ramble

名词 n. 动词 v.

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. A leisurely stroll; a recreational walk in the countryside.
    — Marianne was prevailed upon to join her sisters in their usual walk, instead of wandering away by herself. Hitherto she had carefully avoided every companion in her rambles. If her sisters intended to walk on the downs, she directly stole away towards the lanes;[…]
  2. A rambling; an instance of someone talking at length without direction.
  3. A bed of shale over the seam of coal.
  4. A section of woodland suitable for leisurely walking.
    — Someone proposed that we play in one of the small clearings in a gay crusing ^([sic]) area in Central Park called the rambles.
动词 v.
  1. To move about aimlessly, or on a winding course.
    — Weak from drifting on the longest mosey ever rambled. Weeks with no meal or beverage. Blistering desert pounding me to the crosine-tipped ^([sic]) brink of insanity. Yet perhaps there is truth in sand madness.
  2. To walk for pleasure; to amble or saunter.
  3. To lead the life of a vagabond or itinerant; to move about with no fixed place of address.
    — 1994, Richard Thompson, “Beeswing” We was drinking more in those days and tempers reached a pitch And like a fool I let her run with the rambling itch
  4. To talk or write incessantly, unclearly, or incoherently, with many digressions. often,with-on
    — Francine has a tendency to ramble when it gets to be late in the evening.
  5. To follow a winding path or course.
    — The river rambled through the mountains.

词形变化

rambles plural rambles present,singular,third-person rambling participle,present rambled participle,past rambled past

词汇关系

词源

词源 1
An altered form (with dissimilation of mm to mb) of dialectal rammle, from Middle English *ramlen, *ramelen, frequentative of Middle English ramen (“to roam, ramble”); compare Swedish ramla (“to stumble; fall; make a noise; rumble”), Danish ramle (“to stumble; collapse; thunder; boom”); equivalent to roam + -le.
"mid-15 c., perhaps frequentative of 'romen' 'to walk, go' perhaps via 'romblen' (late 14 c.) 'to ramble.' The vowel change perhaps by influence of Middle Dutch 'rammelen,' a derivative of 'rammen' 'copulate,' 'used of the night wanderings of the amorous cat.' Meaning 'to talk or write incoherently' is from 1630s".
词源 2
An altered form (with dissimilation of mm to mb) of dialectal rammle, from Middle English *ramlen, *ramelen, frequentative of Middle English ramen (“to roam, ramble”); compare Swedish ramla (“to stumble; fall; make a noise; rumble”), Danish ramle (“to stumble; collapse; thunder; boom”); equivalent to roam + -le.
"mid-15 c., perhaps frequentative of 'romen' 'to walk, go' perhaps via 'romblen' (late 14 c.) 'to ramble.' The vowel change perhaps by influence of Middle Dutch 'rammelen,' a derivative of 'rammen' 'copulate,' 'used of the night wanderings of the amorous cat.' Meaning 'to talk or write incoherently' is from 1630s".
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