crap

名词 n. 动词 v. 形容词 adj. 感叹词 intj.

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. The husk of grain; chaff. obsolete,uncountable,usually
  2. A losing throw of 2, 3, or 12 in craps.
  3. Something worthless or of poor quality; junk. mildly,slang,uncountable,usually,vulgar
    — The long-running game show went from offering good prizes to crap in no time.
  4. Attributive form of craps. attributive,form-of
    — To test the possibility that her husband’s luck was indestructible, Mary went to the crap tables and made a small bet.
  5. Nonsense; something untrue. mildly,slang,uncountable,usually,vulgar
    — The college student boasted of completing a 10,000-word essay on Shakespeare, but that claim was utter crap.
  6. Feces. mildly,slang,uncountable,usually,vulgar
    — I stepped in some dog crap that was on the sidewalk.
  7. An act of defecation. countable,mildly,slang,usually,vulgar
    — I have to take a crap.
动词 v.
  1. To defecate. intransitive,mildly,slang,vulgar
    — That soup tasted funny, and now I need to crap.
  2. To defecate in or on (clothing etc.). mildly,slang,transitive,vulgar
    — He almost crapped his pants from fright.
  3. To bullshit. India,mildly,slang,transitive,vulgar
    — Don't try to crap me: I know you're lying.
形容词 adj.
  1. Of poor quality. colloquial,mildly,vulgar
    — I drove an old crap car for ten years before buying a new one.
感叹词 intj.
  1. Expression of worry, fear, shock, surprise, disgust, annoyance, or dismay. mildly,slang,vulgar
    — Oh crap! The other driver's going to hit my car!

词形变化

craps plural craps present,singular,third-person crapping participle,present crapped participle,past crapped past crapper comparative crappest superlative crappy alternative,Canada,US craps plural

词源

词源 1
Etymology tree
Old Dutch krappender.
Old French crappe
Middle French crapebor.
Middle English crappe
English crap
From Middle English crappe, also in plural: crappys, craps (“chaff; buckwheat”), from Middle French crape, from Old French crappe, crapin (“chaff”) (compare Medieval Latin crappa pl, also crapinum), from Old Dutch krappen (“to cut off, pluck off”) (whence Middle Dutch crappe, crap (“a chop, cutlet”), whence Dutch krip (“a steak”)). Related to crop.
词源 2
From crab's eyes.
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