露脸人妻系列最新|少女たちよ在线观看动漫游戏|久久精品国产亚洲AV久|吃瓜黑料网最新爆料事件|国产日产欧洲无码视频|国产二区三区毛片|青青草免费观看|精品二区三区熟女日韩国产|中文字幕av 电影|中文字幕乱码熟女第一区,成人av黄色在线观看,国产 成人 精品,国产麻豆视频一区二区三区

wake

英 [we?k] 美[wek]
  • vi. 醒來;喚醒;警覺
  • vt. 叫醒;激發(fā)
  • n. 尾跡;守夜;守喪
  • n. (Wake)人名;(英)韋克

CET4TEM4考研CET6中頻詞基本詞匯

詞態(tài)變化


第三人稱單數(shù):?wakes;過去式:?woke;過去分詞:?woken;現(xiàn)在分詞:?waking;

中文詞源


wake 醒來,(船只航行時(shí)的)尾流

來自PIE*weg,強(qiáng)健的,有活力的,詞源同vigor,vegetable,watch。引申詞義睡醒,醒來。尾流義詞源不詳。

英文詞源


wake
wake: English has two distinct words wake. The older, ‘not sleep’ [OE], goes back ultimately to the prolific Indo-European base *wog-, *weg- ‘be active or lively’. This proliferated semantically in many directions, including ‘growth’ (in which it gave English vegetable) and ‘staying awake’, which developed into ‘watching’ and from there into ‘guarding’ (all three preserved in vigil).

The original sense ‘liveliness’ is represented in vigour. The prehistoric Germanic base *wak- took over the ‘not sleep, watch’ group of senses. From it was derived the verb *wakōjan, which subsequently split into two in English, producing wake and watch. The noun wake, which (unlike the verb) preserves the ‘watch’ strand of meaning (now specialized to ‘watching over a dead body’), comes from the same base. Waken [12] was borrowed from the related Old Norse vakna. Wake ‘track of a boat’ [16] probably came via Middle Low German wake from Old Norse v?k ‘hole in the ice’.

=> vegetable, vigil, vigour, waft, wait, watch
wake (v.)
"to become awake," a Middle English merger of Old English wacan "to become awake, arise, be born, originate," and Old English wacian "to be or remain awake," both from Proto-Germanic *waken (cognates: Old Saxon wakon, Old Norse vaka, Danish vaage, Old Frisian waka, Dutch waken, Old High German wahhen, German wachen "to be awake," Gothic wakan "to watch"), from PIE root *weg- (2) "to be strong, be lively" (cognates: Sanskrit vajah "force, strength; swiftness, speed," vajayati "drives on;" Latin vigil "watchful, awake," vigere "be lively, thrive," velox "fast, lively," vegere "to enliven;" vigil "awake, wakeful," vigor "liveliness, activity"). Causative sense "to rouse from sleep" is attested from c. 1300. Related: Waked; waking.
wake (n.2)
"state of wakefulness," Old English -wacu (in nihtwacu "night watch"), related to watch (n.); and partly from Old Norse vaka "vigil, eve before a feast," related to vaka "be awake" (cognates: Old High German wahta "watch, vigil," Middle Dutch wachten "to watch, guard;" see wake (v.)). Meaning "a sitting up at night with a corpse" is attested from early 15c. (the verb in this sense is recorded from mid-13c.; as a noun lichwake is from late 14c.). The custom largely survived as an Irish activity. Wakeman (c. 1200), which survives as a surname, was Middle English for "watchman."
wake (n.1)
"track left by a moving ship," 1540s, perhaps from Middle Low German or Middle Dutch wake "hole in the ice," from Old Norse v?k, vaka "hole in the ice," from Proto-Germanic *wakwo. The sense perhaps evolved via "track made by a vessel through ice." Perhaps the English word is directly from Scandinavian. Figurative use (such as in the wake of "following close behind") is recorded from 1806.

雙語例句


1. Adam stumbles on, leaving a trail of devastation in his wake.
亞當(dāng)蹣跚而行,沿路留下毀壞的痕跡。

來自柯林斯例句

2. In his wake came a waiter wheeling a trolley.
一位推著手推車的侍者緊隨著他過來。

來自柯林斯例句

3. You will wake to find film crews camped in your backyard.
一覺醒來,你會發(fā)現(xiàn)電影攝制組進(jìn)駐了你家后院。

來自柯林斯例句

4. Strangely enough, you will automatically wake up after this length of time.
奇怪的是,過了這樣一段時(shí)間你就會自己醒來。

來自柯林斯例句

5. The ride was smooth until they got into the merchant ship's wake.
航行一直很順利,直到他們碰上了商船的尾流。

來自柯林斯例句