释义 |
kit-cat noun or kit-kat \ˈkitˌkat\ Etymology: after Kit (Christopher) Cat or Catling, 18th century English keeper of the tavern where the club originally met 1. usually capitalized K&C or both Ks : a member of an early 18th century London club of Whig politicians and men of letters 2. [probably so called from the portraits hung in a dining room of the Kit-cat club whose low ceiling made the smaller size necessary] : a portrait of less than half length but including the hands < some thirty major portraits hanging on the walls, besides kit-cats, heads, sketches … and all the lesser oddities of a collection many years in the making — Clemence Dane > |