释义 |
con·ti·nent I. \ˈkänt(ə)nənt, -tənənt\ adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin continent-, continens, from present participle of continēre to hold together, repress, contain — more at contain 1. : exercising continence, specifically sexual continence : temperate, moderate, chaste 2. obsolete a. : serving to restrain or limit : restrictive b. : connected, continuous < continent islands > 3. : containing or able to contain or retain Synonyms: see sober II. \“ sometimes -tənˌent or -təˌne-\ noun (-s) Etymology: in senses 1, 2, & 3, from Latin continent-, continens, present participle of continēre to contain, hold together, be continuous; in other senses, from Latin continent-, continens continuous mass of land, from continent-, continens, present participle 1. archaic a. : whatever contains something : receptacle b. : whatever restrains or bounds something 2. archaic : whatever is the seat or the external representative of something or represents the totality of a complex being 3. obsolete : capacity, content 4. a. : a continuous extent or mass of land : mainland b. obsolete : the land, the earth, or the world 5. a. : one of the great divisions of land on the globe; specifically : a large body of land differing from an island or a peninsula in its size and in its structure, which is that of a large basin bordered by mountain chains (as No. America, So. America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, and Antarctica) b. usually capitalized : the continent of Europe — used with the < traveling on the Continent > 6. : a large segment of the earth's outer shell including a terrestrial continent and the adjacent continental shelf |