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单词 old man of the sea
释义

man1 /man/

noun (pl men)
  1. A human being
  2. (usu with cap) mankind, the human genus (also in combination denoting a particular species of this)
  3. An adult human male
  4. A male attendant or servant
  5. A workman or male employee
  6. A vassal
  7. A follower
  8. An uncommissioned soldier
  9. A person possessing a distinctively manly character
  10. A husband or male sexual partner
  11. A piece used in playing chess, draughts, etc
  12. A male member of a team, group, etc
  13. A cairn or rock pillar
  14. A hill with such a man
  15. A ship, as in man-of-war
  16. A word of familiar address
  17. (usu in pl; with cap) in the Scottish Highlands, any of a group of men of strict religious belief, regarded as spiritual leaders in a parish (historical)
adjective and combining form

Male

interjection

Expressing surprise, admiration, etc

transitive verb (mannˈing; manned /mand/)
  1. To provide with a man or men
  2. To provide with a (human) worker, operator, etc
  3. To strengthen or put manhood into
  4. To accustom (a hawk) to being handled, esp by strangers (falconry)
ORIGIN: OE mann; Ger Mann, Du man

manˈdom noun (rare)

Humanity, man collectively

manˈful adjective

  1. Having the good qualities of a man
  2. Manly
  3. Bold
  4. Courageous
  5. Vigorous
  6. Steadfast
  7. Noble-minded

manˈfully adverb

manˈfulness noun

manˈhood noun

  1. The state of being a man
  2. Manly quality
  3. Human nature
  4. Men collectively

mankindˈ noun

  1. The human race, the mass of human beings
  2. /manˈkīnd/ human males collectively
adjective (Shakespeare)

Man-like, viragoish

manˈless adjective

manˈ-like adjective

Having the appearance or qualities of a human being or of an adult human male

adverb
  1. In the manner of a man
  2. In a way that might be expected of a man
  3. Manfully

manˈliness noun

manˈly adjective (manˈlier; manˈliest)

  1. Befitting a man
  2. Brave
  3. Dignified
  4. Noble
  5. Relating to manhood
  6. Not childish or womanish

manned /mand/ adjective

Provided with men, operators, etc

mannˈish adjective

  1. (of a child or woman) resembling or behaving like an adult male (usu derogatory)
  2. Masculine

mannˈishly adverb

mannˈishness noun

man-about-townˈ noun

A fashionable, sophisticated man

man-and-dogˈ adjective

(of an enterprise, organization, etc) extremely small-scale, minimally-staffed

man-at-armsˈ noun

A soldier, esp mounted and heavily-armed

manbag noun

A bag for small articles carried by men

manˈ-body noun (Scot)

A man

man boobs plural noun (slang)

Deposits of fat around a man's nipples, derogatively likened to female breasts

manˈ-child noun (pl menˈ-children) (literary)

  1. A male child
  2. A boy

man crush noun (slang)

A heterosexual man's feeling of admiration for another man

manˈ-day noun (pl manˈ-days)

A day's work by one person

manˈ-eater noun

  1. A cannibal
  2. A tiger or other animal that has acquired the habit of eating humans
  3. A shark that eats human flesh
  4. A woman given to acquiring and dispatching male admirers (informal)

manˈ-eating adjective

manˈ-entered adjective (Shakespeare)

Passed from boyhood into manhood

man flu noun (facetious)

A heavy cold (from the idea that men tend to exaggerate the seriousness of the condition)

Man Friday noun (pl Man Fridays)

A factotum or servile attendant (from Robinson Crusoe's man)

manˈhandle transitive verb

  1. To move by manpower
  2. To handle or treat roughly (orig slang)

manˈhole noun

A hole large enough to admit a person, esp to a sewer, cable-duct, etc

manhood suffrage noun

Right to vote accorded to male citizens

manˈ-hour noun (pl manˈ-hours)

An hour's work by one person

manˈhunt noun

An organized search for a person, esp one mounted by police, etc, for a criminal

man in the moon noun

  1. A supposed likeness of a man's face seen on the surface of the moon
  2. The fanciful character of children's rhymes, etc, derived from this

man in the street noun

  1. The ordinary, everyday man
  2. Tom, Dick, or Harry

man-jackˈ or man jack noun

Individual man (as every man-jack)

man-machine interface noun (computing)

The device or method by which a user communicates with a computer, eg a keyboard or mouse

manˈ-made adjective

  1. Made by man
  2. Humanly made or originated
  3. (of fibre, fabric, etc) artificial, synthetic

man-manˈagement noun

The organization of the work of members of staff

man-manˈager noun (slang)

