hutch

名词 n. 动词 v.

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. A box, chest, crate, case or cabinet.
  2. A coop or cage for keeping small animals (rabbits, guinea pigs, dogs, etc).
    — “No place for rabbits now, but I could easy build a few hutches and you could feed alfalfa to the rabbits.”
  3. A piece of furniture in which items may be displayed.
  4. A cabinet for storing dishes.
  5. A piece of furniture (cabinet) to be placed on top of a desk.
  6. A measure of two Winchester bushels.
  7. The case of a flour bolt.
  8. A car on low wheels, in which coal is drawn in the mine and hoisted out of the pit.
  9. A jig or trough for ore dressing or washing ore.
  10. A baker's kneading-trough.
  11. The pavilion or dressing room. slang
  12. An embankment built in a river to check erosion caused by running water.
    — There were deep pools in the river, known as hutch pools because they are formed by hutches - breakwaters - built out from the bank.
动词 v.
  1. To hoard or lay up, in a chest. transitive
    — She hutched the all-worshipt ore.
    Comus
  2. To wash (ore) in a box or jig. transitive
  3. To move with a jerk; to hitch. ambitransitive
    — And the mind was very disinclined to hutch out of the crevice and face what must be done. […] He hauled himself out of the crevice and the air was warm so that he undressed to trousers and sweater. […] He hutched himself back against a rock with his legs sprawled apart.

词形变化

hutches plural hutches present,singular,third-person hutching participle,present hutched participle,past hutched past

词源

词源 1
From Middle English hucche (“storage chest”), variation of whucce, from Old English hwiċe, hwiċċe (“box, chest”). Spelling influenced by Old French huche (“chest”), from Medieval Latin hūtica, from a different Germanic root, from Frankish *hutta, from Proto-Germanic *hudjō, *hudjǭ (“box, hut, hutch”). Akin to Old English hȳdan (“to conceal; hide”). More at hide, hut.
(cricket pavilion or dressing room): An extension of the rabbit metaphor.
词源 2
From Middle English hucche (“storage chest”), variation of whucce, from Old English hwiċe, hwiċċe (“box, chest”). Spelling influenced by Old French huche (“chest”), from Medieval Latin hūtica, from a different Germanic root, from Frankish *hutta, from Proto-Germanic *hudjō, *hudjǭ (“box, hut, hutch”). Akin to Old English hȳdan (“to conceal; hide”). More at hide, hut.
(cricket pavilion or dressing room): An extension of the rabbit metaphor.
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