| 释义 | mail I. \ˈmāl\ noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English maill, male, from Old English māl terms, agreement, pay, from Old Norse māl speech, language, agreement; akin to Old English mǣl speech, conversation, mæthel assembly, Old Saxon & Old High German mahal assembly, judgment, Gothic mathl meeting place, market, Old English mōt meeting — more at meet
 now chiefly Scotland  : payment, rent, tribute, tax
 II. \ˈmāl, esp before pause or consonant -āəl\ noun
 (-s)
 Usage: often attributive
 Etymology: Middle English male, from Old French, of Germanic origin; akin to Middle Dutch māle bag, traveling bag, Old High German malaha, malha wallet, bag
 1. chiefly Scotland  : bag, wallet, traveling bag
 2.
 a.  : the bags of letters and the other postal matter conveyed under public authority from one post office to another
 b.  : the postal matter consigned at one time to or from one person or one post office or conveyed by a particular train, airplane, or ship
 < the mail for the city >
 < the doctor's mail was late that day >
 < the letter just made the 7 o'clock mail >
 c.  : a conveyance that transports mail
 < the train was a fast mail >
 3. or mails plural
 a.  : a nation's postal system — compare post 3
 b.  : postal matter collectively
 < in colonial days newspapers were not considered part of the mails >
 III. verb
 (-ed/-ing/-s)
 Etymology: mail (II)
 transitive verb
 : to send by mail
 < mail a letter home >
 intransitive verb
 : to send postal matter by mail
 < many advertisers mail to carefully chosen lists of prospects >
 IV. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English maile, maille, from Middle French, from Old French, from Latin macula spot, mesh of a net
 1.
 a. obsolete  : a ring or plate constituting the basic unit of the medieval warrior's defensive armor
 b.  : armor made of metal links or plates — compare chain mail, plate armor
 2.
 a.  : the hard enclosing covering of various animals (as of a tortoise or a lobster)
 b. archaic  : the full-grown breast feathers especially of a hawk
 3.  : a metal or glass eye in a heddle through which the thread of the warp passes
 V. transitive verb
 (-ed/-ing/-s)
 : to arm with mail
 VI. transitive verb
 (-ed/-ing/-s)
 Etymology: perhaps from mail (II) or mail (IV)
 1. obsolete  : envelop
 2.  : to wrap up (a hawk) : bind
 VII. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: French, mall, maul, from Middle French, hammer, maul — more at maul
 obsolete  : mall
 VIII. \ˈmāl\
 Scotland
 variant of mole
 IX. noun
 : messages sent electronically to an individual ; specifically   : e-mail herein
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