| 释义 | nix I. \ˈniks\ noun
 (-es)
 Etymology: German, from Old High German nihhus — more at nicker
 : a supernatural creature originally in Germanic folklore and conceived of in many forms but usually as having the form of a woman or as half human and half fish, dwelling in fresh water usually in a beautiful palace, and usually unfriendly to man
 < haunting, penetrating, pining as voice of nix or siren — Walter de la Mare >
 — called also nixie
 II. noun
 (-es)
 Etymology: German nichts nothing, from Middle High German nihtes, gen. of niht nothing, from Old High German niwiht, neowiht — more at naught
 1. slang  : nothing : no one
 < what a man means to say signifies nix in politics — Emporia (Kans.) Gazette >
 2.  : nixie II
 III. adverb
 slang  : no — used to express disagreement or the withholding of permission
 < if I were to say nix on the books he'd be miserable — Everybody's Magazine >
 IV. transitive verb
 (-ed/-ing/-es)
 slang  : veto, forbid, prohibit, ban, reject, cancel
 < nixed a request for a $2500 business loan — Carl Sifakis >
 < tried to nix the idea of a lie-detector test — Barbara Graham >
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