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单词 till
释义 till
I. preposition
also til \təl (often d.əl after a vowel), tə̇l\
Etymology: Middle English, from Old English til; akin to Old Frisian & Old Norse til to, till, Old English til good, suitable — more at till III
1. chiefly Scotland
 a. : to a place of arrival : through to : as far as
  < till an end >
 b. : to or toward a limit or goal
  < changed till a dragon >
 c. : to — used to introduce an indirect object or complement of various adjectives and nouns
  < gie it till him >
  < aye kind till his ain >
 d. : at, by, for, of, concerning
2. : throughout the interval extending to : during the whole time from the starting point up to : up or down to a specified time : until — used with an implication of termination or change at the time mentioned
 < till his return >
 < till after four o'clock >
 < till next week >
 < to live till ninety >
3. : at any time before or before the arrival, appearance, or beginning of — used after a negative expression with an implication that the action or condition began or is to begin at the specified time
 < a refund which I did not get till ten years later >
4. — used as a function word indicating position before the clock hour
 < five minutes till three >
II. conjunction
also til \“\
Etymology: Middle English, from till, til, preposition
1. : throughout the interval extending to the (specified) time thereafter : up to the time when : until
 < wait till I come >
— formerly used with that
 < till that a capable and wide revenge swallow them up — Shakespeare >
 < till that we see our cheeks ale-dyed — Robert Herrick †1674 >
2.
 a. dialect : before
  < felt like a frost till morning — Conrad Richter >
 b. : previous to the time when : at any time before : unless at some future time — used after a negative statement or an injunction
  < you'll never succeed till you concentrate your efforts >
 c. chiefly dialect : up to or at the time when : when — used in negative constructions
  < scarcely reached home till the rain started >
3. dialect : in extent of time intervening before
 < it seemed long till dawn came >
4. : continuously up to the point at which : for so long that : so that finally
 < ran and ran till he could run no more >
5. chiefly dialect : while
 < enjoy the roses till they flourish — Thomas Wright >
6. dialect : than
 < more till one can play >
7. dialect : in order that : so that
 < can't write my name till you can read it — J.H.Stuart >
III. \ˈtil\ transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: Middle English tilien, tilen, tillen to strive for, obtain, work, cultivate, from Old English tilian; akin to Old English til good, suitable, Old High German zil goal, zilōn to hurry, Old Norse aldrtili death, Gothic gatils suitable
1. : to turn or stir (as by plowing, harrowing, or hoeing) and prepare for seed : sow, dress, and raise crops from : cultivate
 < learned to till the soil — Eric Newton >
 < tilled the rocky land — E.W.Smith >
 < helping to till the fields — Will Irwin >
2. dialect England : prepare, set
 < till a snare >
3.
 a. : to improve by assiduous labor or study : foster the growth or development of : care for
  < new ground, not adequately tilled in any older book — Hugo Leichtentritt >
  < the president of a university in those days tilled a very broad field — A.D.White >
  < whole broad field of liberty was being tilled — W.H.Allison >
 b. : to make researches into : work upon
  < till a field of knowledge >
IV. transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: Middle English tullen, tillen, from Old English -tyllan (as in fortyllan to seduce, betyllan to allure); akin to Old English talu talk, narrative, list — more at tale
obsolete : attract, entice, charm
V. \ˈtil\ noun
(-s)
Etymology: Anglo-French tylle
1.
 a. : a box, drawer, or tray in a receptacle (as a cabinet or chest) used especially for valuables
 b. : a money drawer in or behind a counter or desk (as in a store or bank)
 c. : a removable compartment fitting in the drawer of a cash register and used to hold or carry money
  < gunmen … lifted $225 from the tillTime >
 d. : a place where money is kept for ready access
  < bank … needs some cash in its till to meet day-to-day needs of customers for cash — Federal Reserve System >
2.
 a. : the money contained in a till
  < borrow from the till >
 b. : a quantity or supply of ready money
  < passion for a brimful till — E.O.Hauser >
  < amateur groups never forget the insistency of the till — Robertson Davies >
  — compare till money
3. : one of the four spaces between projections above the platen of a hand press
4. : till basket
VI. transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
: to put (as money) in a till
VII. noun
(-s)
Etymology: probably from German tülle socket, mouth of a pitcher, from Old High German tulli socket for an arrowhead; akin to Old High German tuolla small valley — more at dole
: a horizontal piece fitted between the main uprights in an early handpress and supporting the sleeve with the spindle and screws
VIII. noun
(-s)
Etymology: origin unknown
1. chiefly Scotland : a hard unproductive usually clay subsoil often containing stones and gravel
2. : unstratified drift deposited by a glacier and consisting of clay, sand, gravel and boulders intermingled in any proportions : boulder clay
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更新时间:2025/1/27 22:03:41