hermit
hermit概况
n. (尤指宗教原因的)隐士;隐居者
hermit词义
n.
隐士;小甜饼;
变形
复数:hermits
双语释义
n.(名词)[C](尤指早期基督教的)隐居修道士;隐士;遁世者 person (especially a man in early Christian times)who has withdrawn from society and lives completely alone;recluse
英英释义
hermit[ 'hə:mit ]
n.
one retired from society for religious reasons
同义词:anchorite
one who lives in solitude
同义词:reclusesolitarysolitudinariantroglodyte
hermit用法
词组短语
hermit crab n. 寄生蟹
双语例句
用作名词(n.)
A hermit used to live in the cave.
一位隐士曾经住在那个山洞里。
The old hermit was very cagey about her past life.
老隐士对自己过去的生活守口如瓶。
权威例句
The Behavioral Ecology of Hermit CrabsEvolution of king crab from hermit crab ancestors.
Evolution of king crabs from hermit crab ancestors
Three hybrid zones between Hermit and Townsend's Warblers in Washington and Oregon
MOVEMENT AND TERRITORIALITY OF WINTERING HERMIT THRUSHES IN SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA
Pseudo-Hermiticity versus PT-symmetry III: Equivalence of pseudo-Hermiticity and the presence of antilinear symmetries
Pseudo-Hermiticity versus PT-symmetry. II. A complete characterization of non-Hermitian Hamiltonians with a real spectrum
Pseudo-Hermiticity versus PT symmetry: The necessary condition for the reality of the spectrum of a non-Hermitian Hamiltonian
Demographic Effects of Habitat Selection by Hermit Thrushes Wintering in a Pine Plantation Landscape
FRUIT ABUNDANCE AND LOCAL DISTRIBUTION OF WINTERING HERMIT THRUSHES (CATHARUS GUTTATUS) AND YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLERS (DENDROICA CORONA...
hermit词源
hermit
hermit: [13] Etymologically, a hermit is someone who lives alone in the desert. The word comes ultimately from Greek érēmos ‘solitary’, from which was derived erēmíā ‘desert, solitude’. Many of the early Christian hermits, notably Saint Anthony, lived not only alone but in the desert, so it was appropriate that the term erēmítēs was applied to them. It came into English via medieval Latin herēmīta and Old French hermite.
hermit (n.)
early 12c., "religious recluse," from Old French (h)eremite, from Late Latin ermita, from Greek eremites, literally "person of the desert," from eremia "desert, solitude," from eremos "uninhabited, empty, desolate, bereft," from PIE *ere- (2) "to separate" (cognates: Latin rete "net," Lithuanian retis "sieve"). Transferred sense of "person living in solitude" is from 1799. The hermit crab (1735) was so called for its solitary habits.