释义 |
nymph \ˈnim(p)f\ noun (plural nymphs \-m(p)ts, -mps\) Etymology: Middle English nimphe, from Middle French, nymph, from Latin nympha bride, nymph, from Greek nymphē — more at nuptial 1. Greek & Roman mythology : one of the minor divinities of nature that are represented as beautiful maidens dwelling in the mountains, forests, meadows, and waters — compare naiad, nereid, oceanid, oread, wood nymph 1 < she fled as if she were a startled nymph — E.A.Peeples > 2. a. : girl b. : a woman of loose morals 3. a. : any of various hemimetabolic insects in an immature stage: as (1) : a late larva (as of a true bug) in which wing pads and rudiments of the genitalia are present; broadly : any insect larva that differs chiefly in size and degree of differentiation from the imago (2) : naiad 2 b. : a mite or tick in the first 8-legged form that immediately follows the last larval molt c. : a nymphal stage in the life cycle of an insect or acarid 4. : nymph pink 5. : an artificial fly of a type made in imitation of the larval stage of the Ephemeridae |