释义 |
fill I. \ˈfil\ verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English fillen, from Old English fyllan; akin to Old High German fullen to fill, Old Norse fylla, Gothic fulljan; causative from the root of English full (I) transitive verb 1. a. (1) : to supply with as much as can be held or contained < filling the holes in the road > (2) : to place or put as much material in as can be often conveniently contained < fill a box > : pour as much of a substance into as can be conveniently held < fill a cup > < fill a barrel with apples > (3) : to furnish (as a container) especially in proportion : provide < fill a glass with water > < fill a page with print > (4) : to provide (as a container) with a specified amount < fill it half full > (5) : pour < fill wine into bottles > : load, put < fill coal into bins > (6) : to make full or complete (as a partly empty line or an incomplete column in printed matter) by respacing the existing printed matter or by adding matter (7) : to give a pleasingly full form to (as a dress) in wearing — often used with out < she filled the dress nicely > < he began to fill his suits out well as he grew older > b. (1) : to stop up : obstruct < wreckage filled the channel > — often used with up < the traffic jam filled the street up completely > (2) : to make an embankment in or raise the level of (a low place) with earth, gravel, or rock c. (1) : plug < fill a chink > : caulk < fill the seams with oakum > (2) : to stop up the interstices, crevices, or pores of (as cloth, wood, leather) with some foreign substance for the sake of hardening, dressing, or adulterating (3) : load 3c(1) (4) : to close up (a cavity in a tooth) with gold, silver, or other comparatively inert material d. obsolete : impregnate e. (1) : to feed and water (livestock) immediately before sale to increase the apparent weight (2) : to stuff (a food) with a filling < filled rolls > 2. a. : to occupy the whole of < his huge bulk filled the chair > b. : to swarm in : pervade < shoppers filled the city > c. (1) : pack, load, surfeit < her presence filled his heart with joy > < filled his head with foolish ideas > (2) : satisfy, satiate < fill their guest with good food > (3) : to belly out : distend — often used with out < the wind filled the sails out > d. (1) : to supply fully or completely < fill a long-felt want > (2) : stock < fill a stream with trout > 3. a. : to execute or fulfill the requirements of (a business order) b. : to complete or make out — often used with out < fill out a check > or up < fill up the blanks in a questionnaire > or in < fill in the tax form > c. : to make up (a prescription) 4. a. : occupy, hold < fill a throne > b. : to provide with incumbents < fill vacancies left by retirements > — often used with up c. : to possess and perform the duties of < fill an office > 5. : to trim (a sail) so that the wind will blow on the after side 6. : to cover the surface of with a layer of precious metal — used chiefly as a past participle < a gold-filled watch > 7. : to draw the cards in poker necessary to complete (a full house, a flush, or a straight) intransitive verb 1. a. (1) : to become full < the rivers filled > (2) of the eyes : to become full with tears (3) : to become so suffused with ink (as of the bowl of a letter or the space between the dots of a halftone) as to print improperly — often used with in or up b. : to have the whole capacity occupied < the stadium filled and overflowed > c. : to fill a cup or glass for drinking 2. a. : to become blocked, burdened, or obstructed by or as if by accumulations — often used with in < the harbor gradually filled in > or up < the channel filled up > b. (1) : to become heavy, choked, or fraught < his heart filled at the words > < their expressions filled with grief > (2) : to swell out in or as if in fullness < the sails filled with wind > < her body began to fill out > < the balloon filled up > 3. : to complete a full house, flush, or straight in poker • - fill one's shoes - fill the bill II. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English fille, from Old English fyllo; akin to Old High German fulli fill, abundance, Old Norse fyllr, Gothic ufarfullei great abundance; derivative from the root of English full (I) 1. : a full supply; especially : a quantity that satisfies or satiates — usually used with a possessive < eat your fill > < she wept her fill > 2. a. (1) : material used to fill a receptacle, cavity, or passage < fill for a trench > — see backfill; compare gob (2) : an embankment (as in railroad construction) to fill a hollow or ravine or the place filled by such an embankment; also : the depth of the filling material when in place (3) : material that is used to take up unused or vacant periods (as in a radio or television schedule) b. : the contents of the digestive tract of an animal 3. : the maximum width of the paper producible by a particular papermaking machine III. noun (-s) Etymology: by alteration chiefly dialect : thill IV. noun : a bit of instrumental music that fills the pauses between phrases (as of a vocalist or soloist) |