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单词 verb
释义

verb

/vəːb /
Grammar
noun
A word used to describe an action, state, or occurrence, and forming the main part of the predicate of a sentence, such as hear, become, happen.This could be a preposition, a verb, or a noun which does not in fact count as the ‘possessor’....
  • Kanji are used in writing the main parts of a sentence such as verbs and nouns, as well as names.
  • We typically identify powers with a certain standard locution, employing the infinitives of verbs along with verb phrases.
verb [with object]
Use (a word that is not conventionally used as a verb, typically a noun) as a verb: any English noun can be verbed, but some are more resistant than others (as noun verbing) I hate the verbing of that particular noun...
  • Shakespeare verbed nouns, while the discourse particle "like" was common in some dialects of English as far back as the 1800s.
  • Like any kind of wordplay, verbing can distract instead of persuade.
  • She relies heavily on assonance and shows a fondness for verbing nouns.

Derivatives

verbless

/ˈvəːbləs/ adjective ...
  • On Tuesday the prime minister employed 107 verbless sentences, a record to cherish.
  • In fact, all he offered was a verbless sentence committing him to precisely nothing: ‘So, the United Nations route.’
  • It is notable for verbless sentences, and promises which sound good while avoiding precision.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French verbe or Latin verbum 'word, verb'.

  • word from Old English:

    Word is ultimately related to Latin verbum, the source of verb (Late Middle English), proverb (Middle English) the ‘pro’ here having the sense ‘put forth’, and verbal (Late Middle English). ‘In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God’ are the first words of the Gospel of John, which continues: ‘And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us…full of grace and truth.’ To eat your words is first found in a 1571 translation of a work by the French Protestant theologian John Calvin: ‘God eateth not his word when he hath once spoken.’ A word in your ear is of similar vintage, coming from Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing: ‘Come you hither sirra, a word in your ear, sir’. People sometimes say a word to the wise or a word to the wise is enough to imply that only a hint or brief explanation is required. The wording of the first English use, at the start of the 16th century, was ‘Few words may serve the wise’, although the concept was expressed much earlier than that in the Latin saying verbum sapienti sat est, sometimes shortened to verb sap.

Rhymes

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更新时间:2025/1/24 10:48:03