| 释义 | 
		co·coon I. \kəˈkün also ku̇ˈk- or sometimes especially Brit käˈk-\ noun (-s) Etymology: French cocon, from Provençal coucoun cocoon, eggshell, from coco shell, from Latin coccum excrescence on a tree — more at coak 1.   a.  : the envelope often composed largely of silk which the larvae of many insects form about themselves previous to changing to a pupa and in which they pass the pupa stage, those of silkworms being the source of the silk of commerce  b.  : any of various other protective coverings produced by animals (as the cases of silk made by spiders or the egg cases of mucus secreted by leeches and earthworms) 2.  : any covering resembling or suggesting a cocoon  < soon we two old fellows were stuffed into a tight cocoon of buffalo robes — Austin Strong > specifically  : a long-term protective covering usually plastic placed or sprayed over a gun or other military or naval equipment in storage II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) intransitive verb  : to form a cocoon transitive verb 1.  : to wrap or envelop especially tightly as if in a cocoon  < cocooned in several layers of shawls and scarves — Time >  < the aircraft having been cocooned at the United States Navy base — Crowsnest > 2.  : to fit into or enclose in especially snugly as if in a cocoon  < once having cocooned myself in Quongdong, I could never pluck up enough courage to go forth — Rex Ingamells >  < a sense of … being in a steel box packed against another steel box, inhumanly cocooned, came over her — William Sansom > |