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单词 jute
释义

jute1

noun dʒuːtdʒut
mass noun
  • 1Rough fibre made from the stems of a tropical Old World plant, used for making twine and rope or woven into sacking or matting.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Then, like magpies, they hurry back to their workshop loaded with wisps of lace and coils of steel mesh, strands of silk and ropes of jute.
    • I go back and find some odd things like rope and natural jute twine packaged for the crafts market.
    • In fact, the cloth made of cotton, silk, and jute has lovely shades of mauve, brown, blue, and white.
    • About 200 yardages produced with natural fibres like cotton, wool, silk, and jute in natural dyes and the different structures using different counts of yarn are being displayed in the show.
    • This superfine cloth comes from our own traditional handlooms woven out of natural fibres like cotton, linen, silk, wool, jute, etc. and soaked in natural dyes.
    • There were different weaves in jute and blends of jute with cotton and silk.
    • People now use reusable bags, commonly woven from jute, creating another industry with associated economic benefit.
    • The jute and silk blended saris, available at some shops such as Nalli's, are eco-friendly; they come in double shades or light colours.
    • This information will show whether it is profitable for a farmer to produce fibre from kenaf and jute,’ he said.
    • Fabrics with 60 per cent cotton, 20 per cent jute and 20 per cent silk give a silky finish and are suited for all occasions.
  • 2The herbaceous plant which is cultivated for jute fibre, with edible young shoots.

    Genus Corchorus, family Tiliaceae: several species

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The major crops are rice, jute, wheat, tea, sugarcane, and vegetables.
    • This is more so in the case of small & medium Farmers who are involved in conventional cultivation of common products like rice, wheat, coconut, jute or sugar cane.
    • Some paper, however, is made from such plants as cotton, rice, wheat, cornstalks, hemp, and jute; very high quality ‘rag’ paper is still derived from cotton rags.
    • Natural products from jute and banana fibre are being promoted with much hype, especially in urban setups where there is a demand for anything biodegradable.
    • The prices of jute, potato, soyabean, cashew nut, pepper, rubber, green tea leaves, coconut, groundnut and coffee have fallen sharply.
    • There's also a freezer full of such frozen goods as okra, cut pigs' feet, snails, jute leaves, hot peppers, red snapper, and hard chicken.
    1. 2.1 Used in names of other plants that yield fibre, e.g. Chinese jute.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For the Sahara Cup, it was the Chinese jute cap, T-shirt, chinos, towel set and socks; for the McDowells event, it will be a leather pouch for golf balls and a leather wallet.
      • The Chinese jute growing and manufacturing industry reached its zenith in 1985.
      • Gunny bags account for about 90 percent of the total production of Chinese juteand kenaf textile mills.

Origin

Mid 18th century: from Bengali jhūṭo 'matted hair', from Prakrit juṣṭi.

Rhymes

acute, argute, astute, beaut, Beirut, boot, bruit, brut, brute, Bute, butte, Canute, cheroot, chute, commute, compute, confute, coot, cute, depute, dilute, dispute, flute, galoot, hoot, impute, loot, lute, minute, moot, newt, outshoot, permute, pollute, pursuit, recruit, refute, repute, route, salute, Salyut, scoot, shoot, Shute, sloot, snoot, subacute, suit, telecommute, Tonton Macoute, toot, transmute, undershoot, uproot, Ute, volute

Jute2

noun dʒuːtdʒut
  • A member of a Germanic people that (according to Bede) joined the Angles and Saxons in invading Britain in the 5th century, settling in a region including Kent and the Isle of Wight. They may have come from Jutland.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I would suggest that concentration on teaching the Romans, Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Normans in Britain is more likely to achieve her objective.
    • The Jutes settled in and near Kent, but the dialect for the region is known as Kentish, not Jutish.
    • Across the North Sea, new Germanic tribes were settling: Angles, Jutes, Saxons.
    • The Jutes settled in Kent, the Saxons in Essex, Sussex, Middlesex and Wessex, and the Angles everywhere else.
    • Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians who settled in England were still imbued with the traditional freedom of primitive German society.
    • The collapse of Roman rule in the early fifth century ended urban life, as groups of Germanic Angles, Jutes, and Saxons carved the country into tribal enclaves and later created the heptarchy.
    • Compared to Beowulf, we are told that Hermod was treacherous, exiled along with the Jutes.
    • The area is recorded as being the site where the Britons fought the Jutes at the Battle of Creganford in 457.
    • Britain is a mongrel country of Britons, Celts, Scots, Picts, Romans, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Vikings, Normans, Jews, Huguenots, members of the Empire and Commonwealth, and many more groups.
    • I have always understood the Angles, Saxons and Jutes were Germanic tribes who moved to Britain following the retreat of the Roman Empire.

