释义 |
plup|plʌp| [Echoic: cf. plop n. and adv.] The sound of or as of a body falling on a hard surface, into liquid, etc. Also fig.
1911R. Brooke in E. Marsh Rupert Brooke (1918) p. lxvii, The ‘quaint’ remarks fall all round one during meal times, with little soft plups like pats of butter. 1926Chambers's Jrnl. Dec. 847/1 The surge of the water down below, and the plup of ‘escape’ above the roof, were but soft sounds. 1931E. A. Robertson Four Frightened People v. 144 Gas bubbles rose with a soft ‘plup-plup’-ing. |