felt
名词 n.
动词 v.
形容词 adj.
英文释义
名词 n.
-
A cloth or stuff made of matted fibres of wool, or wool and fur, fulled or wrought into a compact substance by rolling and pressure, with lees or size, without spinning or weaving.
— It were a delicate stratagem to shoe A troop of horse with felt.
- A hat made of felt.
-
A felt-tip pen.
— You'll notice that all the illustrations are done in different media: some with pencil crayons, some with felts, some with paint, some with chalk pastels.
-
A skin or hide; a fell; a pelt.
— To know whether sheep are sound or not, see that the felt be loose.
动词 v.
-
To make into felt or a feltlike substance; to cause to adhere and mat together.
— the same Wool , for instance , one Men felts it into a Hat, another weaves it into Cloth , another weaves it into Kersey or Serge
- simple past and past participle of feel
-
To cover with, or as if with, felt.
— to felt the cylinder of a steam engine
- To cause (a player) to lose all their chips.
- To thoroughly defeat or humiliate (someone).
形容词 adj.
-
That has been experienced or perceived.
— Conversions to Islam can therefore be a deeply felt aesthetic experience that rarely occurs in Christian accounts of conversion, which are generally the source rather than the result of a Christian experience of beauty.
词汇关系
词源
词源 1
From Middle English felt, from Old English felt, from Proto-West Germanic *felt (compare Dutch vilt, German Filz, Danish, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, and Swedish filt, French feutre), from Proto-Indo-European *pilto, *pilso 'felt' (compare Latin pilleus (“felt”, adjective), Old Church Slavonic плъсть (plŭstĭ), Albanian plis, Ancient Greek πῖλος (pîlos)), from *pel- 'to beat'. More at anvil.
词源 2
From Old English fēled, corresponding to feel + -ed.
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数据来源: Wiktionary