释义 |
mes·sen·ger I. \ˈmesənjə(r)\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English messager, messangere, messengere, from Old French messagier, from message, from Medieval Latin missaticum, from Latin missus, past participle of mittere to send — more at smite 1. : one who bears a message or does an errand : courier, emissary, envoy: as a. archaic : one who prepares the way : forerunner, harbinger < behold, I send my messenger to prepare the way before me — Mal 3:1 (Revised Standard Version) > b. : a dispatch bearer (as for an official or a government body or in military service) < queen's messenger > < city messenger > < messengers, orderlies, and any other soldiers — F.V.W.Mason > c. : one employed by a business concern to do errands within or outside the establishment < bank messengers empty the boxes once a week — L.H.Olsen > d. (1) : a postal employee who delivers special-delivery mail (2) : mail messenger e. : a delegate to a religious convention or meeting; especially : one sent from a local church within a denomination that adheres to a congregational polity f. : a character especially in a classical Greek play who comes onstage to make known an action that has occurred offstage < all theatergoers now must have watched for the entrance of the breathless messenger, who knows the result — John Masefield > 2. a. : a rope or chain passed round a capstan and having its two ends lashed together to form an endless rope or chain b. : a light line used in hauling a heavier line (as between ships) c. : a device sliding on a line for operating a trip (as to release a target or close a net) d. : messenger cable II. noun 1. : a substance (as a hormone) that mediates a biological effect — see second messenger herein 2. : messenger RNA herein |