释义 |
sup·ple·ment I. \ˈsəpləmənt\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin supplementum, from supplēre to fill up, complete, supply + -mentum -ment — more at supply 1. : something that supplies a want or makes an addition : something that completes, adds a finishing touch, or brings closer to completion or a desired state < one of the real services of the historical novel is not that it can be a substitute for history, but that it can be … a supplement — T.C.Chubb > < the policy of apartheid is only a political supplement to an economic policy that depends on cheap native labor — Emory Ross > < prescribe a vitamin supplement > as a. : a part added to or issued as a continuation of a book or periodical to make good its deficiencies, correct its errors, bring it up to date, or provide special features not ordinarily included < issued … in fourteen volumes and subsequently kept up to date by nine annual supplements — H.W.H.Knott > < Sunday supplement > < magazine supplement > b. : a material added to a pesticidal spray or dust to improve a physical or chemical property (as adhesiveness or wettability) — compare spreader 1f c. : a feedstuff rich in protein used to balance a livestock ration 2. : the quantity by which an arc or an angle falls short of 180 degrees II. \-ˌment, -_mənt — see -ment II\ transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) : to fill up or supply by additions : add something to : fill the deficiencies of: as a. : to serve as a supplement for < the frontiersman depended for game to supplement his meager larder — R.A.Billington > b. : to supply a supplement for < he signed mutual defense treaties … and supplemented many with favorable commercial agreements — R.E.Lee > |