gale

英 [geɪl] 美 [ɡel]
  • n. [气象] 大风,狂风;(突发的)一阵
  • n. (Gale)人名;(西、葡、塞)加莱;(缅)格礼;(英)盖尔
CET6+ TEM4 IELTS GRE
使用频率:
星级词汇:
gale
«
1 / 3
»
音:刮了,刮了大风
2. yell, nightgale => gale.
3. 拟声词。
gale 大风

来自PIE*ghel, 呼喊,尖叫,词源同 yell, nightingale. 用来指大风。

gale
gale: [16] Gale is a puzzling word. An isolated early example of what appears to be the word, in the phrase gale wind (‘Our life like smoke or chaff is carried away as with a gale wind’, Zachary Boyd, The Last Battle 1619), suggests that it may originally have been an adjective. If this is so, a possible candidate as a source may be Norwegian galen ‘bad’ – making gale etymologically a ‘bad wind’. The Norwegian adjective in turn may go back to Old Norse galinn ‘bewitched, enchanted’, a derivative of galo ‘sing, bewitch, enchant’ (source of English yell and related to the final syllable of nightingale).
=> nightingale, yell
gale (n.)
"strong wind," especially at sea, 1540s, from gaile "wind," origin uncertain. Perhaps from Old Norse gol "breeze," or Old Danish gal "bad, furious" (often used of weather), which are related to Old Norse galinn "furious, mad, frantic; enchanted, bewitched," from gala "to sing, chant," the wind so called from its raging or on the notion of being raised by spells (but OED finds reason to doubt this). Or perhaps it is named for the sound, from Old English galan "to sing," or giellan "to yell." The Old Norse and Old English words all are from the source of yell (v.). In nautical use, between a stiff breeze and a storm; in technical meteorological use, a wind between 32 and 63 miles per hour.
1. A gale was blowing and the sea was choppy.
狂风大作,海面上波浪起伏。

来自柯林斯例句

2. The wind was still rising, approach-ing a force nine gale.
风力仍在增强,接近9级大风。

来自柯林斯例句

3. In a severe gale the ship split in two.
在一次大风中,船断成了两截。

来自柯林斯例句

4. Sometimes happiness is just a matter of attitude adjustment.--Susan Gale
有时候,幸福只需转变一下自己的态度。

来自金山词霸 每日一句

5. It sank in a howling gale.
它在呼啸的狂风中沉没了。

来自柯林斯例句