loaf

英 [ləʊf] 美[lof]
  • n. 条,一条面包;块;游荡
  • vt. 游荡;游手好闲;虚度光阴
  • vi. 游荡;游手好闲;虚度光阴

CET4TEM4IELTSGRE考研CET6低频词扩展词汇

词态变化


复数: loaves;第三人称单数: loafs;过去式: loafed;过去分词: loafed;现在分词: loafing;

助记提示


【记忆】谐音:漏富。游手好闲是一种漏富的行为。
2. 谐音“no 父” --- 没有父亲 ---- 养不教父之过,一个没有父亲的人,就没人管教他,于是就变成了一个游手好闲的人。
3. leap => lope, elope, loaf.
4. 音:老夫,老夫已赋闲在家,无所事事,虚度光阴,生活上有条面包足矣;
5. l 象一个人 + oaf 傻瓜,一个人象傻瓜一样虚度光阴,无所事事
6. 罗浮面包。

中文词源


loaf 面包

来自古英语hlaf,一块面包,词源同lady,lord.

英文词源


loaf
loaf: English has two words loaf. By far the older is ‘portion of bread’ [OE], which goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *khlaibaz. This also produced German laib and Danish lev ‘loaf’, and was borrowed, originally into Gothic, from an Old Slavic chleb (source of modern Russian and Polish chleb ‘bread, loaf’). Heavily disguised, loaf forms part of both lady and lord (which etymologically mean respectively ‘loafkneader’ and ‘loaf-guardian’), and it also contributed the first syllable to Lammas [OE], literally ‘loaf-mass’.

The verb loaf ‘dawdle, mooch’ [19] seems to have been a back-formation from loafer, which was probably adapted in 19th-century American English from German landläufer ‘vagabond’, a compound of land ‘land’ and läufer ‘runner’ (to which English leap is related).

=> lady, lord; leap
loaf (n.)
late 13c., from Old English hlaf "portion of bread baked in a mass of definite form," from Proto-Germanic *khlaibuz (cognates: Old Norse hleifr, Swedish lev, Old Frisian hlef, Old High German hleib, German Laib, Gothic hlaifs "bread, loaf"), of uncertain origin, perhaps connected to Old English hlifian "to raise higher, tower," on the notion of the bread rising as it bakes, but it is unclear whether "loaf" or "bread" is the original sense. Finnish leipä, Old Church Slavonic chlebu, Lithuanian klepas probably are Germanic loan words. Meaning "chopped meat shaped like a bread loaf" is attested from 1787.
loaf (v.)
1835, American English, back-formation from loafer (1830). Related: Loafed; loafing.
The term "loafing" is, of course, very vague. Its meaning, like that of its opposite, "work," depends largely on the user. The highly successful quarterback with an E in Greek is a loafer in his professor's eyes, while the idea of the professor's working, in spite of his voluminous researches on Mycenean Table Manners, would excite hoots of derision from the laborer that lays the drains before his study window. [Yale Literary Magazine, May 1908]

双语例句


1. The proposal could put 3p on a loaf of bread.
这项提议会使每个面包的成本增加3便士。

来自柯林斯例句

2. The cost of a loaf of bread has increased five-fold.
一条面包的价钱增长了4倍。

来自柯林斯例句

3. Pick up a quart of milk or a loaf of bread.
拿1夸脱牛奶或一条面包。

来自柯林斯例句

4. a loaf of bread
一条面包

来自《权威词典》

5. a loaf of sliced bread
一条切片面包

来自《权威词典》