| 释义 | 
		cat·a·ract I. \ˈkad.əˌrakt, -atə-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English cataracte floodgate, from Latin cataracta, catarractes waterfall, portcullis, floodgate, from Greek kataraktēs, katarrhaktēs, literally, sheer, abrupt, from katarassein to dash down, from kata- cata- + arassein to strike, smash 1. obsolete  : floodgate — used in plural  < the rain descended for forty days, the cataracts … of heaven being opened — John Milton > 2. [Middle French or Medieval Latin; Middle French cataracte, from Medieval Latin cataracta; perhaps from its likeness to a portcullis in constituting an obstruction]  : a clouding of the lens of the eye or of its capsule varying in degree from slight to complete opacity and obstructing the passage of light 3. [Latin cataracta, catarractes waterfall]   a. obsolete  : waterspout  b.  : waterfall; especially  : a great fall of water over a precipice — compare cascade 1  c.  : steep rapids in a large river   < the cataracts of the Nile >  d.  : an overwhelming downpour or rush : flood   < cataracts of rain poured down — C.S.Forester >   < his cataract of eloquence — Herman Wouk > • cat·a·ract·al \| ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷| ̷ ̷təl\ adjective II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) transitive verb  : to cause to fall like a cataract  < the … rotor cataracts water over the top of the case — Flow Quarterly > intransitive verb  : to fall like a cataract  < rain cataracting down the windowpanes > |