¹ØÓÚ wake µÄ°Ù¿ÆÐ¡³£Ê¶
wake
[weik]
vt.
½ÐÐÑ ¼¤·¢
vi.
ÐÑÀ´ ÐÑ×Å ¾¯¾õ Õñ·Ü
n.
ÐÑ ÊØÒ¹ β¼£ (ÈË ³µµÈ¾¹ýµÄ)ºÛ¼£ ÊØÉ¥
Wake
[weik]
(=Wake Island)Íþ¿Ëµº[±±Ì«Æ½Ñó]
wake
wake 1
AHD:[w³k]
D.J.[weik]
K.K.[wek]
v.£¨¶¯´Ê£©
woke[w½k] »ò waked [w³kt] waked»ò wok.en [w½¡°k¡n] wak.ing wakes
v.intr.£¨²»¼°Îﶯ´Ê£©
To cease to sleep; become awake:
ÐÑ£ºÍ£Ö¹Ë¯¾õ£»ÐѹýÀ´£º
overslept and woke late.
˯̫¶à¶øÇÒÓÖÐѵÃÍí
To stay awake:
ËÕÐÑ£º±£³ÖÇåÐÑ£º
Bears wake for spring summer and fall and hibernate for the winter.
ÐÜÔÚ´ºÌì¡¢ÏÄÌìºÍÇïÌì±£³ÖÇåÐÑ ÔÚ¶¬¼¾¶¬Ãß
To be brought into a state of awareness or alertness:
ÇåÐÑ£º½øÈëÒ»ÖÖÖª¾õ»ò¾¯¾õµÄ״̬£º
suddenly woke to the danger we were in.
ͻȻµØÈÏʶµ½ÎÒÃÇËù´¦µÄΣÏÕ
To keep watch or guard especially over a corpse.
¿´ÊØ ÊØÁ飺±£³Ö¾¯¾õ»ò¾¯Ìè ÓÈÖ¸¶ÔÒ»¸öʬÌå
v.tr.£¨¼°Îﶯ´Ê£©
To rouse from sleep; awaken.
ʹÐѹýÀ´£ºÊ¹´Ó˯ÃßÖÐÐѹýÀ´£»ÅªÐÑ
To stir as from a dormant or inactive condition; rouse:
¼¤·¢ »½ÐÑ£ºÈç´ÓÐÝÃß»ò²»»îÔ¾µÄ״̬֮Öм¤ÐÑ£»»½ÐÑ£º
wake old animosities.
»½Æð¾ÉºÞ
To make aware of; alert:
ʹÒâʶµ½£ºÊ¹ÈÏʶµ½£»Ê¹¾¯¾õ£º
The shocking revelations finally woke me to the facts of the matter.
ÁîÈËÕ𾪵ĽÒ¶×îÖÕʹÎÒÒâʶµ½ÊÂÇéµÄ±¾ÖÊ
To keep a vigil over.
±£³Ö¾¯Ìè
To hold a wake over.
Ϊ¡ÊØÒ¹
n.£¨Ãû´Ê£©
A watch; a vigil.
ÊØÁé£»ÊØÒ¹
A watch over the body of a deceased person before burial sometimes accompanied by festivity.Also called Regional viewing
ÊØÁ飺ÔÚÔáÀñÇ°ÊØ×ÅËÀÈ˵ÄʬÌå ÓÐʱ°éÓÐÒÇʽҲ×÷ ¡¾ÇøÓòµÄ¡¿ viewing
wakes (used with a sing. or pl. verb)Chiefly British
wakes £¨Óëµ¥Êý»ò¸´Êý¶¯´ÊÁ¬Óã©¡¾¶àÓÃÓÚÓ¢¹ú¡¿
A parish festival held annually often in honor of a patron saint.
ÊØ»¤Éñ½ÚÈÕ£º½ÌÇøÒ»ÄêÒ»¶ÈµÄ½ÚÈÕ ³£Îª¼ÍÄîÒ»¸öÊØ»¤Éñ
An annual vacation.
Äê¶È¼ÙÆÚ
Middle English wakien waken
ÖйÅÓ¢Óï wakien waken
from Old English wacan [to wake up]
Ô´×Ô ¹ÅÓ¢Óï wacan [ÐÑÀ´]
wacian [to be awake keep watch] * see weg-
wacian [±£³ÖÇåÐÑ] *²Î¼û weg-
wak¡°er
n.£¨Ãû´Ê£©
The pairs wake waken and awake awaken have formed a bewildering array since the Middle English period. All four words have similar meanings though there are some differences in use. Only wake is used in the sense ¡°to be awake ¡± as in expressions like waking (not wakening ) and sleeping every waking hour. Wake is also more common than waken when used together with up; and awake and awaken never occur in this context: She woke up (rarely wakened up; never awakened up or awoke up ). Some writers have suggested that waken should be used only transitively and awaken only intransitively but there is ample literary precedent for usages such as He wakened early and They did not awaken her. In figurative senses awake and awaken are more prevalent:
wake waken ºÍ awake awaken ÕâÁ½¶Ô´Ê×ÔÖйÅÓ¢ÓïÒÔÀ´¾ÍÐγÉÁîÈ˲»½âµÄÒ»×é´Ê¡£ Ëĸö´ÊÓÐÏàËÆµÄÒâ˼ ¾¡¹ÜÔÚÓ÷¨ÉÏÓвîÒì¡£Ö»ÓÐwake ÓÃÓÚ¡°±£³ÖÇåÐÑ¡±µÄÒâÒå ÈçÔÚwaking £¨¶ø·Ç wakening ) and sleeping every waking hour£¨ÇåÐѺÍ˯Ãß Ã¿Ò»¸öÐÑ×ŵÄʱ¿Ì£©¡£ WakeÔÚÓë up һͬÓÃʱҲ±È waken ¸ü³£Óã» ²¢ÇÒawake ºÍ awaken ´Ó²»³öÏÖÔÚÕâÖÖÓïÑÔ»·¾³ÖУº She woke up £¨ºÜÉÙÓà wakened up £»´Ó²»Óà awakened up »ò awoke up )¡£ ÓÐЩ×÷¼ÒÖ¸³öwaken Ó¦Ö»ÓÃ×÷¼°ÎïµÄ¶ø awaken Ö»ÓÃ×÷²»¼°ÎïµÄ µ«ÓкܶàÎÄѧÉϵÄÓ÷¨ÏÈÀý ÈçHe wakened early£¨ËûÐѵÃÔ磩 ºÍ They did not awaken her£¨ËûÃÇû¾ªÐÑËý£©¡£ ÔÚ±ÈÓ÷ÒâÒåÉÏawake ºÍ awaken ¸üÆÕ±é£º
With the governor's defeat the party awoke to the strength of the opposition to its position on abortion.
