freak

B2 FREQ #2177 ★★☆☆☆

n. 畸形人, 畸形物, 不正常的事物, 反复无常 a. 奇异的, 反常的

发音

其它 /fɹiːk/

词形变化

freaks 复数 freaked freaking freaks 三单 freaks fruck freaking 现在分词 freaked 过去式 freaked 过去分词

别名

freake freik freke frick

释义与例句

n.
  1. 1.

    Someone or something that is markedly unusual or unpredictable.

    The two-headed calf was a freak.

    freak of nature, freak of the weather, freak of the imagination

  2. 2.

    A hippie.

  3. 3.

    A drug addict.

  4. 4.

    A person who is extremely abnormal in appearance, social behavior, sexual orientation, gender identity, or business practices; an oddball, a unique person, originally in a displeasing or alienating way.

    人妖

    怪物

    贬义 俚语
  5. 5.

    A person whose physique has grown far beyond the normal limits of muscular development; often a bodybuilder weighing more than 260 pounds (120 kg).

    体育
  6. 6.

    An enthusiast, or person who has an obsession with, or extreme knowledge of, something.

    Bob's a real video-game freak. He owns every games console of the last ten years.

  7. 7.

    A very sexually perverse individual.

    非正式

    She's a freak in the sheets!

  8. 8.

    A wild dance.

    非裔美国英语

    Get your freak on.

  9. 9.

    A sudden change of mind.

    过时
  10. 10.

    A streak of colour; variegation.

    过时
  11. 11.

    Euphemistic form of fuck (“smallest amount of concern or consideration”).

    委婉
  12. 1.

    A man, particularly a bold, strong, vigorous man.

  13. 2.

    A fellow; a petulant young man.

    苏格兰 英国 方言
v. B2
  1. 1.

    To react extremely or irrationally, usually under distress or discomposure.

    不及物 俚语
  2. 2.

    To be placed or place someone under the influence of a psychedelic drug, (especially) to experience reality withdrawal, or hallucinations (nightmarish), to behave irrational or unconventional due to drug use.

    及物/不及物 俚语
  3. 3.

    To streak; to variegate

    过时 及物
adj.
  1. 1.

    Strange, weird, unexpected.

    a freak genius

    freak accident

词汇关系

相关短语

词源

First appears c. 1567. The sense "sudden change of mind, a whim" is of uncertain origin. Probably from a dialectal word related to Middle English frekynge (“capricious behavior; whims”) and Middle English friken, frikien (“to move briskly or nimbly”), from Old English frician (“to leap, dance”), or Middle English frek (“insolent, daring”), from Old English frec (“desirous, greedy, eager, bold, daring”), from Proto-West Germanic *frek, from Proto-Germanic *frekaz, *frakaz (“hard, efficient, greedy, bold, audacious”) (in which case, it would be related to the noun under Etymology 2). Compare Old High German freh (“eager”), Old English frēcne (“dangerous”). For the meaning development compare Russian заско́к (zaskók) akin to скок (skok), скака́ть (skakátʹ).

来源:wiktionary