A person regarded in a terms of ability to direct the work of others (as in a good man-manager

manˈ-mark transitive verb

(in football, hockey, etc) to mark (a particular opponent) closely

man-millˈiner noun (literary)

  1. A male milliner
  2. A man with frivolous interests or concerns (archaic; derogatory)

man-mindˈed adjective

Having the mind or qualities of a man

man of business noun (esp Scot)

An agent or a lawyer

man of God noun

  1. A holy man
  2. A clergyman (also man of the cloth)

man of his hands noun

A man of prowess

man of law noun

A lawyer

man of letters noun

  1. A scholar
  2. A writer

man of skill noun (Scots law)

An expert witness or a professionally qualified person appointed by the court to provide a written report on a technical issue in a case

man of straw noun

  1. A person of no substance (esp financially)
  2. One nominally, but not really, responsible
  3. A sham opponent or argument set up for the sake of disputation

man of the cloth see man of God above.

man of the match noun

The outstanding player in a sports match (also figurative)

man of the moment noun

The man (most capable of) dealing with the present situation

man of the world noun

A man with experience of the pains and (esp sexual) pleasures of life

man-of-warˈ or man-o'-warˈ noun (pl men-of-warˈ or men-o'-warˈ)

  1. A warship
  2. A soldier (archaic or facetious)
  3. (in full man-of-war bird) the frigate bird
  4. (see also Portuguese man-of-war under Portuguese)

manˈ-of-war's-man noun

A man who serves on board a warship

manˈ-orchid noun

An orchid (Aceras anthropophora) whose flowers have a human-like shape

manˈpack noun

A package of supplies or equipment designed to be carried by one person

manˈpower noun

  1. The agency or energy of people in doing work
  2. The rate at which a person can work
  3. Available resources in population or in able-bodied people

Manpower Services Commission noun

The former name for the Training Agency (see under train1)

manˈ-queller noun (Shakespeare)

A man-killer, a murderer

manˈrider or manriding train noun

The formal name for a paddy train (qv)

manˈriding adjective

Used of equipment on oil rigs that is used by personnel and is built to a higher standard of safety than material-handling systems

manˈrope noun (nautical)

A rope railing on a gangway or ladder

manˈ-servant noun (pl menˈ-servants)

A male servant

manˈshift noun

The work done by one person in one shift or work period

manˈ-size or manˈ-sized adjective

  1. Suitable for, or requiring, a man
  2. Very big (informal)

manˈslaughter noun

  1. The killing of a man
  2. Unlawful homicide without malice aforethought (law)

manˈ-slayer noun

A person who kills a man

manˈ-stealer noun

A person who steals people, esp to make slaves of them

manˈtrap noun

  1. A trap for catching trespassers
  2. Any source of potential danger
  3. A woman who takes a mischievous pleasure in attracting and acquiring men (informal)

manˈ-watching noun

The study of body language

manˈ-week or manˈ-year noun (pl manˈ-weeks or manˈ-years)

A week's or year's work by one person

menˈfolk or menˈfolks plural noun

Male people, esp a woman's male relatives

men's movement noun

A movement begun in the USA in opposition to the women's movement (qv under woman), aiming to uphold the traditional role of men in society

mensˈwear noun

Clothing for men

as one man

  1. All together
  2. Unanimously

be one's own man

To be independent, not answerable to anyone else

be someone's man

To be exactly the person someone is seeking for a particular purpose

make a man of

To help a young man to acquire the characteristics associated with a mature adult

man alive

An exclamation of surprise

man and boy

From childhood to adulthood

man to man

  1. One man to another as individuals in fight or talk
  2. Frank(ly) and confidential(ly)

man up

(informal) to accept responsibility in the manner of a mature person

men in grey suits

Unseen establishment figures holding the ultimate power in an organization, political party, etc

old man of the sea see under old

our man in…

A company or government representative in, or journalist covering, a particular area

separate (or sort out) the men from the boys

To serve as a test of ability, calibre, courage, etc

the Man of Sin (religion)

The Antichrist

to a man

Without exception

old /ōld/

adjective (oldˈer or eldˈer (qv); oldˈest or eldˈest)
  1. Advanced in years
  2. Having been long or relatively long in existence, use or possession
  3. Of a specified (or to-be-specified) age
  4. Of long standing
  5. Worn or worn-out
  6. Out of date
  7. Superseded or abandoned
  8. Former
  9. Old-fashioned
  10. Antique
  11. Ancient
  12. Early
  13. Belonging to later life
  14. Belonging to former times
  15. Denoting anyone or anything with whom or with which one was formerly associated, such as old school, etc
  16. (of a language) of the earliest or earliest known stage
  17. Long practised or experienced
  18. Having the characteristics of age
  19. Familiar, accustomed
  20. In plenty, in excess, or wonderful (esp in high old; informal)
  21. A general word of familiar or affectionate approbation or contempt (often good old or little old; informal)
  22. Reckoned according to Old Style (see style)
adverb (Shakespeare)

