| 释义 | 
		sire I. \ˈsī(ə)r, -īə\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Old French, from Latin senior older, elder — more at senior 1.   a.  : a male parent : father   < carried almost as many business burdens as his sire — R.J.Purcell >  b. archaic  : male ancestor : forefather   < we are wiser than our sires — Alfred Tennyson >  c.  : one that produces or originates something; specifically  : author   < the sire of an immortal strain — P.B.Shelley > 2.   a. archaic  : a man of rank, station, or authority; especially  : one who holds the lordship of a domain or realm : lord, master — used formerly as a form of address and as a title (as of the king of France)  b. obsolete  : an elderly man : senior   < an aged sire, all hoary gray — Edmund Spenser > 3.   a.  : the male parent of an animal and especially of a domesticated mammal or bird — compare dam  b.  : a stallion having at least one colt who has won a race II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) 1.  : to make oneself the father of : father, beget, procreate  < sired seven children — Green Peyton >  — used especially of domestic animals  < was mated with 25 ewes and sired 18 lambs — Fla. Agric. Experimental Station Bulletin > 2.   a.  : to bring into being : generate, originate   < motion picture industry, sired and nourished by private enterprise — W.H.Hays >  b.  : to be the author of (a literary work)   < sired another play — E.L.Wallant > |