请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 sinkhole
释义

sinkholen.

Brit. /ˈsɪŋkhəʊl/, U.S. /ˈsɪŋkˌhoʊl/
Forms: see sink n.1 and hole n.
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: sink n.1, hole n.
Etymology: < sink n.1 + hole n.
1.
a. A hole or hollow in which waste matter collects or is thrown; a cesspit. Also: the hole or pipe that drains waste water from a sink. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > sanitation > provision of sewers > sewage treatment > [noun] > use of cesspools or lagoons > cesspool or pit
sink1413
midden pita1425
sinkhole1456
suspiralc1512
sentine1537
dung pit1598
muck pit1598
sinker1623
bumby1632
sump1680
sump hole1754
jaw-hole1760
recess1764
cesspool1783
dead-hole1856
soil-tank1861
cesspit1864
lagoon1909
sewage lagoon1930
1456 in Chartulary of Cockersand Abbey 471 Following the said strind to the Sinkehole, and fro' Sinkeholl..into the Black polles.
1548 W. Patten Exped. Scotl. sig. D vii b James of the Synkhole (sauyng your reuerence) a frier forsooth that wrote the Legendaurie.
1576 A. Fleming tr. Cicero in Panoplie Epist. 152 Wee satt at ye sterne,..but now we haue no place allowed vs, no not scarsely next the pump, or the sinck-hole.
1587 W. Gravet Sermon 50 Away with it therefore as a sinke-hole of all iniquitie.
a1625 J. Fletcher Wife for Moneth v. ii, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Iiiiii/1 Thou wilt be hang'd as handsomly..as if thou wert Heire apparent To all the impious Suburbs, and the sink-holes.
1665 M. Nedham Medela Medicinæ 89 Instead of clearing the body of Scorbutick Humors, they drain the best Juices down through the common Sink-hole.
1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 132 This passage, or rather sink-hole, as being very steep and shelving,..goes sloaping down Seventy six Foot.
1742 W. Ellis Timber-tree Improved (ed. 3) II. xxx. 161 I saw..a Standard Nectarine-tree..which grew near a Sink-hole, almost at the Back-door of a House.
1830 T. P. Thompson in Westm. Rev. Apr. 428 The law is to be made a sink-hole for the storing-up of old abuses.
1860 ‘P. Paradox’ Land of Kelt II. vi. 230 There was in one corner of my dungeon a covered sink-hole, for carrying off the filth..protected by a grating.
1924 W. A. Hardenbergh Home Sewage Disposal x. 121 Some few places dispose of excreta by dumping it into a sinkhole or pit. There is little to commend this practice.
1984 Jrnl. Physical Soc. Japan 53 1026/1 In our daily life we see vortices formed around the sinkhole of the bath-tub or the kitchen sink.
1988 P. Carey Oscar & Lucinda vi. 23 Hennacombe was the sump, the sink-hole of the Anglican Church.
2009 Independent 14 Dec. 23/3 Billions of dollars have disappeared down a tabloid sinkhole.
b. U.S. An unprofitable undertaking which is carried on in spite of losses.
ΚΠ
1874 Voice of Peace July 63/1 The Indian Bureau has been a great sinkhole of the public money.
1895 I. K. Funk et al. Standard Dict. Eng. Lang. II. Sinkhole,..An exceedingly unremunerative undertaking carried on in spite of losses.
1952 Z. L. Schiller Candle for Star 174 This project can easily develop into a sinkhole... If I were you I'd let them struggle it out the best way they can.
1994 N.Y. Times 30 Oct. e 4/3 Social Security..will become the sort of economic sinkhole early in the next century that Medicare is becoming now.
2003 B. D. Fromson Hitting Jackpot xi. 85 Mr. Pizza under Bell's management was a financial sinkhole. Instead of creating a river of revenue..the restaurant produced an ever-widening stream of losses.
2. A hole or depression in the ground formed as the result of erosion or collapse of underlying rock, soil, etc.; esp. a cavity resulting from dissolution of rock (typically limestone) by water, often providing a route for the escape of surface water; a swallow hole.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > hole or pit > [noun] > pot-hole or swallow-hole
water sink1553
swallow1610
swallow-hole1660
estuary1665
swallet1668
cockpit1683
sinkhole1772
sink1791
pot1797
water-swallow1811
shake-hole1823
pothole1826
fleet-hole1839
spout hole1849
katavothron1869
ponor1890
sump1951
1772 T. Jefferson Memorandum Bks. 29 Dec. (1997) I. 280 ‘The Sink hole lands.’ 10,000. a[cre]s. might be included in one grant.
1780 W. Fleming Diary 20 Mar. in N. D. Mereness Trav. Amer. Colonies (1916) 639 Springs..appear again either in Sink holes immediately vanishing or bursting out.
1814 H. M. Brackenridge Views Louisiana ii. ii. 106 The number of funnels, or sink holes, formed by the washing of the earth into fissures of the limestone rock.
1946 N.Z. Geol. Surv. Bull. No. 41. 20 The drainage of this limestone dip-slope area is mostly underground by means of sink-holes.
2016 Times-News (Burlington, N. Carolina) 30 Sept. 1/3 (caption) Residents of Tangle Ridge Trail are blocked in after heavy rain caused a sink hole.
3. North American. A concealed expanse of water in a swamp; muskeg.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > marsh, bog, or swamp > [noun]
marsheOE
fenc888
sladec893
moorOE
mossOE
marshlandlOE
lay-fena1225
lay-mirea1225
moor-fenc1275
flosha1300
strother?a1300
marish1327
carrc1330
waterlanda1382
gaseync1400
quaba1425
paludec1425
mersec1440
sumpa1450
palus?1473
wash1483
morass1489
oozea1500
bog?a1513
danka1522
fell1538
soga1552
Camarine1576
gog1583
swale1584
sink1594
haga1600
mere1609
flata1616
swamp1624
pocosin1634
frogland1651
slash1652
poldera1669
savannah1671
pond-land1686
red bog1686
swang1691
slack1719
flowa1740
wetland1743
purgatory1760
curragh1780
squall1784
marais1793
vlei1793
muskeg1806
bog-pit1820
prairie1820
fenhood1834
pakihi1851
terai1852
sponge1856
takyr1864
boglet1869
sinkhole1885
grimpen1902
sphagnum bog1911
blanket bog1939
string bog1959
the world > the earth > water > body of water > still or standing water > [noun] > in bog
bog-water1847
sinkhole1885
1885 Jrnl. Amer. Geogr. Soc. N.Y. 17 332 It is strange in this far northern clime to find vegetation growing so rank as to build up land in the water. Yet the muskeg or sink-hole of these vast swamps is the outgrowth of such floating islands as surprised the Spaniards in the Lake of Tezcuco.
1895 I. K. Funk et al. Standard Dict. Eng. Lang. II. 1674/2 Sink-hole,..5. A place in a marsh where it is too soft to make a road, and which the winter's cold does not freeze over.
1970 P. Berton National Dream vii. iv. 284 There were the notorious sinkholes—little lakes over which a thick crust of vegetable matter had formed and into which the line might tumble at any time.
2005 A. Bradford Legends of Nevermore Country 96 The sucking, mushy sounds his feet made and the resistance he felt when he moved them made him think of Big Sister Beth. The words ‘boggy sink-holes’ rang loud in his head like she was standing right there.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
n.1456
随便看

 

英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/9/22 6:40:05