punch

英 [p?n(t)?]
  • n. 沖壓機;打洞器;鉆孔機
  • vt. 開洞;以拳重擊
  • vi. 用拳猛擊
  • n. (Punch)人名;(馬來)蓬芝;(英)龐奇

GRECET4TEM4考研TOEFLCET6中頻詞核心詞匯

詞態變化


復數:?punches;第三人稱單數:?punches;過去式:?punched;過去分詞:?punched;現在分詞:?punching;名詞:?puncher;

中文詞源


punch 拳擊,打孔,按鍵

來自拉丁語pungere,刺,擊,來自PIE*pung,刺,擊,打,詞源同pungent,puncture,point.引申諸相關詞義。

punch 潘趣酒

來自印度語panch,五,詞源同five,Pentecost.因這種酒需五種原料(酒,水,檸檬汁,糖,香 料)調制而得名。

英文詞源


punch
punch: English has three distinct words punch, not counting the capitalized character in the Punch and Judy show, but two of them are probably ultimately related. Punch ‘hit’ [14] originated as a variant of Middle English pounce ‘pierce, prod’. This came from Old French poinsonner ‘prick, stamp’, a derivative of the noun poinson ‘pointed tool’ (source of the now obsolete English puncheon ‘pointed tool’ [14]).

And poinson in turn came from Vulgar Latin *punctiō, a derivative of *punctiāre ‘pierce, prick’, which went back to the past participle of Latin pungere ‘prick’ (source of English point, punctuation, etc). Punch ‘tool for making holes’ [15] (as in ‘ticket punch’) probably originated as an abbreviated version of puncheon. Punch ‘drink’ [17] is said to come from Hindi pānch, a descendant of Sanskrit panchan ‘five’, an allusion to the fact that the drink is traditionally made from five ingredients: spirits, water, lemon juice, sugar, and spice.

This has never been definitely established, however, and an alternative possibility is that it is an abbreviation of puncheon ‘barrel’ [15], a word of uncertain origin. The name of Mr Punch [17] is short for Punchinello, which comes from a Neapolitan dialect word polecenella. This may have been a diminutive of Italian polecena ‘young turkey’, which goes back ultimately to Latin pullus ‘young animal, young chicken’ (source of English poultry).

It is presumably an allusion to Punch’s beaklike nose.

=> point, punctuation
punch (v.)
"to thrust, push; jostle;" also, "prod, to drive (cattle, etc.) by poking and prodding," late 14c., from Old French ponchonner "to punch, prick, stamp," from ponchon "pointed tool, piercing weapon" (see punch (n.1)). Meaning "to pierce, emboss with a tool" is from early 15c.; meaning "to stab, puncture" is from mid-15c. To punch a ticket, etc., is from mid-15c. To punch the clock "record one's arrival at or departure from the workplace using an automated timing device" is from 1900. Related: Punched; punching.
Perhaps you are some great big chief, who has a lot to say.
Who lords it o'er the common herd who chance to come your way;
Well, here is where your arrogance gets a dreadful shock,
When you march up, like a private, salute, and PUNCH THE CLOCK.

[from "Punch the Clock," by "The Skipper," "The Commercial Telegraphers' Journal," May 1912]
Specialized sense "to hit with the fist" first recorded 1520s. Compare Latin pugnare "to fight with the fists," from a root meaning "to pierce, sting." In English this was probably influenced by punish; "punch" or "punsch" for "punish" is found in documents from 14c.-15c.:
punchyth me, Lorde, and spare my blyssyd wyff Anne. [Coventry Mystery Plays, late 15c.]
To punch (someone) out "beat up" is from 1971.
punch (n.1)
"pointed tool for making holes or embossing," late 14c., short for puncheon (mid-14c.), from Old French ponchon, poinchon "pointed tool, piercing weapon," from Vulgar Latin *punctionem (nominative *punctio) "pointed tool," from past participle stem of Latin pungere "to prick" (see pungent). From mid-15c. as "a stab, thrust;" late 15c. as "a dagger." Meaning "machine for pressing or stamping a die" is from 1620s.
punch (n.2)
type of mixed drink, 1630s, traditionally since 17c. said to derive from Hindi panch "five," in reference to the number of original ingredients (spirits, water, lemon juice, sugar, spice), from Sanskrit panchan-s, from pancha "five" (see five). But there are difficulties (see OED), and connection to puncheon (n.1) is not impossible.
Punch (n.)
the puppet show star, 1709, shortening of Punchinello (1666), from Italian (Neapolitan) Pollecinella, Pollecenella, diminutive of pollecena "turkey pullet," probably in allusion to his big nose. The phrase pleased as punch apparently refers to his unfailing triumph over enemies. The comic weekly of this name was published in London from 1841.
punch (n.3)
"a quick blow with the fist," by 1570s, probably from punch (v.). In early use also of blows with the foot or jabs with a staff or club. Originally especially of blows that sink in to some degree ("... whom he unmercifully bruises and batters from head to foot: here a slap in the chaps, there a black eye, now a punch in the stomach, and then a kick on the breech," "Monthly Review," 1763). Figurative sense of "forceful, vigorous quality" is recorded from 1911. To beat (someone) to the punch in the figurative sense is from 1915, a metaphor from boxing (attested by 1913). Punch line (also punch-line) is from 1915 (originally in popular-song writing); punch-drunk is from 1915 (alternative form slug-nutty is from 1933).

雙語例句


1. W. Somerset Maugham's novel still packs an emotional punch.
威廉·薩默塞特·毛姆的小說仍具有強烈的情感沖擊力。

來自柯林斯例句

2. The guards, he said, would punch them for no reason.
他說警衛會無緣無故毆打他們。

來自柯林斯例句

3. He managed to free one hand to ward off a punch.
他設法掙脫出一只手來擋住了一拳。

來自柯林斯例句

4. He was involved in a punch-up with Sarah's former lover.
他和薩拉的舊情人打起來了。

來自柯林斯例句

5. Government workers were made to punch time clocks morning, noon and night.
公務員早、中、晚都要打卡。

來自柯林斯例句

主站蜘蛛池模板: 精品久久久无码中文字幕| 91精品国产91久久综合| 男女激情边摸边做边吃奶在线观看| 好男人在线社区| 免费一级毛片在线观看| 97夜夜澡人人爽人人| 欧美丰满大乳大屁股流白浆| 国产大秀视频在线一区二区| 丰满少妇人妻无码专区| 精品久久久久久国产91| 国产超碰人人做人人爽av| 亚洲AV无码专区国产乱码电影| 豪妇荡乳1一5白玉兰免费下载 | 国色天香精品一卡2卡3卡| 亚洲毛片基地4455ww| 欧美h片在线观看| 无码av中文一区二区三区桃花岛| 免费毛片a线观看| 18禁美女黄网站色大片免费观看| 最新国产AV无码专区亚洲| 嘟嘟嘟www在线观看免费高清| a毛片全部免费播放| 极品丝袜老师h系列全文阅读| 国产一区二区三区欧美| a毛片在线免费观看| 最近2019中文免费字幕| 同学浓精灌麻麻| 97人人在线视频| 日韩人妻无码中文字幕视频| 全彩里番acg海贼王同人本子| 2020天天干| 日本特黄在线观看免费| 和几个女同事的激情性事| 8888奇米影视笫四色88me| 日本高清护士xxxxx| 低头看我是怎么c哭你的| 欧美亚洲777| 婷婷四房综合激情五月在线| 亚洲午夜精品一区二区| 翁止熄痒禁伦短文合集免费视频| 国产视频中文字幕|