释义 |
cab·bage I. \ˈkabij, -ēj\ noun (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English caboche, from Old North French, head, perhaps from boche swelling, bump; akin to Old French boce bump — more at boss 1. : a leafy garden plant (Brassica oleracea capitata) derived from a wild European plant (B. oleracea) and distinguished by a short stem upon which is crowded a mass of leaves usually green but in some varieties red or purplish forming a dense globular head that is used as a vegetable 2. : a terminal bud of certain palm trees that resembles a head of cabbage and is eaten as a vegetable 3. : cabbage palmetto < cabbage woods > 4. slang : paper money or bank notes II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) : to compress (loose sheet-metal scrap) into a form convenient for handling and remelting III. noun (-s) Etymology: perhaps by folk etymology from Middle French cabas cheating, theft, literally, basket — more at caba Britain : cloth remaining after the cutting out of a garment and traditionally said to be appropriated by the tailor as a perquisite IV. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) transitive verb : to take surreptitiously : steal, filch < they also cabbaged our bats, balls, and gloves — H.L.Mencken > intransitive verb : to take something surreptitiously — sometimes used with onto |