felt

名词 n. 动词 v. 形容词 adj.

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. 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. countable,uncountable
    — It were a delicate stratagem to shoe A troop of horse with felt.
  2. A hat made of felt. countable,uncountable
  3. A felt-tip pen. countable,uncountable
    — 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.
  4. A skin or hide; a fell; a pelt. countable,obsolete,uncountable
    — To know whether sheep are sound or not, see that the felt be loose.
动词 v.
  1. To make into felt or a feltlike substance; to cause to adhere and mat together. transitive
    — the same Wool , for instance , one Men felts it into a Hat, another weaves it into Cloth , another weaves it into Kersey or Serge
  2. simple past and past participle of feel form-of,participle,past,transitive
  3. To cover with, or as if with, felt. transitive
    — to felt the cylinder of a steam engine
  4. To cause (a player) to lose all their chips. transitive
  5. To thoroughly defeat or humiliate (someone). Internet,broadly,transitive
形容词 adj.
  1. That has been experienced or perceived. transitive
    — 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.

词形变化

felts plural felte alternative,archaic felts present,singular,third-person felting participle,present felted participle,past felted past felte alternative,archaic felte alternative,archaic more felt comparative most felt superlative felte alternative,archaic

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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