K

英 [keɪ] 美 [ke]
  • n. 字母k
  • abbr. 千(kilo-)
星级词汇:
K
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K
Roman letter, from Greek kappa, ultimately from Phoenician and general Semitic kaph, said to be literally "hollow of the hand," so called for its shape. For more on the history of its use, see C. As a symbol for potassium, it represents Latin kalium "potash." Slang meaning "one thousand dollars" is 1970s, from kilo-. K as a measure of capacity (especially in computer memory) meaning "one thousand" also is an abbreviation of kilo-. As an indication of "strikeout" in baseball scorekeeping it dates from 1874, said to be from last letter of struck, perhaps because first letter already was being used as abbreviation for sacrifice. The invention of the scorecard symbols is attributed to U.S. newspaperman Henry Chadwick (1824-1908) of the old New York "Clipper."
Smith was the first striker, and went out on three strikes, which is recorded by the figure "1" for the first out, and the letter K to indicate how put out, K being the last letter of the word "struck." The letter K is used in this instance as being easier to remember in connection with the word struck than S, the first letter, would be. [Henry Chadwick, "Chadwick's Base Ball Manual," London, 1874]
1. Sen. John K Nordqvist
约翰∙K. 诺德维斯参议员

来自《权威词典》

2. The final letter is very vague; possibly an R or a K.
最后一个字母很不清楚, 可能是R,也可能是K.

来自《简明英汉词典》

3. Vitamin K is routinely given in the first week of life to prevent bleeding.
出生后第一周通常要服用维生素K,以防止出血。

来自柯林斯例句

4. "Is Mary Ann O.K?" — "She's fine," she said evenly.
“玛丽·安还好么?”——“她很好,”她平静地说。

来自柯林斯例句

5. O.K. I'll sign off. We'll talk at the beginning of the week.
好,就说到这儿吧,下周初我们再谈。

来自柯林斯例句