gas
名词 n.
动词 v.
形容词 adj.
英 /ɡæs/
美 /ɡæs/
英文释义
名词 n.
-
Gasoline, a light derivative of petroleum used as fuel.
— Saturday’s tariffs are unlikely to be Trump’s last. The president said himself said in the Oval Office that additional tariffs could come by mid-February on chips, pharmaceuticals, steel, aluminum, copper, oil and gas imports – along with tariffs on the European Union – all threats that few would discount given his willingness to follow through on the North American and China tariffs on Saturday.
-
Matter in an intermediate state between liquid and plasma that can be contained only if it is fully surrounded by a solid (or in a bubble of liquid, or held together by gravitational pull); it can condense into a liquid, or can (rarely) become a solid directly by deposition.
— A lot of gas had escaped from the cylinder.
-
Matter in an intermediate state between liquid and plasma that can be contained only if it is fully surrounded by a solid (or in a bubble of liquid, or held together by gravitational pull); it can condense into a liquid, or can (rarely) become a solid directly by deposition.; A flammable gaseous hydrocarbon or hydrocarbon mixture used as a fuel, e.g. for cooking, heating, electricity generation or as a fuel in internal combustion engines in vehicles, especially natural gas.
— Gas-fired power stations have largely replaced coal-burning ones.
- Ellipsis of gas pedal; accelerator, throttle.
-
An internal virtual currency used in Ethereum to pay for certain operations, such as blockchain transactions.
— gas fee
-
Matter in an intermediate state between liquid and plasma that can be contained only if it is fully surrounded by a solid (or in a bubble of liquid, or held together by gravitational pull); it can condense into a liquid, or can (rarely) become a solid directly by deposition.; Poison gas.
— The artillery fired gas shells into the enemy trenches.
-
A chemical element or compound in such a state.
— The atmosphere is made up of a number of different gases.
- Marijuana, typically of high quality.
-
A hob on a gas cooker.
— She turned the gas on, put the potatoes on, then lit the oven.
-
Methane or other waste gases trapped in one's belly as a result of the digestive process; flatus.
— My tummy hurts so bad – I have gas.
- The supply of natural gas, as a utility.
-
A humorous or entertaining event, person, or thing.
— Two more girls came in, one in bright pink stretch pants and the other in purple. “Man this place is a gas,” said pink.
-
Frothy or boastful talk; chatter.
— Bang, little boy, stop with the gas / Little T, man he chats up his ass
-
A fastball.
— The closer threw him nothing but gas.
- Arterial or venous blood gas.
动词 v.
-
To attack or kill with poison gas.
— The Nazis gassed millions of Jews during the Holocaust.
-
To increase the fuel flow to a vehicle's engine in order to accelerate it.
— The cops are coming. Gas it!
-
To use poison gas in (a volume or area) to attack or kill someone or something.
— "He's been waiting to jump my brain-bones since I left R&E. I could feel him hammering on the door." She trotted to the nearest wall and knocked on it for emphasis. "But whatever it is that makes us remember the good old days, it also makes us impossible to possess now. That's why Willie and I both woke up, and why Noè never got taken out by Mukami. So all I had to do was open my mind up to the guy, invite him in, then... gas the foyer, as it were."
-
To fill (a vehicle's fuel tank) with fuel.
— Between 0945 and 1020 six definite explosions were reported in the hangar. Explosions at 0945 and 1006 were described as minor while those at 1002, 1003 and 1005 were classed as major explosions and the explosion at 1020 was described as a heavy explosion but less severe than some previous ones. The cause of these explosions was not reported and can only be estimated from the damage sustained by the ship and the known condition of loading. Each of the six torpedo planes spotted in the hangar was armed with one Mark 13, torpex-loaded torpedo and was fully gassed, including auxiliary wing tanks. Explosions in the hangar therefore might have been either detonations of torpedoes or gasoline vapor explosions.
-
To talk in a boastful or vapid way; to chatter.
— […] (it was the town's humour to be always gassing of phantom investors who were likely to come any moment and pay a thousand prices for everything) — “[…] Them rich fellers, they don't make no bad breaks with their money. […]”
-
To impose upon by talking boastfully.
— I went shop and the boss man said "Don't pay me it's fine" and I said ...(whaaat): "You ain't gotta gas, I'm gas fam" ( don't gas me), "You ain't gotta gas, I'm gas fam".
-
To emit gas.
— The battery cell was gassing.
-
To impregnate with gas.
— to gas lime with chlorine in the manufacture of bleaching powder
-
To singe, as in a gas flame, so as to remove loose fibers.
