groaned「groan」
groaned是什么意思
groaned
v.
抱怨;**( groan的过去式和过去分词 );发牢骚;受苦

groan是什么意思
groan [ɡrəun]
vi. **;抱怨;发吱嘎声
vt. **;抱怨
n. **;叹息;吱嘎声
groan 变化形式
复数: groans
第三人称单数: groans
过去式: groaned
过去分词: groaned
现在分词: groaning
所属分类:
CET6TEM4CET4IELTSGRE考 研
使用频率:
星级词汇:
中文词源
groan **
拟声词,**的声音。
groan 用法和例句提示:点击例句中的单词,就可以看到词义解释
Maybe that groan had been a moan after all ?
也许婚礼上她的**真的是一声呜咽?
He explained that when president obama made the spilled-milk joke in his ' state of the union ' speech , ' there was a collective groan that went on around the country ' on twitter .
他解释说,当奥巴马总统在国情咨文中讲那个关于牛奶溢出的笑话时,全美国都在推特表达着集体的抱怨情绪。
An agonizing groan finished my sentence .
一段痛苦的**结束了我的语句。
You can almost hear gamers groan in unison .
你几乎可以听到玩家们共同的**。
This can cause people in rem sleep to twitch and groan , sometimes flailing about and injuring their bedmates .
这些能引起位于快速动眼睡眠的人们抽搐,**,甚至有些时候会伤害与之同床的人。
男生英文名‘Eric'是什么意思
男生英文名“Eric”的意思是埃里克。
“Eric”解释:
释义:男性姓名,埃里克。
发音:美 [ˈerɪk],英 [ˈerɪk]。
来源语种:男子教名,源于古日耳曼语。
名字寓意:多才多艺的。
语法:Eric的北欧变体是Erick;德语形式是Erich。
示例:Eric left the barge in a hurry.
译文:埃里克匆忙离开了驳船。
扩展资料
Eric的临近词语:
一、Erica
释义:埃丽卡
发音:英 [ˈɛrɪkə],美 [ˈɛrɪkə] 。
语法:Erica的瑞典语形式是Erika。
示例:Erica was friendly and chattered about Andrew's children
译文:埃丽卡很和气,不停地念叨着安德鲁的孩子们。
二、Erich
释义:埃里希。
发音:美 [ˈɛrɪk],英 [ˈɛrɪk] 。
语法:Erich的北欧变体是Erick。
示例:Erich Fromm is one of the most famous figures of Frankfort School and NeoFreudi** in the 20th century.
译文:埃里希·弗洛姆是20世纪法兰克福学派和新弗洛伊德主义的主要代表人物之一。
英语题急
groan-groaned(过去式)
英音:[gr?un]美音:[gron]
不及物动词 vi.
1.** 2.发吱嘎声 3.受重压;受压迫;受苦[(+beneath/under)] 4.【口】抱怨
及物动词 vt.
1.用**表示;**着说
天鹅湖的英语故事表述
The swan lake|天鹅湖
Chapter 1
Long ago in a far kingdom there lived a queen.
She had
a son. On the day before the prince was eighteen years old the queen said to
him: “You are grown up enough, my son, to find you a bride1 who will one day sit
at your side on the throne2.”
However, the prince had not thought of
getting married at all. “Don't trouble me with it, Mum,” he answered and looked
out of the window at the trees bending in the wind.
“But you must get
married, my son,” the queen insisted. “What would the subjects say about their
king being without a queen?”
The prince sighed heavily.
“So, what am I
to do, mum?” he asked.
“I'll arrange everything myself,” said the queen.
“But you must obey me.”
The prince sighed for the second time. “Well, mum,
I'll do as you say. But I'd better go hunting today.”
“Enjoy your youth
while you have it,” the queen **iled. “But remember that tomorrow I'm going to
arrange a great party, inviting the nicest maidens of all the best families we
have in our country. And from among them you'll have to choose your
bride.”
“You may choose her for me yourself!” the prince exclaimed, being
glad to end the conversation. “The wind, the far land, the steed3, the bow, and
the forests are dearer to me!” And the queen saw no more of him. Taking his
favorite companion Beppo and some of the equipage4 the prince left everything
and went hunting.
They sat in the saddle all day long, but the prince had
no gladness in hunting, galloping5 wildly through the meadows6. Something
depressed7 him, but he didn't know what it was.
When at last in the evening
the prince and his companions grew tired and were going back exhausted, they all
at once found themselves near the Stone Grove. This was the forest about which
there were such terrible stories told that no one dared to go there.
At the
sight of the forest terror overcame them all. Even the horses pricked up8 their
ears seeing the dark wall of oaks, which looked as if hewed9 from
stone.
