英文字典中文字典


英文字典中文字典51ZiDian.com



中文字典辞典   英文字典 a   b   c   d   e   f   g   h   i   j   k   l   m   n   o   p   q   r   s   t   u   v   w   x   y   z       







请输入英文单字,中文词皆可:

ananas    
n. 菠罗

菠罗

Ananas
n 1: a genus of tropical American plants have sword-shaped
leaves and a fleshy compound fruits composed of the fruits
of several flowers (such as pineapples) [synonym: {Ananas},
{genus Ananas}]
2: large sweet fleshy tropical fruit with a terminal tuft of
stiff leaves; widely cultivated [synonym: {pineapple}, {ananas}]


请选择你想看的字典辞典:
单词字典翻译
ananas查看 ananas 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
ananas查看 ananas 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
ananas查看 ananas 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





安装中文字典英文字典查询工具!


中文字典英文字典工具:
选择颜色:
输入中英文单字

































































英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • Why is pineapple in English but ananas in all other languages?
    The question is: why did the English adapt the name pineapple from Spanish (which originally meant pinecone in English) while most European countries eventually adapted the name ananas, which came from the Tupi word nanas (also meaning pineapple)
  • Is the first r in February now considered a silent letter?
    A complete answer should cover the following issues across speakers, regions, and registers: Does February have four, three, or two syllables? If it has four syllables, are there two stresses: one primary and one secondary? If its written ‹r› is not ‘silent’, is it phonetically realized as [ɹ], [ɻ], or [ɻʷ] — and in Scotland, India, or South Africa even [r] or [ɾ]? Can that
  • Capitalization Proper use of apostrophe for omitted letters at start of . . .
    0 Suppose I have a character who can’t pronounce the letter b, and I have him start a sentence with “bananas” in dialogue Is this correct, using a single quotation mark in front of a pointing away from a: “’ananas! What will I do now?” Arun said Should I capitalize the a of “ananas”? It’s at the beginning of the sentence
  • User 応振强 - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
  • prepositions - forbidden from or forbidden to - English Language . . .
    Opinions differ: FORBID, PROHIBIT These verbs are near synonyms, but they take different prepositions Use to rather than from with forbid, and from rather than to with prohibit Take care to avoid sentences like They were forbidden from using cameras and They were prohibited to use cameras Make it forbidden to use or prohibited from using Lester Kaufman and Jane Straus; The Blue Book of
  • single word requests - What would you call someone who is constantly . . .
    What would you call someone who is constantly thinking of all scenarios possibilities outcomes? The type of person who, before stepping into a situation or conversation, thinks of all the different
  • gerund vs infinitive - Suggest to go vs. suggest going - English . . .
    You wrote in your test "Someone suggested to go for a walk" assuming that to suggest is followed by a to-infinitive as hundreds of other verbs But to suggest is one of the few verbs that need a gerund, just as to avoid There is no logic reason for the gerund construction, it is just a convention and must be learnt (grammar point: verbs + gerund instead of to-infinitive)
  • Should there be a space before a percent sign?
    I will add that German standards, too, use a space (see DIN 5008, Duden, etc ), but it appears that barely any German is aware of that The style guidelines of the German Wikipedia agree that there should be a space, but even in their article on the percent sign itself that rule is occasionally ignored: for every instance with a space, there's another one without So much for standards
  • Does moving a meeting forward mean the time will be earlier or later . . .
    Suppose I say quot;We're moving the 12 PM meeting forward 2 hours quot;, does that mean the meeting is at 10 AM or 2 PM?
  • Why does swings and roundabouts mean gains and losses that offset . . .
    I know "swings and roundabouts" means "gains and losses that offset each other", but I can't understand Any story behind this?





中文字典-英文字典  2005-2009