— to gas thread
形容词 adj.
-
Of high quality.
— This food is gas.
-
Comical, zany; fun, amusing.
— Mary's new boyfriend is a gas man.
词形变化
词汇关系
衍生词
air gas
antigas
bag gas
base gas
blast furnace gas
Blau gas
bog gas
bottled gas
breathing gas
Calor gas
camping gas
carbonic acid gas
carrier gas
CN gas
coal gas
coal seam gas
coke oven gas
combined gas law
cooking on gas
cooking with gas
CS gas
degas
drip gas
exhaust gas
Fermi gas
filling gas
flue gas
fossil gas
freedom gas
galaxy gas
gasalier
gas and air
gas and gaiters
gasbag
gas balloon
gas bar
gas bladder
gas boat
gas bottle
gas-bracket
gas bracket
gas burner
gas can
gas cap
gas car
gas centrifuge
gas chamber
gas check
gas chromatograph
gas chromatography
gas clathrate
gas coal
gas constant
gas cylinder
gas discharge
gas duster
gas dwarf
gas dynamics
gas engine
gaseous
gasface
gas field
gas fire
gas-fired
gas-firing
gas fitter
gasfitting
gas flaring
gas gauge
gas generator
gas giant
Gashead
gasholder
gashouse
gas-house egg
gas hydrate
gasiferous
gasification
gasiform
gasify
gas jar
gas jet
gas-jet
gas jockey
gaslamp
gas lamp
gas law
gasless
gas lighter
gaslighter
gas-lighter
gaslight
gas light
gas-light
gas lighting
gas-lighting
gaslike
gas line
gas-liquid chromatography
gaslit
gas-lit
gas main
gasman
gas mantle
gas mark
gas mask
gas-masked
gas mechanics
gas meter
gas meter bandit
gasogen
gasogenous
gasometer
gasometre
gasometric
gasometry
gas on a stick
gasoscope
gasotransmitter
gas passer
gas pipe
gaspipe
gas pipeline
gas plant
gas poker
gas-powered
gasproof
gassy
gas syringe
gas tar
gastight
gas tracer
gas turbine
gas van
gas washer
gas water
gasworker
gasworks
gas works
greenhouse gas
happy gas
have a gas
hydrogen gas
hydrogen gas electrode
ideal gas
ideal gas law
illuminating gas
inert gas
inert gas narcosis
Knudsen gas
laughing gas
laughy gas
lifting gas
liquefied natural gas
liquefied petroleum gas
liquid gas
liquid natural gas
liquified natural gas
marsh gas
Mond gas
multigas
mustard gas
natural gas
natural gas liquid
nerve gas
Nevada gas
noble gas
nongas
non-ideal gas
nonideal gas
OC gas
off-gas
oil gas
olefiant gas
outgas
oxy-gas torch
oxygen gas
packaging gas
pass gas
pepper gas
pepper-gas
Pintsch gas
poison gas
power to gas
producer gas
purple gas
rare gas
regas
rotten egg gas
rotten-egg gas
second gas effect
sewer gas
shale gas
sneeze gas
sour gas
super greenhouse gas
swamp gas
synthesis gas
syngas
take gas
tear gas
tear-gas
town gas
towns gas
ullage gas
van der Waals gas
water gas
wet gas
white gas
wood gas
gas and dash
gas-and-dash
gas and go
gas-and-go
gas up
词源
词源 1
Etymology tree
Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰeh₂-der.
Ancient Greek χαῦνος (khaûnos)
Ancient Greek χάος (kháos)der.
Dutch gasbor.
English gas
Borrowed from Dutch gas, coined by chemist Jan Baptist van Helmont in Ortus Medicinae. Derived from Ancient Greek χάος (kháos, “chasm, void, empty space”); perhaps also inspired by geest (“breath, vapour, spirit”). Doublet of chaos. First attested in 1648.
Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰeh₂-der.
Ancient Greek χαῦνος (khaûnos)
Ancient Greek χάος (kháos)der.
Dutch gasbor.
English gas
Borrowed from Dutch gas, coined by chemist Jan Baptist van Helmont in Ortus Medicinae. Derived from Ancient Greek χάος (kháos, “chasm, void, empty space”); perhaps also inspired by geest (“breath, vapour, spirit”). Doublet of chaos. First attested in 1648.
词源 2
Clipping of gasoline. Slang forms popularized on TikTok by Gen Z.
词源 3
Compare the slang usage of "a gas", above.
0 次浏览
数据来源: Wiktionary