释义 |
hoard I. \ˈhō(ə)rd, ˈhȯ(ə)rd, ˈhōəd, ˈhȯ(ə)d\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English hord, from Old English; akin to Old High German hort treasure, Old Norse hodd, Gothic huzd treasure, Greek kysthos vulva, Old English hȳdan to hide — more at hide 1. : a collection or accumulation or amassment of something usually of special value or utility that is put aside for preservation of safekeeping or future use often in a greedy or miserly or otherwise unreasonable manner and that is often kept hidden or as if hidden : a supply or stock or fund of something that is stored up and closely and often jealously guarded < a hoard of money > < a hoard of provisions > < a hoard of facts > often : treasure < dug up a hoard of gold and jewels > < a hoard of old coins > 2. obsolete : the place where a hoard is kept : repository; specifically obsolete : treasury II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English horden, from Old English hordian, from hord, n. transitive verb 1. : to collect or accumulate or amass into a hoard : lay up a hoard of < hoard ing their money and refusing to make even reasonable expenditures > 2. : to keep (as a desire) hidden and in reserve and allow to develop or become strengthened < she hoarded her intention — Virginia Woolf > < the people outside disperse their affections, you hoard yours, you nurse them into intensity — Joseph Conrad > intransitive verb : to lay up a hoard; especially : to practice hoarding Synonyms: see accumulate III. noun (-s) Etymology: alteration of earlier hourd, probably from French dialect, scaffold, scaffolding, from Old French hourt scaffold, scaffolding, platform, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German hurd hurdle — more at hurdle : hoarding II 1 |