“Just look, Beppo!” the prince cried suddenly to his companion,
pointing at the darkling sky.
“They are swans, what else do you think they
can be?” asked Beppo, shrugging10 slightly. “But don't you see that one in
front?” cried the prince. “You too have grown pale, Beppo, haven't you? It has a
golden crown on its head! Those are not swans at all!”
“Indeed,” Beppo
agreed.
These swans were strange, and most strange was the one that led
them. They reminded one of white clouds, floating quickly across the
sky.
“I must have this one!” cried the prince. “The Swan-Queen can be seen
only once in a lifetime, and most people don't see her at all.”
Grief11
filled his heart. The prince drew his bow. But the flock12 had already
vanished13 into the depth of the wood.
The hunters di**ounted14
and ran into the forest. There they were overcome by an awful silence. The
great oaks reminded them of cliffs15. And the moss16 was like a thick carpet.
They made their way through the thicket, not knowing where they were
going.
Suddenly Beppo pointed forward:
“A lake!”
A silver mirror
glinted17 in the dusk among the trees. The hunters drew apart the last branches
of the thicket and stopped on the beach, wonder-stricken. A flock of white swans
with long lithe18 necks were swimming in the lake, and at their head, towering
above the water mirror, glided the most beautiful, the most mysterious, and
therewith19, the gravest20 swan with a golden crown on it's head.
The
prince drew his bow, but he had to lower it again.
“I can't shoot!” he
groaned21.” “It seems to me that I'd be killing a human being. It isn't a swan,
Beppo. It's a beautiful maiden. That is the princess, whom I seek, that is my
bride!”
“Are you mad, Prince!” Beppo scolded him.“ It was not long ago
when you were overjoyed with our wild galloping and now you talk like this! Has
something enchanted22 you? They say that the Stone Grove is woven of
witchery23”.
“The Queen of the swans has enchanted me,” the prince
whispered, and the reflection24 of the lake with the flock of white swans
glinted in his eyes.
“Look how beautiful she is! Like a snow-white, gently
inflated25 sail! Like the uneasy nights, in the darkness of which I woke and
something inexpressible26 pushed me to the night window to look at the Moon as
it was floating through the clouds...Do you see? Now they are ready to go away.
They are taking off!”
And so it was. In the dusk27 the swans unfolded28
their wings and stretched their necks forward. The darker it became the whiter
they seemed. The whitest was the swan wearing the golden crown that glinted in
the setting sun. The queen of the swans took off into the air like a white
waft29 of air, and the prince was dazzled30.
“She is flying to us!” he
exclaimed suddenly. “She's noticed us!”
The queen of swans flew right
towards them. But just as she neared them she changed course, swerved31 and flew
high above the lake. The others followed her as if she pulled them behind her on
an unseen thread.
“I'll run after her, I can't lose her!” cried the prince.
And Beppo tried to hold him back in vain32. The others had no time to look round
before the prince had disappeared into the shadow of the forest.
“What
shall we do?” said Beppo helplessly to his companions, seeing that he couldn't
overtake33 the prince.
“We'll seek him,” said an old well-tried
archer34. “I think we'll find him at the edge of the forest.”
“He has
fallen in love with a swan,” the old hunter laughed. “With their queen! Who has
ever heard the like? The queen is beautiful and graceful, but she loves nobody.
She has cold eyes, and loves only cool water. She never can give the prince an
heir35.”
“For she is a real swan, nevertheless,” added Beppo.
Soon the
hunters made their way through the thicket towards where they thought they could
find the prince.
Only the moon lighted their way.
Chapter 2
The moon glinted like silver in the sky, and it could be seen
how the prince hurried after it. He went steadily in the direction whither36 the
swans were flying.
Suddenly the forest thinned. In the pale moonlight the
ruins of Stone Castle were seen.
The prince sat on a stone to have a
rest.
Frightened, he thought, “How will I find her here in this wild dark
forest, if I don't know where she is hiding?”
Helplessly he looked up at
the moon, which answered him with a cold unmoving stare. He turned to the oaks,
which stood like a silent crowd of servants, waiting for an order.
Just
then it seemed to him that he saw something new among them. A beautiful maiden
stood before the prince.
He spoke to her. And to his surprise the maiden
replied. Most of all he was amazed that she talked to him as to a close friend,
as if they had played together in childhood.
“I was like all maidens, my
prince”, she said. But the master of this bewitched37 grove38 turned me into a
swan in revenge39. And all the girls of my retinue40, too.”
“Is there a
master in the Stone Grove?”
“Yes, Readbeard,” she asserted41. “Oh, if you
only knew, how cruel and evil he is.”
“Then you are not a swan!” the prince
said gladly. “But how has it come about that I see you now in your real
image?”
