释义 |
gang I. \ˈgaŋ, ˈgaiŋ\ noun (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English, from Old English; akin to Old High German gang act of going, Old Norse gangr act of going, Gothic gang street, Greek kochōnē perineum, Sanskrit jaṅghā shank 1. : the act, manner, or means of going : passage, course, journey; also : gait 2. a. dialect chiefly Britain (1) : passage, way, road, lane (2) : a pasturage for cattle b. chiefly Scotland : journey; especially : one undertaken to perform an errand c. chiefly Scotland : the amount (as of wood, water, or peat) that can be carried at one time or in one trip 3. a. (1) : a set or full complement of articles : outfit < a gang of oars > (2) : a combination of similar implements or other items arranged so as to act together to save time or labor < a gang of saws > or to produce in one operation or as one unit < a gang of printing plates printing several jobs on a single sheet > b. : a number of individuals making up a group: as (1) : a group of persons working under the same direction or at the same task < migrants … laboring in gangs in the woods, mines, and fields — American Guide Series: Washington > < gangs of expert bottomers — B.H.Sprague > (2) : a company of criminals < a gang of desperate banditti — Tobias Smollett > < squealed on the other members of the gang > (3) : an elementary and close-knit social group of spontaneous origin; especially : such a unit composed of antisocial adolescents < teenage gangs > (4) : a group of persons acting in accord who are believed to engage in improper acts or to be influenced by self-seeking, corrupt, or unworthy motives < made captive by the gang which seized power — A.H.Sulzberger > < denounced the musical gang then in power — Virgil Thomson > < a political gang … dragged out the racial issue to divert attention from itself — Oscar Handlin > (5) : a group of congenial persons having close and informal social relations : a group of persons drawn together by a community of tastes, interests, or activity < one of a gang that call one another great — O.W.Holmes †1935 > < invite the gang plus some pretty girls — Dorothy Bradbury > < where's the gang going tonight > < the gang in the office > (6) : a flock or herd of animals < a gang of little chickens — J.H.Stuart > < a gang of elk > II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) transitive verb 1. : to attack (a person) as a gang < young hoodlums … always gang you — W.R.Burnett > < try to gang him and take it away from him — Springfield (Massachusetts) Union > 2. a. : to assemble or operate (mechanical or electronic parts) simultaneously as a group < circuits ganged together by gears > b. : to arrange in or produce as a gang (as type pages or printed sheets) — often used with up intransitive verb : to form a group or gang : keep company : go, travel < empty-headed, idle-handed widows who gang together — Henry Miller > < gangs with those kids on the next block > — often used with up < the boys would gang up around the corner drugstore > III. intransitive verb Etymology: Middle English gangen to go, walk, from Old English gangan; akin to Old High German gangan to go, Old Norse ganga, Gothic gaggan to go, Old English gang act of going Scotland : go IV. variant of gangue |