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单词 fig
释义 fig
I. \ˈfig\ noun
(-s)
Etymology: Middle English fige, from Old French fige, figue, from Old Provençal figa, from (assumed) Vulgar Latin fica, from Latin ficus fig tree, fig, of non-Indo-European origin; akin to the source of Greek sykon fig, Armenian t'uz
1.
 a. : an oblong to pear-shaped or nearly globose edible fruit of warm regions that is greenish, yellowish to orange, or purple when ripe, that has a thick soft skin enclosing a sweet pulp full of tiny seeds, and that is available commercially chiefly dried — see common fig, smyrna fig, syconium
 b. obsolete : poison given in a fig
2. or fig tree : a tree of the genus Ficus; usually : any of the cultivated or escaped trees derived from a tree (F. carica) native to southwestern Asia but extensively grown in several varieties in warm regions of the New and Old Worlds for the edible figs that are their fruit — see caprifig
3.
 a. Australia : any of several woody plants that resemble fig trees or produce fruits resembling figs: as
  (1) : blueberry ash
  (2) : a slender twining xerophytic vine (Marsdenia australis) that produces pear-shaped fruits sometimes eaten by the aborigines
 b. : fig banana
 c. : cochineal fig
 d. dialect chiefly England : raisin
4. : something resembling the fruit of the fig tree (as piles or a warty excrescence on the frog of a horse's hoof)
5. : a small piece of tobacco
6.
 a. [Middle French figue (in faire la figue make a fig), from Italian fica (in far la fica), from fica fig, vulva, from (assumed) Vulgar Latin fica fig] : a gesture or sign of contempt (as thrusting a thumb between two fingers)
 b. : the least bit : the merest trifle : particle
  < he doesn't give a fig for his appearance >
  < who cares a fig for widows swindled in the … real-estate boom — Lee Rogow >
  — often used interjectionally to express scorn or contempt
  < a fig for housework! she said to herself — Glenway Wescott >
[fig 1: leaves and fruit]
II. transitive verb
(figged ; figged ; figging ; figs)
obsolete : to insult by giving the sign of the fig to
III. intransitive verb
Etymology: perhaps alteration of Middle English fiken — more at fike
now dialect England : to move about restlessly : pace back and forth
IV. transitive verb
(figged ; figged ; figging ; figs)
Etymology: origin unknown
1. : to dress or adorn — used with out or up
 < a richly figged out dowager >
2. : to put ginger or pepper in the anus or vagina of (a horse) to stimulate action or improve carriage
V. noun
(-s)
1. : dress, array
 < the appealing figure of a young woman in dazzling royal full fig — Mollie Panter-Downes >
2. : condition, form
 < in fine fig for a race >
VI. abbreviation
1. figurative
2. figure
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更新时间:2024/12/24 8:44:01