释义 |
pore I. \ˈpō(ə)r, -ȯ(ə)r, -ōə, -ȯ(ə)\ verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English pouren, puren intransitive verb 1. : to gaze intently or fixedly : look searchingly : stare < pored … on her lovely and large brown eyes — Edmund Wilson > < those who pore over the microscope — R.W.Morin > 2. : to devote oneself to attentive reading : be deep in study — used chiefly with over < pored over every single page of that thick novel — H.W.Carter > 3. : to reflect or mediate steadily : ponder — used with on or upon < began to pore upon religious problems — Cecil Sprigge > 4. archaic : to peer nearsightedly transitive verb : to bring to some state by poring < pored himself blind > < pored her eyes out over his letters > II. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English poore, pore, from Middle French pore, from Latin porus, from Greek poros passage, pore — more at fare 1. a. : a minute opening especially in an animal or plant by which matter passes through a membrane b. : the cross section of a vessel element or tracheid often including both lumen and wall c. : germ pore 2. a. : a small interstice (as in stone) admitting absorption or passage of liquid b. : such interstices indicating density < a mineral's fine pores > 3. : one of countless minute darkish dots mottling the sun |