释义 |
lave I. \ˈlāv\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English (northern dialect), from Old English lāf; akin to Old High German leiba remainder, Old Norse leifar (plural) remnants, Gothic laiba remnant; derivative from the root of Old English belīfan to remain, be left over — more at leave now dialect : something that is left or remains : residue, remainder < he aye did as the lave did — J.G.Lockhart > II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English laven, from Old English lafian; akin to Middle Dutch laven to refresh, soak, Old High German labōn to refresh, wash; all from a prehistoric West Germanic word borrowed from Latin lavare to wash — more at lye transitive verb 1. : to wash or flow along or against : wash, bathe < laved her injured foot in the cold stream — W.H.Hudson †1922 > < baptism is performed by laving the candidate's head — George Stimpson > < all stuffed into a whole long loaf of bread and laved generously with oil — R.B.Gehman > 2. : pour 3. obsolete : to dip or scoop up or out (as with a ladle) : lade, bail intransitive verb archaic : to wash oneself : bathe < in her chaste current oft the goddess laves — Alexander Pope > III. dialect variant of leave |