buffalo
英:[ˈbʌfələʊ] 美: [ˈbʌfəloʊ]
buffalo 基本解释
n.水牛(分非洲水牛和亚洲水牛两种);(南非或北美的)野牛;威胁;恐吓
vt.威胁;欺骗;迷惑;
变形
复数:buffaloesbuffalo
双语释义
n.(名词)[C]水牛,(南非或北美的)野牛 a large ox of various kinds,including the wild S African buffalo,the tame (often domesticated) Asian buffalo and the N American bison
英英释义
buffalo
n.large shaggy-haired brown bison of North American plains同义词:American bisonAmerican buffaloBison bison
a city on Lake Erie in western New York (near Niagara Falls)meat from an American bisonany of several Old World animals resembling oxen including, e.g., water buffalo; Cape buffalo同义词:Old World buffalo
v.intimidate or overawe
buffalo 相关例句
词组短语
water buffalo水牛
同近义词辨析
buffalo, cow, bull, ox这组词都有“牛”的意思,其区别是:
buffalo指水牛,在美国指野牛。
cow指任何品种的成年母牛或乳用的乳牛。
bull指未经阉割,通常用于配种的公牛,也指西班牙或美洲经专门饲料用作斗牛表演的公牛。引申指彪形大汉。
ox泛指野生或驯养的牛类,系动物学的用词,通称,也指公牛。
双语例句
用作名词(n.)- Asian buffalo isn't as wild as that of America's.
亚洲水牛比美国水牛温顺些。 - There were lots of buffaloes in the North America 100 years ago.
100年前,北美有大量的野牛。
用作及物动词(vt.)- Don't buffalo me into doing something I don't want to do.
别威胁我做我不想做的事。 - He tried to buffalo me at first meeting but I soon caught on to his tricks.
初次见面时他企图欺骗我,但是我很快就明白了他耍的花招。 - The fifth question on the test buffaloed me completely.
我完全被测验上的第五题迷惑了。
权威例句
Impaired recognition memory in monkeys after damage limited to the hippocampal regionAssemblathon 1: a competitive assessment of de novo short read assembly methodsThe human perirhinal cortex and recognition memoryLaminar differences in gamma and alpha coherence in the ventral streamBird Mortality Associated with Wind Turbines at the Buffalo Ridge Wind Resource Area, MinnesotaIdentification, purification, and biological characterization of hematopoietic stem cell factor from buffalo rat liver-conditioned m..."Buffalo hump"in men with HIV-1 infectionMortality of Bats at a Large-scale Wind Power Development at Buffalo Ridge, MinnesotaComparative analysis of seeded and vegetative biotype buffalograsses based on phylogenetic relationship using ISSRs, SSRs, RAPDs, an...Pulmonary function is a long-term predictor of mortality in the general population: 29-year follow-up of the Buffalo Health Study.