释义 |
don I. \ˈdän\ noun (-s) Etymology: Spanish, from Latin dominus, master, lord — more at dame 1. a. : lord, sir — prefixed to the Christian name of a Spaniard of high rank b. (1) : senor — used among Spanish-speaking people prefixed to the Christian name as a courtesy title (2) : master — used as a form of address for an Italian priest 2. often capitalized : a Spaniard or man of Spanish descent < he played on Jackson's obsession against the Spanish by promising to drive the dons from America — C.G.Bowers > 3. a. archaic : a great or famous person : a person of consequence : grandee < the great dons of wit — John Dryden > b. : a head, tutor, or fellow in an English university < she didn't want to be a don's wife and live in Oxford forever — Virginia Woolf > broadly : a college or university teacher II. transitive verb (donned ; donned ; donning ; dons) Etymology: contraction of do + on 1. a. : to put on (an article of wear) : dress in < donned the robes of his office > b. : to apply (as greasepaint) to the face or body c. : to insert (a cone) in the holder in a textile machine 2. : to clothe or envelop oneself in : assume < able to don the personality of another person > < perhaps the truest understanding would come from the donning of new and more tyrannous moralities — Edward Sapir > |