释义 |
lint I. \ˈlint\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, perhaps from Latin linteum linen cloth, from neuter of linteus made of linen, irregular from linum flax, linen — more at linen 1. chiefly Scotland : flax 1 2. a. : a soft fleecy material (as for poultices and dressings for wounds) made from linen usually by scraping b. : fuzz consisting usually of fine ravelings and short fibers of yarn and fabric; especially : an accumulation of dust and fuzz on a floor c. : fluff or fuzz of any material (as paper) 3. dialect : the actual netting of a fishnet 4. a. : a fibrous coat of thickened convoluted hairs borne by the seeds of cotton plants and constituting the staple of cotton fiber after ginning — compare linter 1 b. or lint cotton : virgin cotton II. intransitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) 1. : to leave lint adhering to a surface after contact : give off or deposit lint < found that his napkin had linted > 2. : pick vi 5 |