释义 |
plonk
plonk 1 P0378100 (plŏngk, plŭngk)v.n. & adv. Variant of plunk.
plonk 2 P0378100 (plŏngk)n. Chiefly British Slang Cheap or inferior wine. [Short for earlier plink-plonk, perhaps alteration of French vin blanc, white wine : vin, wine (from Old French; see vinegar) + blanc, white (from Old French; see blank).]plonk (plɒŋk) vb (often foll by down) to drop or be dropped, esp heavily or suddenly: he plonked the money on the table. nthe act or sound of plonkinginterjan exclamation imitative of this sound
plonk (plɒŋk) n (Brewing) informal Brit and Austral and NZ alcoholic drink, usually wine, esp of inferior quality[C20: perhaps from French blanc white, as in vin blanc white wine]plonk (plɒŋk) n. Chiefly Brit. inferior or cheap wine. [1925–30; perhaps alter. of French (vin)blanc white (wine)] plonk Past participle: plonked Gerund: plonking
Present |
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I plonk | you plonk | he/she/it plonks | we plonk | you plonk | they plonk |
Preterite |
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I plonked | you plonked | he/she/it plonked | we plonked | you plonked | they plonked |
Present Continuous |
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I am plonking | you are plonking | he/she/it is plonking | we are plonking | you are plonking | they are plonking |
Present Perfect |
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I have plonked | you have plonked | he/she/it has plonked | we have plonked | you have plonked | they have plonked |
Past Continuous |
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I was plonking | you were plonking | he/she/it was plonking | we were plonking | you were plonking | they were plonking |
Past Perfect |
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I had plonked | you had plonked | he/she/it had plonked | we had plonked | you had plonked | they had plonked |
Future |
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I will plonk | you will plonk | he/she/it will plonk | we will plonk | you will plonk | they will plonk |
Future Perfect |
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I will have plonked | you will have plonked | he/she/it will have plonked | we will have plonked | you will have plonked | they will have plonked |
Future Continuous |
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I will be plonking | you will be plonking | he/she/it will be plonking | we will be plonking | you will be plonking | they will be plonking |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been plonking | you have been plonking | he/she/it has been plonking | we have been plonking | you have been plonking | they have been plonking |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been plonking | you will have been plonking | he/she/it will have been plonking | we will have been plonking | you will have been plonking | they will have been plonking |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been plonking | you had been plonking | he/she/it had been plonking | we had been plonking | you had been plonking | they had been plonking |
Conditional |
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I would plonk | you would plonk | he/she/it would plonk | we would plonk | you would plonk | they would plonk |
Past Conditional |
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I would have plonked | you would have plonked | he/she/it would have plonked | we would have plonked | you would have plonked | they would have plonked | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | plonk - a cheap wine of inferior qualityvino, wine - fermented juice (of grapes especially)Australia, Commonwealth of Australia - a nation occupying the whole of the Australian continent; Aboriginal tribes are thought to have migrated from southeastern Asia 20,000 years ago; first Europeans were British convicts sent there as a penal colonyBritain, Great Britain, U.K., UK, United Kingdom, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - a monarchy in northwestern Europe occupying most of the British Isles; divided into England and Scotland and Wales and Northern Ireland; `Great Britain' is often used loosely to refer to the United Kingdom | | 2. | plonk - the noise of something dropping (as into liquid)noise - sound of any kind (especially unintelligible or dissonant sound); "he enjoyed the street noises"; "they heard indistinct noises of people talking"; "during the firework display that ended the gala the noise reached 98 decibels" | Verb | 1. | plonk - set (something or oneself) down with or as if with a noise; "He planked the money on the table"; "He planked himself into the sofa"plunk down, flump, plank, plump, plump down, plunk, plopplace down, put down, set down - cause to sit or seat or be in a settled position or place; "set down your bags here" | Translationsplonk (ploŋk) verb to place or put noisily and rather clumsily. He plonked his books on the table; She plonked herself down in front of the fire. 用力丟下(或放下) 扑通一甩,使劲投掷
plonk
plonk (someone, something, or oneself) downTo set, throw, drop, or place someone, something, or oneself heavily down to a lower level. A variant of the more common "plunk (someone, something, or oneself) down." He plonked the bag on the table and went into his room without a word. Please don't just plonk yourself down in front of the television all afternoon—I want you to play outside for at least two hours today! He threw his toy across the room, so I carried him upstairs kicking and screaming and plonked him down in bed for the night.See also: down, plonkplonk downTo fall or set down heavily down to a lower level. A variant of the more common "plunk (someone, something, or oneself) down." He came into the room and plonked down onto the sofa, too tired to speak. Please don't just plonk down in front of the television all afternoon—I want you to play outside for at least two hours today!See also: down, plonkplonk (someone or something) upTo set someone or something upright against or atop something else in a haphazard or careless manner. Someone plonked the sack of money up against the side of the building and just left it there! The odd little café was just sort of plonked up on top of the little hill all on its own. He plonked the little girl up on the his shoulders so she could see the parade.See also: plonk, upplonked upSet upright against or atop something in a haphazard or careless manner. The odd little café was just sort of plonked up on top of the little hill all on its own. We discovered the sack of money plonked up against the side of the building, without a soul in sight!See also: plonk, upplonk something downto slap something down; to plop something down. He plonked a dollar down and demanded a newspaper. He plonked down his beer mug on the bar.See also: down, plonkplonk n. white wine; cheap wine; any liquor. (From French blanc.) That plonk is really hard on the gut. plonked (up) mod. alcohol intoxicated. (see also plonk, blank.) He sure is plonked up. See also: plonk, upplonked verbSee plonked upSee also: plonkplonk
plonk Brit, Austral, and NZ informal alcoholic drink, usually wine, esp of inferior quality plonk (networking, abuse)(Possibly influenced by British slang"plonk" for cheap booze, or "plonker" for someone behavingstupidly; usually written "*plonk*") The sound a newbiemakes as he falls to the bottom of a kill file. While thisterm originated in the Usenet newsgroupnews:talk.bizarre, by 1994 it was widespread on Usenet andmailing lists as a form of public ridicule.
Another theory is that it is an acronym for "Person withLittle Or No Knowledge".PLONK
Acronym | Definition |
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PLONK➣Person Leaving Our Newsgroup (kill filtered) | PLONK➣Please Leave Our Newsgroup Kid (slang) | PLONK➣Person with Little Or No Knowledge | PLONK➣Pewien Lamer Opuscil Nasza Kompanie (Polish) | PLONK➣Put Lamer On Kill Filter (USENET) | PLONK➣Pewnie Lepiej Olac Niz Komentowac (Polish) |
plonk Related to plonk: plinkSynonyms for plonknoun a cheap wine of inferior qualityRelated Words- vino
- wine
- Australia
- Commonwealth of Australia
- Britain
- Great Britain
- U.K.
- UK
- United Kingdom
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
noun the noise of something dropping (as into liquid)Related Wordsverb set (something or oneself) down with or as if with a noiseSynonyms- plunk down
- flump
- plank
- plump
- plump down
- plunk
- plop
Related Words- place down
- put down
- set down
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