释义 |
mum·my I. \ˈməmē, -mi\ noun (-es) Etymology: Middle English mummie, from Middle French momie, from Medieval Latin mumia, from Arabic mūmiyah mummy, bitumen, from Persian mūm wax 1. : a concoction formerly used as a medicament or drug containing powdered parts of a human or animal body 2. a. obsolete : lifeless flesh < should have a mountain of mummy — Shakespeare > b. chiefly dialect : a soft pulpy mass 3. a. (1) : a body of a human being or other animal embalmed or treated for burial with preservatives after the manner of the ancient Egyptians (2) : a body unusually well preserved owing to the manner of its burial or to some special preparation for burial < a Peruvian mummy > (3) : a carcass fortuitously preserved (as by being sun-dried) b. : one resembling a mummy; especially : a person whose energies have withered < sat like a couple of mummies ever since we left home — Richard Blaker > 4. : a brown bituminous artists' pigment of varying properties (as made by grinding the bones of mummies) 5. a. : congo 4 b. : mummy brown 2b c. : a moderate yellowish brown that is redder and very slightly darker than Bismarck brown and darker and slightly redder than maple sugar 6. : a dried-up or shriveled fruit first rotted by a fungus < the brown-rot mummies of stone fruits > II. verb (-ed/-ing/-es) : mummify < the mummied heath-bells of the past summer — Thomas Hardy > III. variant of mommy |