Of old

noun
  1. An old person (archaic or, esp in pl, informal)
  2. Olden times, eld
ORIGIN: OE ald (WSax eald); Du oud, Ger alt

olde /ōld or ōldˈi/ adjective

A facetious spelling of old, used to imply that something has a quaint charm

oldˈen transitive verb and intransitive verb (rare)

To age

adjective

Former, old, past (now usu only in phrases in olden days/times)

oldˈie or (rarely) oldˈy noun (informal)

  1. An old person
  2. A film, song, etc produced or popularized, etc a considerable time ago

oldˈish adjective

Rather old

oldˈness noun

oldˈster noun

  1. A person who is growing old (informal)
  2. A midshipman of four years' standing, a master's mate

old age noun

The later part of life

old-age pension noun

A pension for someone who has reached old age, esp under a national system (first instituted in Britain in 1908; see also retirement pension under retire)

old-age pensioner noun

old bachelor noun

A rather elderly or confirmed bachelor

Old Bailey noun

The Central Criminal Court in London

Old Believer noun (historical)

In Russia, a dissenter from the Orthodox church, a Raskolnik

Old Bill noun

  1. A soldier with a drooping moustache in World War I cartoons by Bruce Bairnsfather
  2. The police (slang; sometimes with the)

old bird noun

An astute, experienced person

old boy noun

  1. One's father, husband, etc (informal)
  2. An old or oldish man, esp one in authority, or one who has some air of youthfulness
  3. A former pupil
  4. An affectionately familiar term of address to a male of any age (also old bean, old chap, old fellow, old fruit, old man, old thing; informal)

Old Boy network noun

  1. (also without caps) the members of a society (usu upper-class), closely interconnected, who share information and secure advantages for each other
  2. This form of association

Old Catholic noun

A member of a body that broke away from the Roman Catholic Church on the question of papal infallibility

old-clothesˈman noun

Someone who deals in cast-off garments

Old Contemptibles plural noun

The British Expeditionary Force to France in 1914, from the then Kaiser's probably apocryphal reference to them as a contemptible little army

old country noun

The mother-country

Old Dart noun (Aust sl)

Great Britain

old dear noun (slang)

An old lady

Old Dominion noun

Virginia

old economy noun

The part of the economy based on traditional industries and the production of physical goods (cf new economy under new)

oldˈ-economy adjective

Old English noun

  1. See English
  2. The form of black letter used by 16c English printers

Old English sheepdog noun

A large breed of dog with a long shaggy coat, usu white with large dark patches

old-estabˈlished adjective

Long established

olde-worlde /ōl-di-wûrldˈi/ adjective (informal)

Self-consciously imitative of the past or supposed past

old Europe noun

The countries of Western Europe

old face noun (printing)

The early roman type as used by Caslon

oldfangˈled adjective

Old-fashioned

old fart noun (derogatory or facetious)

A staid or curmudgeonly old person

old-fashˈioned adjective

  1. In the style of long ago
  2. Out of date
  3. Clinging to old things and old styles
  4. With manners like those of a grown-up person (said of a child)
  5. (in old-fashioned look) quizzically disapproving or critical

noun (N American)

A cocktail made from whisky, bitters, water and sugar

old-fashˈionedness noun

old fogey or old fogy noun

A dull old person, or someone with old-fashioned notions

old-foˈgeyish or old-foˈgyish adjective

Like an old fogey

Old French noun

The French language until about 1400

old gang or old guard noun

The old and conservative element in a party, etc

old-genˈtlemanly adjective

Characteristic of an old gentleman

old girl noun (informal)

  1. An old or oldish woman, esp one with an air of youthfulness
  2. A former pupil
  3. An affectionately familiar form of address to a female of any age

Old Glory noun

The US flag, the Stars and Stripes

old gold noun

A dull gold colour like tarnished gold, used esp in textile fabrics

old'-growth adjective

(of forest or woodland) ancient

old guard see old gang above.

