pamphlet

CET-6 大学 FREQ #18771 ★☆☆☆☆

n. 小册子, 活页文选

发音

UK /ˈpæmflɪt/
其它
UK /-flət/
UK /ˈpænflɪt/
US /ˈpænflət/

词形变化

pamphlets 复数 pamphlets pamphleted pamphleting pamphlets 三单 pamphletted pamphletting pamphleting 现在分词 pamphletting 现在分词 pamphleted 过去式 pamphleted 过去分词 pamphletted 过去式 pamphletted 过去分词

教材释义与例句

名词

小册子

释义与例句

n.
  1. 1.

    A small, brief printed work, consisting either of a folded sheet of paper, or several sheets bound together into a booklet with only a paper cover, formerly containing literary compositions, newsletters, and newspapers, but now chiefly informational matter.

    小册子

  2. 2.

    Such a work containing political material or discussing matters of controversy.

  3. 3.

    A brief handwritten work.

    废旧
v.
  1. 1.

    To write about (someone or something) in a pamphlet; to issue (some material) in the form of a pamphlet.

    古体 及物
  2. 2.

    To write or produce pamphlets.

    不及物 废旧 罕用
  3. 3.

    To distribute pamphlets.

    不及物
  4. 4.

    To distribute pamphlets (to someone or some place).

    及物

词汇关系

词源

The noun is derived from Late Middle English pamflet, pamphilet (“short written text; small book; tract”) [and other forms], from Middle French Pamphilet (compare Late Latin (Anglo-Latin) pamfletus, panfletus, paunflettus (“short written text”), Old French Panfilès), a popular shorthand for the 12th-century Latin love poem Pamphilus, seu de amore (Pamphilus, or On Love): the widely circulated pamphlets then gave this name to the whole phenomenon. Pamphilet is derived from Latin Pamphilus, the name of a protagonist of the poem + Middle French -et (suffix forming diminutive masculine nouns); while Pamphilus is from Ancient Greek Πάμφιλος (Pámphilos, literally “beloved by all”), from παν- (pan-, prefix meaning ‘all; every’) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *peh₂- (“to protect; to shepherd”)) + φῐ́λος (phĭ́los, “beloved, dear”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *bʰil- (“decent; friendly; good; harmonious”)). For the Middle French and Old French use of the suffix -et to form shorthands for the titles of works, compare Middle French Avionet (“the fables of Avianus”) from Avianus; Middle French Catonet, Old French Chatonnet, Chatonez (“the Distichs of Cato”) from Caton (they were formerly believed to be by Cato); and Old French Esopet, Isopet (“Aesop’s Fables”) from Ésope (Aesop). The verb is derived from the noun.

来源:wiktionary