释义 |
rime I. \ˈrīm\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English rim, from Old English hrīm; akin to Old Saxon hrīpo frost, Old High German hrīffo, rīffo, Middle High German rīm, Old Norse hrīm, hrīmi frost, Latvian kreims cream, Lithuanian krėna 1. or rime frost : frost 1c(1) 2. : an accumulation of granular ice tufts on the windward sides of exposed objects slightly resembling hoarfrost but formed only from undercooled fog or cloud and always built out directly against the wind 3. : crust, incrustation < rime of snow — D.C.Peattie > < dust settled down … making a gray rime on eyebrows, nose — Thomas Wood †1950 > < a rime of alkali on flatland > II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) : to cover with or as if with rime < hedgerows were rimed and stiff with frost — William Faulkner > < age had rimed his beard — Kay Rogers > < wagons rimed with clay — Hamilton Basso > III. variant of rhyme IV. \ˈrīm\ noun (-s) Etymology: Latin rima — more at row : chink, crack, fissure V. dialect chiefly England variant of ream |