜尋結果
pluck
- IPA[plʌk]
英式
- take hold of (something) and quickly remove it from its place;catch hold of and pull quickly
- spirited and determined courage;the heart, liver, and lungs of an animal as food.
verb: pluck, 3rd person present: plucks, gerund or present participle: plucking, past tense: plucked, past participle: plucked
noun: pluck
- 釋義
- 相關詞
動詞
- 1. take hold of (something) and quickly remove it from its place she plucked a blade of grass he plucked a tape from the shelf 同義詞
- ▪ catch hold of and pull quickly she plucked his sleeve brambles plucked at her jeans 同義詞
- ▪ pull the feathers from (a bird's carcass) to prepare it for cooking the turkeys are plucked and cleaned by machine 同義詞
- ▪ pull some of the hairs from (one's eyebrows) to make them look neater whether you pluck your eyebrows depends on your type of looks
- ▪ (of glacier ice) break off (pieces of rock) by mechanical force.
- 2. quickly or suddenly remove someone from a dangerous or unpleasant situation the baby was plucked from a grim orphanage
- 3. sound (a musical instrument or its strings) with one's finger or a plectrum she picked up her guitar and plucked it idly 同義詞
名詞
- 1. spirited and determined courage it must have taken a lot of pluck to walk along a path marked ‘Danger’
- 2. the heart, liver, and lungs of an animal as food.
- make an effort to do something that frightens one
Oxford American Dictionary
- make an effort to do something that frightens one
Oxford Dictionary
- make an effort to do something that frightens one
Oxford American Dictionary
- make an effort to do something that frightens one
Oxford Dictionary
- 更多解釋
- IPA[plək]
美式
- take hold of (something) and quickly remove it from its place: she plucked a blade of grass he plucked a tape from the shelf
- spirited and determined courage: it must have taken a lot of pluck to walk along a path marked “Danger”
Oxford American Dictionary