Derivatives

  • Jutish

  • adjective
    • He probably travelled overland along the Aude - Carcassonne Gap - Garonne - Gironde route to the Atlantic, and then sailed on local shipping to explore the sources of British tin and Jutish amber.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Jutish territories around the present city of Southampton were seized by Cædwalla, king of Wessex, c. 686, presumably to acquire excellent harbours and access to the sea.
      • Their high king, Vortigern, finding himself beset on all sides by barbarian invaders, hired Anglo-Saxon and Jutish mercenaries from Denmark and north Germany.
      • The Jutish king Ethelbert of Kent married the Frankish princess Bertha and introduced Christianity into parts of Britain.

Origin

Old English Eotas, Iotas, influenced later in spelling by medieval Latin Jutae, Juti.

 
 

jute1

noundʒutjo͞ot
  • 1Rough fiber made from the stems of a tropical Old World plant, used for making twine and rope or woven into sacking or matting.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In fact, the cloth made of cotton, silk, and jute has lovely shades of mauve, brown, blue, and white.
    • The jute and silk blended saris, available at some shops such as Nalli's, are eco-friendly; they come in double shades or light colours.
    • This superfine cloth comes from our own traditional handlooms woven out of natural fibres like cotton, linen, silk, wool, jute, etc. and soaked in natural dyes.
    • About 200 yardages produced with natural fibres like cotton, wool, silk, and jute in natural dyes and the different structures using different counts of yarn are being displayed in the show.
    • Fabrics with 60 per cent cotton, 20 per cent jute and 20 per cent silk give a silky finish and are suited for all occasions.
    • This information will show whether it is profitable for a farmer to produce fibre from kenaf and jute,’ he said.
    • Then, like magpies, they hurry back to their workshop loaded with wisps of lace and coils of steel mesh, strands of silk and ropes of jute.
    • There were different weaves in jute and blends of jute with cotton and silk.
    • I go back and find some odd things like rope and natural jute twine packaged for the crafts market.
    • People now use reusable bags, commonly woven from jute, creating another industry with associated economic benefit.
  • 2The herbaceous plant which is cultivated for jute fiber, with edible young shoots.

    Genus Corchorus, family Tiliaceae: several species, in particular C. capsularis of China and C. olitorius of India

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Some paper, however, is made from such plants as cotton, rice, wheat, cornstalks, hemp, and jute; very high quality ‘rag’ paper is still derived from cotton rags.
    • There's also a freezer full of such frozen goods as okra, cut pigs' feet, snails, jute leaves, hot peppers, red snapper, and hard chicken.
    • This is more so in the case of small & medium Farmers who are involved in conventional cultivation of common products like rice, wheat, coconut, jute or sugar cane.
    • The prices of jute, potato, soyabean, cashew nut, pepper, rubber, green tea leaves, coconut, groundnut and coffee have fallen sharply.
    • The major crops are rice, jute, wheat, tea, sugarcane, and vegetables.
    • Natural products from jute and banana fibre are being promoted with much hype, especially in urban setups where there is a demand for anything biodegradable.
    1. 2.1 Used in names of other plants that yield fiber, e.g. Chinese jute.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Gunny bags account for about 90 percent of the total production of Chinese juteand kenaf textile mills.
      • The Chinese jute growing and manufacturing industry reached its zenith in 1985.
      • For the Sahara Cup, it was the Chinese jute cap, T-shirt, chinos, towel set and socks; for the McDowells event, it will be a leather pouch for golf balls and a leather wallet.

Origin

Mid 18th century: from Bengali jhūṭo ‘matted hair’, from Prakrit juṣṭi.

Jute2

noundʒutjo͞ot
  • A member of a Germanic people that may have come from Jutland and, according to the Venerable Bede, joined the Angles and Saxons in invading Britain in the 5th century, settling in a region including Kent and the Isle of Wight.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians who settled in England were still imbued with the traditional freedom of primitive German society.
    • I have always understood the Angles, Saxons and Jutes were Germanic tribes who moved to Britain following the retreat of the Roman Empire.
    • Compared to Beowulf, we are told that Hermod was treacherous, exiled along with the Jutes.
    • The Jutes settled in Kent, the Saxons in Essex, Sussex, Middlesex and Wessex, and the Angles everywhere else.
    • The area is recorded as being the site where the Britons fought the Jutes at the Battle of Creganford in 457.
    • The collapse of Roman rule in the early fifth century ended urban life, as groups of Germanic Angles, Jutes, and Saxons carved the country into tribal enclaves and later created the heptarchy.
    • I would suggest that concentration on teaching the Romans, Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Normans in Britain is more likely to achieve her objective.
    • Across the North Sea, new Germanic tribes were settling: Angles, Jutes, Saxons.
    • Britain is a mongrel country of Britons, Celts, Scots, Picts, Romans, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Vikings, Normans, Jews, Huguenots, members of the Empire and Commonwealth, and many more groups.
    • The Jutes settled in and near Kent, but the dialect for the region is known as Kentish, not Jutish.

Origin

Old English Eotas, Iotas, influenced later in spelling by medieval Latin Jutae, Juti.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 18:36:08