释义 |
crock I. \ˈkräk\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English crocke, from Old English crocc; akin to Old Saxon krūka pot, Old Norse krukka, Old English crūce pot, pitcher, Middle High German krūche crock, pitcher, and perhaps to Old High German kriochan to creep — more at crutch 1. : a thick earthenware pot or jar 2. dialect England : a cooking pot usually of iron 3. : a broken piece of earthenware : a potsherd used especially to cover the hole in a flowerpot 4. dialect : loose black particles collected from combustion (as on cooking utensils or in a chimney) : soot, smut 5. : coloring matter that rubs off from cloth or dyed leather II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) transitive verb 1. : to put in a crock < crock butter > 2. : to provide drainage in (a flowerpot) by means of a crock 3. dialect : to soil with crock : smudge intransitive verb of dye or dyed fabric or leather : to transfer color under rubbing : rub off < a suede that will not crock > III. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English crok, probably of Scandinavian origin; akin to Norwegian dialect krokje broken-down horse or person, Icelandic kraki delicate boy, Low German krakke broken-down horse, Dutch kraak broken-down cow or person, and perhaps to Old Norse krōkr hook, corner — more at crook 1. dialect Britain : an old or barren ewe 2. : an old or broken-down animal; especially : an old or broken-down horse 3. : one that is broken down, disabled, or impaired < over three quarters of all the ships were crocks — Yale Review > < an old crock of 104 who does nothing but sit by the fire — Richard Joseph > < the poor old crock who feels tired every afternoon at three, from a complicated set of physical and psychological causes — Martin Mayer > IV. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) transitive verb : to cause to become impaired : put out of commission : disable < crock his thumb > — often used with up < a crocked-up athlete > intransitive verb : to become impaired : break down < his physical vigor crocked > < the mare soon crocked > V. noun Etymology: from the phrase crock of shit : bunkum : baloney : bull — usually used with a < those awards are a crock, a PR stunt — Irma Lipkin > |