squire
英式音标:[ˈskwaɪə(r)] 美式音标:[skwaɪr]
squire基本解释 n. 乡绅;侍从;大地主;地方法官vt. 随侍;护卫n. (Squire)人名;(英)斯夸尔 squire的意思释义 n.地主,乡
squire怎么读
英式音标:[ˈskwaɪə(r)]
美式音标:[skwaɪr]
squire基本解释
n. 乡绅;侍从;大地主;地方法官
vt. 随侍;护卫
n. (Squire)人名;(英)斯夸尔
squire的意思释义
n.
地主,乡绅;
变形
复数:squires
英英释义
squire[ \'skwaiə ]n.
young nobleman attendant on a knight
an English country landowner
a man who attends or escorts a woman
同义词:gallant
v.attend upon as a squire; serve as a squire
squire用法及例句
双语例句
用作名词(n.)
The squire can win a number of points as he represents the team for all contests on foot including archery and armoured foot combat.
护卫代表小组参加徒步搏击的所有项目,包括箭术和身着盔甲的徒步对抗赛,也有机会为小组夺分。
A young squire won his spurs in battle.
一年轻随从因作战英勇而获得骑士称号。
The squire was hard at work at Bristol.
乡绅在布里斯托尔热衷于他的工作。
What the squire said is absolutely nonsense!
这个乡绅的话纯属一派胡言!
There was no real squire in the village.
这个村子没有真正的大地主。
用作动词(v.)
The strong man was hired to squire the old lady.
那个大汉受雇护卫这位老妇人。
例句参考
Identification of a cancer stem cell in human brain tumorsThe medial temporal lobe memory system
A New Data Set Measuring Income Inequality
The medial temporal lobe.
Memory and the hippocampus: a synthesis from findings with rats, monkeys, and humans [published erratum appears in Psychol Rev 1992 ...
Cognitive neuroscience and the study of memory
A Neostriatal Habit Learning System in Humans
Preserved Learning and Retention of Pattern-Analyzing Skill in Amnesia: Dissociation of Knowing How and Knowing that
Introduction: Design-Based Research: Putting a Stake in the Ground
Protein synthesis and memory: a review.
squire词源
squire
squire: [13] A squire is etymologically a ‘shieldcarrier’. The word was adapted from Old French esquier (which was later reborrowed into English as esquire [15]). This was descended from Latin scūtārius ‘shield-carrier’, a derivative of scūtum ‘shield’ (source also of English escutcheon [15]).=> escutcheon
squire (v.)
\"to attend (a lady) as a gallant,\" late 14c., from squire (n.). Related: Squired; squiring.
squire (n.)
early 13c., \"young man who attends a knight,\" later \"member of the landowning class ranking below a knight\" (c. 1300), from Old French esquier \"squire,\" literally \"shield carrier\" (see esquire). Meaning \"country gentleman, landed proprietor\" is from 1670s; as a general term of address to a gentleman, it is attested from 1828.