cockney
英式音标:[ˈkɒkni] 美式音标:[ˈkɑkni]
cockney基本解释 n. 伦敦腔;伦敦人adj. 伦敦人的;伦敦方言的 cockney的意思释义 n.伦敦佬;伦敦东区佬;伦敦东区土话;伦敦

cockney怎么读
英式音标:[ˈkɒkni]
美式音标:[ˈkɑkni]
cockney基本解释
n. 伦敦腔;伦敦人
adj. 伦敦人的;伦敦方言的
cockney的意思释义
n.
伦敦佬;伦敦东区佬;伦敦东区土话;伦敦方言
adj.
伦敦(东区)佬的;伦敦(东区)土话的;
变形
复数:cockneys
英英释义
cockney[ \'kɔkni ]n.
a native of the east end of London
the nonstandard dialect of natives of the east end of London
adj.
characteristic of Cockneys or their dialect
\"cockney vowels\"
relating to or resembling a cockney
cockney用法及例句
双语例句
用作名词(n.)
He is a true Cockney, born within the sound of Bow bells.
他是个真正的伦敦人,一个地道的伦敦人。
He speaks with a cockney accent.
他说话带有伦敦腔。
To be honest, I found it very difficult to understand cockney.
说实话,我真的听不懂里面的伦敦腔。
Cockney is the colourful dialect spoken in the East End of London.
伦敦方言是在伦敦东区讲的颇有特色的地方语。
例句参考
Cockney phonologyThe Cockney Moment
Cockney past and present
Cockney Dialect and Slang
Cockney Couplets: Keats and the Politics of Style
Localising cockney: translating dialect into italian
Keats and the Politics of Cockney Style
ESTUARY ENGLISH: IS ENGLISH GOING COCKNEY?
\"Irrepressible chirpy Cockney chappies\"? Humour as an aid to survival.
E integral tuary English: Is English going Cockney?
cockney词源
cockney
cockney: [14] Etymologically, a cockney is a ‘cock’s egg’ (it comes from cokene, the old genitive plural of cock, and ey, the Middle English word for ‘egg’). This was a medieval term for a small or misshapen egg, the ‘runt’ of the clutch, supposedly laid by a cock, and it came to be applied (probably egged on by Middle English cocker ‘pamper’) to a ‘pampered child’ or ‘mother’s boy’.In the 16th century we find that it has passed on to ‘town dweller’ (the notion being that people who lived in towns were soft and effete compared with countrymen), and by around 1600 it had started to mean more specifically ‘someone born in the city of London’. The popular definition ‘someone born within the sound of Bow bells’ is first reported by the lexicographer John Minsheu in 1617.=> cock, egg
cockney (n.)
c. 1600, usually said to be from rare Middle English cokenei, cokeney \"spoiled child, milksop\" (late 14c.), originally cokene-ey \"cock\'s egg\" (mid-14c.). Most likely disentangling of the etymology is to start from Old English cocena \"cock\'s egg\" -- genitive plural of coc \"cock\" + æg \"egg\" -- medieval term for \"runt of a clutch,\" extended derisively c. 1520s to \"town dweller,\" gradually narrowing thereafter to residents of a particular neighborhood in the East End of London. Liberman, however, disagrees:
[I]n all likelihood, not the etymon of ME cokeney \'milksop, simpleton; effeminate man; Londoner,\' which is rather a reshaping of [Old French] acoquiné \'spoiled\' (participle). However, this derivation poses some phonetic problems that have not been resolved.
The accent so called from 1890, but the speech peculiarities were noted from 17c. As an adjective in this sense, from 1630s.cockney相关例句
1.Higgins tried to mould the cockney girl into a elegant lady.
希金斯想把那个柔弱的女孩造就成一位高雅的淑女。
9.cockney ism
伦敦佬派头,伦敦口音[语调]
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 短句参考
10.relating to or resembling a cockney.
关于或类似于伦敦人的。
-- 来源 -- 汉英 - 翻译参考