Ëæ×ÅÖݳ¤µÄʧ°ÜÄǸöµ³ÅÉÇåÐѵØÈÏʶµ½ÔÚ¶éÌ¥ÎÊÌâÉÏ·´¶ÔÒâ¼ûµÄÁ¦Á¿¡£
The scent of the azaleas awakened my memory of his unexpected appearance that afternoon years ago.
¶Å¾é»¨µÄζµÀ»½ÐÑÁËÎÒ¶ÔÐí¶àÄêǰÄǸöÏÂÎçËûͻȻ³öÏֵļÇÒä¡£
Regional American dialects vary in the way that certain verbs form their principal parts. Northern dialects seem to favor forms that change the internal vowel in the verb¡ªhence dove for the past tense of dive and woke for wake : They woke up with a start. Southern dialects on the other hand tend to prefer forms that add an -ed to form the past tense and the past participle of these same verbs: The children dived into the swimming hole. The baby waked up early.
ÔÚÒÔijЩ¶¯´Ê¹¹³É·½ÑÔµÄÖ÷Òª²¿·ÖÉÏÃÀ¹úµØ·½·½ÑÔÒòµØ¶øÒì¡£±±²¿·½ÑÔ¿´ÆðÀ´Æ«ºÃ¶¯´ÊÖмäÔªÒôµÄ±ä»¯¡ª¡ªÈçdove ³ÉΪ dive µÄ¹ýȥʽ ²¢ÇÒwoke ³ÉΪ wake µÄ¹ýȥʽ£º They woke up with a start£¨ËûÃÇÒ»ÏÂ×ÓÐѹýÀ´£©¡£ Ïà·´ Äϲ¿·½ÑÔÇãÏòÆ«°®¼ÓÒ»¸ö-ed ÐÎʽÀ´ÐγÉͬһ¶¯´ÊµÄ¹ýȥʽºÍ¹ýÈ¥·Ö´Ê£º º¢×ÓÌøÈëÓÎÓ¾³Ø¡£º¢×ÓÐѵúÜÔç¡£
wake
wake 2
AHD:[w³k]
D.J.[weik]
K.K.[wek]
n.£¨Ãû´Ê£©
The visible track of turbulence left by something moving through water:
βÁ÷£ºÎïÌåÔÚË®ÖÐÒÆ¶¯ÁôϵÄÔÓÂҿɼûµÄºÛ¼££º
the wake of a ship.
´¬µÄβ¼£
A track course or condition left behind something that has passed:
ÐÐ×Ù£ºÄ³Îï¾¹ýºóÒÅÁôϵĺۼ£¡¢×Ù¼£»ò״̬£º
The war left destruction and famine in its wake.
Õ½ÕùÁôϵĻÙÃðºÍ¼¢»ÄµÄºó¹û
in the wake of
Following directly on.
Ö±½Ó¸úËæ
In the aftermath of; as a consequence of.
×÷Ϊ¡µÄÓನ
Possibly from Middle Low German [hole in the ice]
¿ÉÄÜÔ´×Ô Öйŵ͵صÂÓï [±ù¿ßÁþ]
[of Scandinavian origin] ; akin to Old Norse vök
[Ô´ÓÚ˹¿°µÄÄÉάÑÇÓï] £»ÀàËÆÓÚ ¹Å˹¿°µÄÄÉάÑÇÓï vök
wake
[weik]
n.
(´¬µÄ)Ⲩ º½¼£; (·É»úµÄ)βÁ÷; (ÈË¡¢³µµÈµÄ)×Ù¼£; (ÆøÁ÷ÖеÄ)ÎÐÇø
in the wake of
×·Ëæ×Åǰ´¬µÄº½¼£ ¸úÔÚǰ´¬ºóÃæ
½ô¸úÔÚ...µÄºóÃæ Ëæ×Å...¶øÀ´ ·ÂЧ
wake of another ship
ÔÚËû´¬º½¼£ÖÐ
wake surfing
»¬Ë®(ÒÔ»ú¶¯´¬Í϶¯µÄ³ËÀË»¬ÐÐÔ˶¯)
stagnant wake
¾²Çø ÖÍÁ÷Çø
turbulent wake
ÍÄÁ÷βÁ÷(¼£)
Wake
[weik]
n.
(=Wake Island)Íþ¿Ëµº[±±Ì«Æ½Ñó]
woke
[wEuk]
wake
µÄ¹ýȥʽ¼°¹ýÈ¥·Ö´Ê
wake
ÖйÅÓ¢Óï wakien£¼¹ÅÓ¢Óï wacian ÐÑ