bunch

B2 CET-4 Oxf 3000 高中 FREQ #1222 ★★★☆☆

n. 串, 束 [医] 骨肿块(马)

发音

UK /bʌntʃ/
UK /bʌnʃ/
US /bʌnt͡ʃ/

词形变化

bunches 复数 bunches bunched bunches 三单 bunching bunching 现在分词 bunched 过去式 bunched 过去分词

别名

bounch buncha

教材释义与例句

名词

群;串;突出物

a group of things that are fastened, held, or growing together

动词

隆起;打褶;形成一串

to pull material together tightly in folds

动词

使成一串;使打褶

释义与例句

n. B2 Oxf 3000
  1. 1.

    A group of similar things, either growing together, or in a cluster or clump, usually fastened together.

    嘟噜

    a bunch of grapes

    a bunch of bananas

    a bunch of keys

    a bunch of yobs on a street corner

  2. 2.

    The peloton; the main group of riders formed during a race.

    体育
  3. 3.

    An informal body of friends.

    He still hangs out with the same bunch.

  4. 4.

    A considerable amount.

    美国 非正式

    a bunch of trouble

  5. 5.

    An unmentioned amount; a number.

    非正式

    A bunch of them went down to the field.

  6. 6.

    A group of logs tied together for skidding.

    商务
  7. 7.

    An unusual concentration of ore in a lode or a small, discontinuous occurrence or patch of ore in the wallrock.

    商务 地质 采矿
  8. 8.

    The reserve yarn on the filling bobbin to allow continuous weaving between the time of indication from the midget feeler until a new bobbin is put in the shuttle.

    商务 工程
  9. 9.

    An unfinished cigar, before the wrapper leaf is added.

    Two to four filler leaves are laid end to end and rolled into the two halves of the binder leaves, making up what is called the bunch.

  10. 10.

    A protuberance; a hunch; a knob or lump; a hump.

  11. 11.

    A seventeenth-century unit of Rhenish glass, 60 of which constitute a way or web.

    废旧 艺术
v.
  1. 1.

    To gather into a bunch.

    及物
  2. 2.

    To gather fabric into folds.

    及物
  3. 3.

    To form a bunch.

    不及物
  4. 4.

    To be gathered together in folds

    不及物
  5. 5.

    To protrude or swell

    不及物

词汇关系

相关短语

词源

From Middle English bunche, bonche (“hump, swelling”), of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant of *bunge (compare dialectal bung (“heap, grape bunch”)), from Proto-Germanic *bunkō, *bunkô, *bungǭ (“heap, crowd”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰenǵʰ-, *bʰénǵʰus (“thick, dense, fat”). Cognates include Saterland Frisian Bunke (“bone”), West Frisian bonke (“bone, lump, bump”), Dutch bonk (“lump, bone”), Low German Bunk (“bone”), German Bunge (“tuber”), Danish bunke (“heap, pile”), Faroese bunki (“heap, pile”); Hittite [Term?] (/panku/, “total, entire”), Tocharian B pkante (“volume, fatness”), Lithuanian búožė (“knob”), Ancient Greek παχύς (pakhús, “thick”), Sanskrit बहु (bahú, “thick; much”)). Alternatively, perhaps from a variant or diminutive of bump (compare hump/hunch, lump/lunch, etc.); or from dialectal Old French bonge (“bundle”) (compare French bongeau, bonjeau, bonjot), from West Flemish bondje, diminutive of West Flemish bond (“bundle”).

来源:wiktionary