释义 |
car·pet I. \ˈkärpə̇t, ˈkȧp-, usu -ə̇d.+V\ noun (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English carpete, from Middle French carpite, from Old Italian carpita, from carpire to pluck, modification of Latin carpere — more at harvest 1. : a heavy woven or felted fabric usually made of wool: as a. : a floor covering made in breadths to be sewed together and tacked to the floor — see oriental rug; compare rug b. obsolete : a thick wrought fabric used for covering tables or beds; specifically : an altar covering c. archaic : a luxurious floor covering found especially in boudoirs — now used only attributively to convey the notion of effeminacy < a carpet poet > — see carpet knight 2. a. : a surface resembling or suggesting a carpet (as in smoothness or softness) < the grassy carpet of the plain — Shakespeare > b. : the surface of a cricket field < a carpet drive > 3. a. : a thin skin of boards laid as a wearing surface on a floor b. chiefly Britain : a thin layer of resurfacing material (as asphalt) covering a previously paved roadway • - on the carpet II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) 1. a. : to furnish with a carpet : spread with carpets < the floors were carpeted — Al Spiers > b. : to cover as if with a carpet < flowers carpet the streets — Claudia Cassidy > 2. chiefly Britain : to take to task : reprimand < if the chap's a casualty and anything happens, we might be carpeted — Richard Llewellyn > |