strange

名词 n. 动词 v. 形容词 adj.
发音 strānj

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. Sex outside of one's current relationship. slang,uncountable
    — It was a bar by license, but in hiring practice it became an intergalactic smorgasbord of xenosexual delights, females of fancy species serving drinks and offering cultural exchange to human males seeking some strange.
  2. A strange quark. countable,particle
动词 v.
  1. To alienate; to estrange. obsolete,transitive
  2. To be estranged or alienated. intransitive,obsolete
  3. To wonder; to be astonished at (something). intransitive,obsolete
    — [I]f the world and motion were not from Eternity, then God was Idle; were all the Aſſertions of Ariſtotle, which Theology pronounceth impieties. Which yet we need not ſtrange at from one, of whom a Father ſaith, Nec Deum coluit nec curavit [he neither worshipped nor cared for God]: […]
形容词 adj.
  1. Not normal; odd, unusual, surprising, out of the ordinary, often with a negative connotation.
    — He thought it strange that his girlfriend wore shorts in the winter.
  2. Unfamiliar, not yet part of one's experience.
    — I moved to a strange town when I was ten.
  3. Outside of one's current relationship; unfamiliar. slang
    — When AIDS and Herpes hit the street Talib stopped fucking with strange pussy and stray pussy. Bitches had a ways to go to match Malikah in bed anyway. With her there was that extra element of real love that heightened sex […]
  4. Having the quantum mechanical property of strangeness. particle
    — A strange quark is electrically charged, carrying an amount -1/3, as does the down quark.
  5. Of an attractor: having a fractal structure.
  6. Belonging to another country; foreign. obsolete
    — I take goyng thither [to Italy], and liuing there, for a yonge ientleman, that doth not goe vnder the kepe and garde of such a man, as both, by wisedome can, and authoritie dare rewle him, to be meruelous dangerous […] not bicause I do contemne, either the knowledge of strange and diuerse tonges, and namelie the Italian tonge […] or else bicause I do despise, the learning that is gotten […]
  7. Reserved; distant in deportment. obsolete
    — Good signiors both, when shall we laugh? say, when? / You grow exceeding strange: must it be so?
  8. Backward; slow. obsolete
    — That to his name your barrenneſſe adds rule; / VVho louing the effect, vvould not be ſtrange / In fauoring the cause; looke on the profit, / And gaine vvill quickly point the miſchiefe out.
  9. Not familiar; unaccustomed; inexperienced. obsolete
    — I know thee well; / But in thy fortunes am unlearn’d and strange.
  10. Not belonging to one.

词形变化

stranger comparative strangest superlative stranges present,singular,third-person stranging participle,present stranged participle,past stranged past stranges plural

词源

词源 1
Etymology tree
Proto-Indo-European *h₁éǵʰ
Proto-Indo-European *-s
Proto-Indo-European *h₁éǵʰs
Proto-Indo-European *-teros
Proto-Indo-European *h₁eǵʰsteros
Proto-Italic *eksteros
Latin exter
Latin extrā
Proto-Indo-European *-nós
Proto-Italic *-nos
Latin -nus
Latin -ānus
Proto-Indo-European *-yósder.
Proto-Indo-European *-éyos
Proto-Italic *-ejos
Proto-Italic *-eos
Latin -eus
Latin -āneus
Latin extrāneusder.
Old French estrange
Anglo-Norman estraungebor.
Middle English straunge
English strange
From Middle English straunge, strange, stronge, from Old French estrange, from Latin extrāneus (“that which is on the outside”). Doublet of extraneous and estrange. Cognate with French étrange (“strange, foreign”) and Spanish extraño (“strange, foreign”). Largely displaced native fremd, selcouth, and uncouth, from Old English fremede, seldcūþ, and uncūþ.
词源 2
Etymology tree
Proto-Indo-European *h₁éǵʰ
Proto-Indo-European *-s
Proto-Indo-European *h₁éǵʰs
Proto-Indo-European *-teros
Proto-Indo-European *h₁eǵʰsteros
Proto-Italic *eksteros
Latin exter
Latin extrā
Proto-Indo-European *-nós
Proto-Italic *-nos
Latin -nus
Latin -ānus
Proto-Indo-European *-yósder.
Proto-Indo-European *-éyos
Proto-Italic *-ejos
Proto-Italic *-eos
Latin -eus
Latin -āneus
Latin extrāneusder.
Old French estrange
Anglo-Norman estraungebor.
Middle English straunge
English strange
From Middle English straunge, strange, stronge, from Old French estrange, from Latin extrāneus (“that which is on the outside”). Doublet of extraneous and estrange. Cognate with French étrange (“strange, foreign”) and Spanish extraño (“strange, foreign”). Largely displaced native fremd, selcouth, and uncouth, from Old English fremede, seldcūþ, and uncūþ.
词源 3
Etymology tree
Proto-Indo-European *h₁éǵʰ
Proto-Indo-European *-s
Proto-Indo-European *h₁éǵʰs
Proto-Indo-European *-teros
Proto-Indo-European *h₁eǵʰsteros
Proto-Italic *eksteros
Latin exter
Latin extrā
Proto-Indo-European *-nós
Proto-Italic *-nos
Latin -nus
Latin -ānus
Proto-Indo-European *-yósder.
Proto-Indo-European *-éyos
Proto-Italic *-ejos
Proto-Italic *-eos
Latin -eus
Latin -āneus
Latin extrāneusder.
Old French estrange
Anglo-Norman estraungebor.
Middle English straunge
English strange
From Middle English straunge, strange, stronge, from Old French estrange, from Latin extrāneus (“that which is on the outside”). Doublet of extraneous and estrange. Cognate with French étrange (“strange, foreign”) and Spanish extraño (“strange, foreign”). Largely displaced native fremd, selcouth, and uncouth, from Old English fremede, seldcūþ, and uncūþ.
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