释义 |
boat I. \ˈbōt, usu -d.+V\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English boot, from Old English bāt; akin to Old Norse beit boat, biti beam, and probably to Old English bītan to bite, Latin findere to split; probably from the practice of making a boat by hollowing out a tree trunk — more at bite 1. : a small vessel with or without a deck propelled by oars or paddles or by sail or power — see canoe, cruiser, dinghy, sloop 2. a. : ship < packet boat > < came from England in the last boat > b. : submarine 3. : a utensil or device shaped like a boat: as a. : gravy boat b. : an ecclesiastical vessel for incense c. : an open long narrow usually small receptacle (as of porcelain or nickel) for holding a substance to be heated or burned especially in chemical analysis by combustion 4. : a wooden device used in weaving to obtain a strong selvage • - in the same boat II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) transitive verb 1. a. : to place in a boat or ship < the oarsmen boated their oars when we touched shore > b. : to bring (a hooked fish) toward and into a boat < I've almost worn out my wrists boating a 30-pound halibut — Fred Beck > 2. : to transport by boat < a company of soldiers boated across a river > intransitive verb : to go by boat : ride in a boat often as a pastime < the company boated to the island > < was boating on the river last Sunday afternoon > III. noun : boat form |