释义 |
pig I. \ˈpig\ noun (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English pigge 1. : a young swine of either sex that has not reached sexual maturity; broadly : a wild or domestic swine — see hog 1a 2. a. : pig's flesh as food : bacon, ham, pork b. : the dressed carcass of a young swine weighing less than 130 pounds c. : pigskin 3. : one thought to resemble or suggest a pig in habits or behavior (as in dirtiness, greediness, selfishness) < profit by such a lesson and not make such a gorging pig of himself — F.S.Anthony > < feel a pig for having allowed a fortnight to go by without a letter — H.J.Laski > 4. : an animal likened to the pig (as a guinea pig or bushpig) — usually used in combination or with a qualifying word 5. [so called from the resemblance of the arrangement of the molds in the pig bed to suckling pigs] a. : a crude casting of metal (as iron or lead) convenient for storage, transportation, or melting; especially : one of standard size and shape for marketing run directly from the smelting furnace — compare ingot b. : a mold or channel in the pig bed c. : pig iron, pig lead 6. a. : a small iron or steel car pulled by a cable on a narrow-gage track and used for handling a railway freight car on an incline too steep for a locomotive b. slang : a railroad locomotive 7. : a flask having two or more tubulures to which smaller flasks may be attached and used especially to collect fractions during fractional distillation 8. : a brush, swab, or scraper pushed or pulled through a pipe or duct to clean it 9. : a simple card game in which as cards are passed one at a time from player to player the first player to hold four of a kind lays his hand on the table and puts a finger against his nose and the last to notice and do likewise becomes the pig 10. slang : an immoral woman • - in pig II. verb (pigged ; pigged ; pigging ; pigs) intransitive verb 1. : to bring forth in the manner of pigs : farrow 2. : to huddle, lie together, or live in a way attributed to pigs < a rare collection of human animals … pigging together in mean huts — V.L.Parrington > transitive verb 1. : litter 2. : to crowd like pigs < they love fighting and they get more chance when they're all pigged in together — J.N.Hall > • - pig it III. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English pygg chiefly Scotland a. : an earthenware vessel b. : crock IV. noun : policeman — usually used disparagingly |