ox

英 [ɒks] 美 [ɑks]
  • n. 牛;公牛
CET4 TEM4 考 研 CET6
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ox
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ox 公牛

来自古英语oxa,公牛。其复数为oxen,比较children.

ox
ox: [OE] Ox is an ancient word, traceable back to a prehistoric Indo-European *uksín-. This also produced Welsh ych ‘bull’, Irish oss ‘stag’, and Sanskrit ukshán ‘bull’, and it has been speculated that there may be some connection with Sanskrit uks- ‘emit semen’ and Greek hugrós ‘moist’, as if *uksín- denoted etymologically ‘male animal’.

If this was so, the ‘seed-bearing’ function had clearly been lost sight of by the time it had evolved to Germanic *okhson, which was reserved for a ‘castrated bull’. Ox’s modern Germanic relatives are German ochse (taken over by English in the compound aurochs ‘extinct wild ox’ [18], which etymologically means ‘original or primeval ox’), Dutch os, Swedish oxe, and Danish okse.

=> aurochs
ox (n.)
Old English oxa "ox" (plural oxan), from Proto-Germanic *ukhson (cognates: Old Norse oxi, Old Frisian oxa, Middle Dutch osse, Old Saxon, Old High German ohso, German Ochse, Gothic auhsa), from PIE *uks-en- "male animal," (cognates: Welsh ych "ox," Middle Irish oss "stag," Sanskrit uksa, Avestan uxshan- "ox, bull"), said to be from root *uks- "to sprinkle," related to *ugw- "wet, moist." The animal word, then, is literally "besprinkler."
1. Seize a horse by the mane, and lead an ox by the nose.
马儿抓鬃牛牵鼻.

来自《简明英汉词典》

2. The ox is never woe , till he to the harrow go.
牛不耙地不知苦.

来自《简明英汉词典》

3. I'm willing to be an ox serving the country all my life.
我甘当孺子牛,终生为国家服务.

来自《简明英汉词典》

4. We've made a fire fit to roast an ox.
火生得很旺,足以烤一头牛了.

来自《现代汉英综合大词典》

5. He drove the ox hard.
他使劲地赶牛.

来自《简明英汉词典》