navy

英 ['neɪvɪ] 美 ['nevi]
  • n. 海军
  • 深蓝色的
CET4 TEM4 考 研 CET6
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1、nav- + -y.
2、含义:fleet, ship, fleet of ships, especially for purposes of war.
navy 海军

来自拉丁语navis,船,词源同navigate,nautical.引申词义海军。

navy
navy: [14] Latin nāvis ‘ship’ is the ultimate source of navy. In post-classical times it spawned an offspring nāvia ‘fleet’, which passed into English via Old French navie. Other Latin derivatives of nāvis were nāvālis, source of English naval [16], and the verb nāvigāre ‘manage a ship’, from which English gets navigate [16] (navvy [19] originated as a colloquial abbreviation for navigator, a term applied to someone who dug ‘navigation canals’).

In medieval Latin nāvis was applied to the central part of a church, from the passing resemblance in shape to a ship, and the word was anglicized as nave [17]. Nāvis was related to Greek naus ‘ship’, whose contributions to English include nautical [16], nautilus [17], nausea [16] (etymologically ‘seasickness’), and, somewhat surprisingly, noise.

=> nausea, nautical, navigate, noise
navy (n.)
early 14c., "fleet of ships," especially for purposes of war, from Old French navie "fleet; ship," from Latin navigia, plural of navigium "vessel, boat," from navis "ship" (see naval). Meaning "a nation's collective, organized sea power" is from 1530s. The Old English words were sciphere (usually of Viking invaders) and scipfierd (usually of the home defenses). Navy blue was the color of the British naval uniform. Navy bean attested from 1856, so called because they were grown to be used by the Navy.
1. The Navy is to carry out an examination of the wreck tomorrow.
海军明天将对失事船只进行细查。

来自柯林斯例句

2. There was very little snobbery or class-consciousness in the wartime navy.
战时的海军中很少有势利眼,阶级意识也不强。

来自柯林斯例句

3. Banks spent his national service in the Royal Navy.
班克斯在皇家海军服过兵役。

来自柯林斯例句

4. Dickie bored him all through the meal with stories of the Navy.
迪基吃饭时一直在讲海军的故事,让他不胜其烦。

来自柯林斯例句

5. It hasn't stopped the British Navy proceeding on its merry way.
这没有阻止英国海军继续得意扬扬地前进的步伐。

来自柯林斯例句