单词 | Oed |
例句 | 1. O liberty, how many crimes have been committed in thy name! 2. The year 1705 is usually pronounced seventeen o five. 3. The inspector chalked O.K. on my baggage. 4. We'll stop now and resume at two o 'clock. 5. My phone number is six o four double two . 6. O.K. I'll sign off. We'll talk at the beginning of the week. 7. He's got an O level in Russian. 8. The chemical formula for water is H 2 O. 9. O is the chemical symbol for oxygen. 10. O Lord, in you I put my trust. 11. "I'd like to be alone, O.K?" — "Sure. O.K.". 12. "Any problems?" — "No, I'm O.K." 13. Write to P.O. Box 714, Key Largo, Florida. 14. She took six subjects at O level. 15. O God, I want to go home. 16. We praise thy name, O Lord. 16. Wish you will love and make progress everyday! 17. I can't make out whether this letter is an e or an o. 18. The W.H.O. safety standard for ozone levels is somewhere about a hundred. 19. Don't worry — we'll have the money ready by 4 o 'clock, by hook or by crook. 20. She was really p.o.'d when she didn't get the job. 21. The OED defines LOL as an interjection "used chiefly in electronic communications... to draw attention to a joke or humorous statement, or to express amusement". 22. And even the OED provides mostly historical examples from the 1800 s and 1900 s. 23. This is the Oxford English Dictionary ( OED ) in electronic form, on CD - ROM disk 15 centimetres wide. 24. The OED is the final court of appeal in all matters concerning English words. 25. The anomalous secondary structure of Rorippa islandica(Oed. ) Borb. in the different development period of its root corresponded to its physiological activities. 26. Ms. McPherson said the OED requires 'evidence of a word's usage over a 10-year period, before considering it for inclusion' in its editions. 27. One might not be surprised to find that a dictionary definition of this vintage omits a Japanese viewpoint. Such is indeed the case with the OED Second Edition. 28. It means to do some sort of damage and the OED claims it's from Afro-American origins. 29. But it has been African - American slang since at least the 1960 s, OED researchers found. 30. Kathryn Race, head of marketing at the Council, which represents some 4, 000 growers and processors, said the group had complained in writing to the OED but had yet to receive a response. 31. The OED says "couch potato" originated as American slang, meaning "a pennon who spends leisure –time passively or idly sitting around, especially watching television or video tapes" . 32. The Coopers company began sewing labels marked jockey into their undershorts in 1947 but the OED tells us it was only 1966 when someone wrote about jockey briefs in a book. 33. Although the OED is not a narrative, not scripture, not poetry , it is, nonetheless, transportive. 34. One, fubar supposedly standing for "fu**ed up beyond all recognition" actually has made it into the OED along with snafu. 35. The OED says this form of slug a slang usage, not tracing the origin. 36. The source of the word dapper is "Flemish or another Low German dialect" according to the OED. 37. According to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), the term capitalism was first used by novelist William Makepeace Thackeray in 1854 in The Newcomes, where he meant "having ownership of capital".Sentencedict 38. At least that's what the OED tells us; the only example that they can find of the word scrannel is in Milton's Lycidas. 39. The multi - volume Oxford English Dictionary ( OED ) lists and defines all words in the English language. 40. The OED is the court of appeal in all matters concerning English words. 41. The OED is the final court of appeal in all matters concerning Egilish words. 42. So in the late '60s when The Lord of the Rings was making its first rise to popularity the OED added hobbit as an entry. 43. I see that the entrys in the OED second and draft third edition a little different. 44. The OED is the definitive work on the history and usage of English. 45. It was found that OED belonged to mixed corrosion inhibitor by electrochemical curve. 46. For example, OED found a quotation for OMG in a personal letter from 1917, and FYI (For Your Information) originated in the language of memoranda in 1941. 47. Strangely, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology seems to agree with Brewer's and not with the OED—it's fellow Oxford University Press publication, in blaming galoshes on the Gauls. 48. The OED online gives a first citation of gazpacho from 1845 and even gives a recipe. 49. The OED reports that this sense fed a slang expression where to beef someone was to knock them down; showing first in writing in 1926. |
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