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- 在洋泾浜英语中,牛津字典把chop chop一词解释为汉语“快”的洋泾浜英语,这应该如何理解? - 知乎
在洋泾浜英语中,牛津字典把chop chop一词解释为汉语“快”的洋泾浜英语,这应该如何理解? chop在英语中不是“切,劈”的意思吗? 和汉语词汇究竟有何关系? 如何理解呢? @英语人 @英语 @英语老师骆军 @英语学习网 @英语学霸 [图片] 显示全部 关注者 12 被浏览
- What is the the origin of the expression chop chop?
According to The Phrase Finder chop chop has been around since the 1800s as a corruption of Chinese: this little reduplicated term has its origins in the South China Sea, as a Pidgin English version of the Chinese term k'wâi-k'wâi The earliest known citation of chop-chop in print is from the English language newspaper that was printed in Canton in the early 19th century - The Canton
- What is the origin of the saying “Chop chop suey suey”?
The expression "chop chop suey suey," insofar as it isn't simply a nonsense phrase, thus seems to intend to combine the speed of chop-chop with the fragmentary miscellaneousness of chop suey
- What does Chop chop man bun mean? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
If you just google define chop chop, you get the answer I think you're looking for, "be quick!" Or are you confused about the sentence structure? I notice you're missing a comma: "Chop chop, man bun" You understand that "man bun" is synecdoche, right? If you're learning English, it might be better to ask on English Language Learners instead
- chopping在说唱中是什么风格? - 知乎
Chop起源于美国中西部,Bone-Thugs-N-Harmoy这个组合中的Layzie Bone很喜欢用快速的flow,接着Tech N9ne以及Twista等人都开始快速说唱。但Chopper这个类种的定义还是由Tech N9ne提出的,同样是他组织了Worldwide Choppers和Midwest Chopper的cypher,在国内,worldwide choppers的part2,即Speedom,由于有姆爷参与所以相对有名点
- sounds - Word for the noise made by a helicopter? - English Language . . .
I can only imagine a TV programme for small children referring to the 'chop chop' of a helicopter It sounds like baby talk Likewise 'choppy sound' The onomatopoeic sounds listed, while very imaginative, are almost entirely novel concoctions (i e all but 'swish swash') 'Chopping sound' and 'pulsing noise' constitute adult language, but neither are anything but very general descriptors, and
- 筷子的英文名谁起的? - 知乎
The English word "chopstick" may have derived from Chinese Pidgin English, in which "chop chop" meant "quickly" [5] [6] [7] According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the earliest published use of the word is in the 1699 book Voyages and Descriptions by William Dampier: "they are called by the English seamen Chopsticks" [8] Another possibility, is that the term is derived from chow (chow
- etymology - Theres a pork chop in every beer, origin - English . . .
There's a pork chop in every beer An October 2, 2002, question at the message board of the same site asks whether a (12-ounce, presumably) beer has the same nutritional value as a pork chop, a question that suggests why someone thought of equating beer and pork chops in the first place
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