throe

n. 剧痛, 阵痛 [医] 剧痛

发音

UK /θɹəʊ/
其它
US /θɹoʊ/

词形变化

throes 复数 throed throeing throes 三单 throeing 现在分词 throed 过去式 throed 过去分词

别名

throw

释义与例句

n.
  1. 1.

    A severe pang or spasm of pain, especially one experienced when the uterus contracts during childbirth, or when a person is about to die.

  2. 2.

    A severe pang or spasm of pain, especially one experienced when the uterus contracts during childbirth, or when a person is about to die.

    The pain of labour or childbirth; the suffering of death.

  3. 3.

    Any severe pang or spasm, especially an outburst of feeling; a paroxysm.

  4. 4.

    A hard struggle, especially one associated with the beginning or finishing of a task.

    比喻
  5. 1.

    Synonym of froe (“a cleaving tool for splitting cask staves and shingles from a block of wood”).

    废旧
v.
  1. 1.

    To cause (someone) to feel throes, as if in childbirth; to put in agony.

    废旧 及物
  2. 2.

    To feel throes; to struggle in extreme pain; to be in agony; to agonize.

    不及物 废旧

词汇关系

相关短语

词源

The noun is probably derived partly: * from Middle English throu, throwe (“(chiefly in the plural) uterine contraction during the birth of a child; pain experienced while giving birth; suffering; a pain; emotional distress, anxiety”) [and other forms], perhaps from: ** Old English þrawu (rare), a variant of þrēa (“affliction, torment; disaster; oppression; a rebuke; severity; threat”), from Proto-West Germanic *þrau, from Proto-Germanic *þrawō (“longing; suffering”), from Proto-Indo-European *trewh₁-; and ** Old English þrōwian (“to endure, suffer”), from Proto-Germanic *þrōwijaną, probably from *þrawō (see above); and ** Old Norse þrá (“longing, yearning”), from Proto-Germanic *þrawō (see above); and * from Middle English throuen (“to endure distress, suffer; to be ill, to have a fever; to suffer (death, hardship, illness, punishment, etc.); to endure (sadness, hard work, etc.)”) [and other forms], from Old English þrōwian (see above). The current spelling of the word is a 16th-century variant of Middle English throu, throwe, perhaps to avoid confusion with throw (“act of turning or twisting; fit of bad temper or peevishness; look of anger, bad temper, irritation, etc., a grimace”). The verb is derived: * from the noun; and * perhaps from Middle English throuen (verb) (see above).

来源:wiktionary