crisp怎么读?

crisp

英 [krɪsp] 美[krɪsp]
  • adj. 脆的;新鲜的;易碎的
  • vt. 使卷曲;使发脆
  • vi. 卷曲;发脆
  • n. 松脆物;油炸马铃薯片
  • n. (Crisp)人名;(英)克里斯普

CET6TEM4IELTS考研中低频词常用词汇

词态变化


复数: crisps;第三人称单数: crisps;过去式: crisped;过去分词: crisped;现在分词: crisping;比较级: crisper;最高级: crispest;副词: crisply;名词: crispness;

助记提示


1. 易卷曲的、易弯曲的肯定都是脆的、易碎的,要不然怎么容易卷曲、掰弯、掰碎呢。
2. cr- "bend, hooked" => Latin crispus 'curled'.
3. 由“干脆、清脆”进而引申出:明快的,清晰的;干净利落的;清新的,爽快的,凉爽的;活泼的,有生气的,轻快的。
4. 谐音“可内撕破、可里撕破、克里撕破、颗粒撕破、烤了碎破”。
5. 谐音“烤了碎破”------烤了后会卷曲并发出清脆的响声、进而碎裂。

中文词源


crisp 脆的

来自PIE*sker, 转,弯,词源同ring, curly. 词义由转,弯外延至卷,脆。

英文词源


crisp
crisp: [OE] Historically, crisp means ‘curly’. It was borrowed into Old English from Latin crispus ‘curled’ (which was also the source of French crêpe, acquired by English as crape in the 17th century and then reborrowed in the original French form in the 19th century). The reason for the emergence of the word’s modern sense ‘brittle’, which happened in the early 16th century, is not clear, it may simply be that the sound of the word suggested brittleness.
=> crape, crêpe
crisp (adj.)
Old English crisp "curly," from Latin crispus "curled, wrinkled, having curly hair," from PIE root *(s)ker- (3) "to turn, bend" (see ring (n.)). It began to mean "brittle" 1520s, for obscure reasons, perhaps based on what happens to flat things when they are cooked. Figurative sense of "neat, brisk" is from 1814; perhaps a separate word. As a noun, from late 14c. Potato crisps (the British version of U.S. potato chips) is from 1929.
crisp (v.)
late 14c., "to curl," from crisp (adj.). Meaning "to become brittle" is from 1805. Related: Crisped; crisping.

双语例句


1. The potato cakes should be crisp outside and meltingly soft inside.
土豆饼应该外面酥脆,里面嫩软.

来自柯林斯例句

2. The air was thin and crisp, filled with hazy sunshine and frost.
空气稀薄清新,其间日光蒙眬,寒气逼人。

来自柯林斯例句

3. Her house is light and airy, crisp and clean.
她的房子光线充足,空气流通,清新整洁。

来自柯林斯例句

4. He wore a panama hat and a crisp white suit.
他戴着一顶巴拿马草帽,穿着一身挺括的白西装。

来自柯林斯例句

5. "Very well," I said, adopting a crisp authoritative tone.
“很好,”我用干脆的命令性的语气说道。

来自柯林斯例句