old hand noun

  1. An experienced performer
  2. An old convict

Old Harry, Old Nick, Old One, Old Poker or Old Scratch noun

The Devil

old-hatˈ adjective

Out-of-date

Old Hundred or Old Hundredth noun

A famous tune set in England about the middle of the 16c to Kethe's version of Psalm 100, marked ‘Old Hundredth’ in Tate and Brady (1696)

old identity noun (Aust and NZ)

A person who has been around a place for a long time

Old Kingdom noun

The 3rd to 6th dynasties in ancient Egypt (26c–22c BC)

old lady noun (informal)

  1. One's mother or wife
  2. A noctuid moth (Mormo maura), with a dull pattern on its wings

Old Light (Scot Auld Licht) noun

A member of a relatively less advanced religious school, applied esp to the party in the Scottish Secession Church who continued to hold unchanged the principle of connection between Church and State

oldˈ-line adjective (N American)

  1. Conservative
  2. Traditional

old-liˈner noun

old maid noun

  1. A spinster, esp one who is likely to remain a spinster
  2. A woman, or often a man, of the character supposed to be common among spinsters, ie fussy, prim, conventional, over-cautious, methodical
  3. A simple game played by passing and matching cards
  4. Also the player left with the odd card

old-maidˈhood or old-maidˈism noun

old-maidˈish adjective

Like the conventional old maid, prim

old-maidˈishly adverb

old man noun

  1. One's husband, father, or employer (informal)
  2. The captain of a ship
  3. A familiar, friendly or encouraging term of address
  4. Unregenerate human nature
  5. An adult male kangaroo
  6. A plant, the southernwood

adjective (Aust informal; also with hyphen)

Of exceptional size, intensity, etc

old man of the sea noun

A person or burden that one cannot shake off, from the old man in the Arabian Nights who, having been carried across a stream by Sinbad the Sailor, refused to get down off his back

old man's beard noun

A name for several plants including traveller's joy

old master noun

(often with caps) any great painter or painting of a period previous to the 19c (esp of the Renaissance)

old money noun

  1. Wealth that has been in the same family for several generations
  2. The possessors of such wealth

old'-mon'ey adjective

old moon noun

The moon in its last waning quarter before its reappearance as a new moon

Old Nick see Old Harry above, and Nick

Old Norse see Norse

Old Pretender see under pretend

Old Red Sandstone noun (geology)

The lacustrine or continental equivalent of the (marine) Devonian, so called in contradistinction to the New Red Sandstone

old rose noun

  1. Any of several varieties of rose that existed before the development of hybrid tea roses
  2. A deep soft pink

old salt noun

An experienced sailor

old school noun

Those whose ways, thoughts or attitudes are such as prevailed in the past

oldˈ-school adjective

old school tie noun

  1. A distinctive tie worn by old boys of a school
  2. The emblem of (esp upper-class) loyalties shown by such people to each other

old soldier noun

  1. An experienced person who knows how to make himself or herself comfortable, or how to turn things to his or her advantage
  2. An empty bottle

old song noun

A mere trifle, a very small price

old squaw or oldˈsquaw noun (US)

A kind of duck, the hareld

old stager noun

An experienced person, an old hand

old story noun

  1. Something one has heard before
  2. Something that happened long ago, or has happened often

Old Style noun

  1. See style
  2. A typeface in imitation of old face (printing)

old talk noun (W Indies)

Small talk

oldˈ-talk intransitive verb (W Indies)

To make small talk

Old Testament noun

The first part of the Christian Bible, containing writings about the history of the Hebrew people and books of prophecy (abbrev OT)

oldˈ-time adjective

  1. Of or relating to times long gone by
  2. Of long standing
  3. Old-fashioned

old-timˈer noun

  1. An experienced person, a veteran
  2. Someone who has been where he or she is for a long time
  3. An old-fashioned person
  4. (esp as a form of address; US) an old person

Old Tom noun (archaic)

A kind of sweetened gin

old wife noun

  1. An old woman
  2. Someone who has the character ascribed to old women
  3. A cap for curing a smoking chimney (Scot)
  4. A kind of duck, the hareld
  5. A fish of various kinds, sea-bream, filefish, alewife, menhaden, etc

old woman noun

  1. One's wife or mother (informal)
  2. An old-womanish person

old-womˈanish adjective

Like an old woman, esp fussy

oldˈ-world adjective

  1. Belonging to earlier times
  2. Old-fashioned and quaint
  3. (with cap) of the Old World

Old World noun

The eastern hemisphere

any old see under any

come the old soldier over someone

To impose on a person

of old

  1. Long ago
  2. In or of times long past
  3. Formerly

the old sod

One's native country, esp used of Ireland, when also the ould sod

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更新时间:2025/3/27 0:48:15