释义 |
du·el I. \ˈd(y)ü]əl, -u̇]əl also -ü]l, chiefly Brit ](ˌ)il\ noun (-s) Etymology: Medieval Latin duellum (influenced in meaning by folk etymological association with Latin duo two), from Latin, war (poetical variant of bellum), from Old Latin; perhaps akin to Greek daiein to ignite, burn up — more at two, teen 1. : a combat between two persons: a. obsolete : personal combat to determine a trial by battle b. : a prearranged formal combat with deadly weapons fought between two persons in the presence of witnesses usually as a result of an injury done or an insult given by one to the other — compare principal II, second II 2. : a conflict between persons, ideas, or forces that are antagonistic < when the long-drawn-out duel … ended in a war — W.J.Hail > < artillery duel > < a duel between the two emotions of repugnance and duty — Hilaire Belloc > II. verb (dueled or duelled ; dueled or duelled ; dueling or duelling ; duels) intransitive verb : to fight a duel transitive verb : to encounter (an opponent) in a duel |