释义 |
[ kah-goh ] / ˈkɑ goʊ /
noun, plural ka·gos.(in Japan) a small basketwork palanquin strung from a pole each end of which rests on the shoulder of a bearer. Origin of kago1855–60; <Japanese: basket, cage Words nearby kagoKafka, Franz, kaftan, Kafue, Kagawa, Kagera, kago, Kagoshima, kagoul, kagu, Kahanamoku, kahawai Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for kago"I have brought a present for our young master," and with a whistle, he summoned a kago that had been waiting in the garden. Romances of Old Japan|Yei Theodora Ozaki The road was very bad, so that even the kago bearers had difficulty in getting along. The Voyage of the Vega round Asia and Europe, Volume I and Volume II|A.E. Nordenskieold The bearers of a kago are two stalwart, bare-legged men, and they always carry long sticks in their hands. How the World Travels|A. A. Methley In the mountainous regions the chair and kago take the place of the 'rikisha. The Old World and Its Ways|William Jennings Bryan
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