释义 |
mangerman‧ger /ˈmeɪndʒə $ -ər/ noun [countable] mangerOrigin: 1300-1400 Old French maingeure, from mangier ‘to eat’ - Arthur as a baby, asleep in the manger straw.
- Joseph and Mary with their newborn son lying in a manger.
- People thronged to the midnight service, as if the manger were the last way station on earth.
- The situation Imagine that you are the manger with three supervisors reporting to you.
- The Virgin's shawl is of a distinctly baroque blue and the manger itself is full of plump Midwestern wheat stalks.
- They met the gang of shepherds going west and all went in together and knelt down at the manger.
- When I examined the manger where the feed had been put, I found oats and bran.
- Your manger had a hunch that you were the culprit, so she winged you.
a long open container that horses, cattle etc eat from |