“Every night we can take on a human image. But then we become twice
as miserable when the white witchery wraps round us again. Our arms become
numb42 and covered with feathers, our necks stretch out and we turn into
swans.”
Moan and groan什么意思?
moan英 [məʊn] 美 [moʊn]
vt. 以**声说出;悲叹;抱怨;哀悼
n. **声;悲叹声;(尤指风的)呼啸声
vi. **;发出**般的凄切声;悲叹;抱怨
**; **声; 呜咽; 悲叹
复数:moans
过去式:moaned
过去分词:moaned
现在分词:moaning
第三人称单数:moans
(1)**;呜咽 If you moan, you make a low sound, usually because you are unhappy or in pain.
Tony moaned in his sleep and then turned over on his side.
托尼在睡梦中发出**声,然后翻了个身。
'My head, my head,' he moaned. 'I can't see.'
“我的头,我的头,”他**着说,“我看不见了。”
Moan is also a noun.
Suddenly she gave a low, choking moan and began to tremble violently.
突然,她发出了一声低沉而哽咽的**,然后剧烈地颤抖起来。
.her moan of sorrow. 她难过的**声
(2)抱怨;发牢骚 To moan means to complain or speak in a way which shows that you are very unhappy.
I used to moan if I didn't get at least six hours' sleep at night.
过去如果晚上的睡眠时间不足6小时的话,我就会抱怨。
moaning about the weather..
抱怨天气
They moan on a lot about money.
他们对钱的事情抱怨不已。
Meg moans, 'I hated it!'... 梅格抱怨道:“我不想这样!”
The gardener was moaning that he had another garden to do later that morning.
园丁当时抱怨说,上午晚些时候他还要到另一个花园干活。
(3)抱怨 A moan is a complaint.
They have been listening to people's gripes, moans and praise.
他们一直在倾听人们的牢骚、抱怨和表扬。
(4)抱怨;发牢骚 If you have a moan, you complain about something.
You can go see him and have a good old moan.
你可以去看看他,好好地诉诉苦。
(5)低沉的声音 A moan is a low noise.
.the occasional moan of the wind round the corners of the house.
风刮过屋角时间或发出的呼啸声
the moan of distant traffic. 远处车流传来的低沉的嘈杂声
groan, moan, sign, sob
这些名词(动词)均有“叹息声,叹息”之意。
groan: 侧重指因受到难忍受的精神负担或强烈的痛苦等而发出沉重的**,也指显示强烈不满的叹息声。
sign: 多指无意识地发出表示沮丧、悲痛、悔恨或厌倦等情绪的深沉叹息。
sob: 指抽噎声或呜咽声,或边说边哭
groan英 [grəʊn] 美 [groʊn]
vi. **;发牢骚;抱怨;吱嘎声:因压力而发出声响
vt. **着说,**着表示 n. **,叹息;**般的声音
**; 叹息; 哼,**; **声
复数:groans
过去式:groaned
过去分词:groaned
现在分词:groaning
第三人称单数:groans
(1)**;叹息
Slowly, he opened his eyes. As he did so, he began to groan with pain.
他慢慢地睁开眼睛,并发出痛苦的**。
They glanced at the man on the floor, who began to groan.
他们瞥了一眼躺在地上的男人,那人现在开始**起来。
She was making **all groaning noises. 她发出轻轻的**声。
Groan is also a noun.
She heard him let out a pitiful, muffled groan.
她听到他发出一声令人悲悯的低沉的**声。
As his ball flew wide, there was a collective groan from the stands.
他将球踢飞了,看台上一片叹息声。
(2)不高兴地低声说;咕哝
'My leg — I think it's broken,' Eric groaned.
“我的腿——我想是断了,”埃里克咕哝着说
(3)动词抱怨;发牢骚
His parents were beginning to groan about the price of college tuition.
他的父母开始抱怨大学的学费太贵。
Groan is also a noun.
Listen sympathetically to your child's moans and groans about what she can't do.
当你的孩子因不能做某些事情而发牢骚的时候,你应该抱着一颗理解的心去倾听。
(4)(树木等)发出嘎吱声
The timbers groan and creak and the floorboards shift.
这些木头在吱吱嘎嘎作响,木地板有些摇晃。
(5)动词堆满,摆满,装满(食物)
The bar counter groans under the weight of huge plates of the freshest fish.
吧台上摆满了大碟大碟非常新鲜的鱼。
a table groaning with food.
堆满了食物的桌子
(6)动词受…重压;受…折磨;不堪重负
Consumers were groaning under the weight of high interest rates.
高利率令消费者不堪重负。
Bookshelves groan under the burden of books on threats to the environment.
书架上摆满了有关环境威胁的书,不堪重负。
