ham
推荐文章



n. 火腿;业余无线电爱好者;蹩脚演员
vi. 表演过火
vt. 演得过火
adj. 过火的;做作的
n. (Ham)人名;(英、瑞典、塞)哈姆;(老)罕;(柬)汉
n.
火腿;(旧时的)小镇,村庄;大腿后部;拙劣演员(尤指表演过火者)
vi.
表情夸张,表演过火;
adj.
过火的,做作的;蹩脚的;自满的;搞业余无线电收发报的
变形
复数:hams过去式:hammed过去分词:hammed现在分词:hamming第三人称单数:hams
双语释义
n.(名词)[C][U]火腿;火腿肉 upper part of a pig's leg, salted and dried or smoked for food; the meat from this
英英释义
ham[ hæm ]
n.
meat cut from the thigh of a hog (usually smoked)
同义词:jambongammon
(Old Testament) son of Noah
a licensed amateur radio operator
an unskilled actor who overacts
同义词:ham actor
v.exaggerate one's acting
同义词:overactham it upoverplay
词组短语
ham sandwich火腿三明治
preserved ham腊肉
ham radio业余无线电
ham and egg火腿肠;火腿鸡蛋
双语例句
用作名词(n.)
This ham has too much fat on it.
这火腿肥肉太多。
He tucked into the ham hungrily.
他狼吞虎咽地大吃火腿。
He made a ham sandwich.
他做了一个火腿三明治。
用作动词(v.)
The actor is really ham it up to amuse the audience.
这些演员为博观众一笑,表演得实在太过火了。
She is the person who likes to ham it up most I have ever seen.
她是我见过的最喜欢做作的人。
Your story is very funny, but there is no need to ham it up.
你的故事很能引人发笑,不过不必过分渲染。
权威例句
Study on the Variation of Physicochemical Properties during Dry-cured Mutton Ham ProcessingLength﹚eight relationship and condition factor of common minnow, Esomus danricus (Ham.) from different freshwater environments
Nutritional value of ham and prosciutto
Light-emitting diodes based on conjugated polymers
Extinction risk from climate change.
Evidence based medicine : what it is and what it isn't
Thomas, C. D., et al. Extinction risk from climate change. Nature
Eight-year results of a randomized clinical trial comparing total mastectomy and lumpectomy with or without irradiation in the treat...
A Randomized Clinical Trial Evaluating Tamoxifen in the Treatment of Patients with Node-Negative Breast Cancer Who Have Estrogen-Rec...
On the Energy Detection of Unknown Signals Over Fading Channels
ham
ham: [OE] The etymological meaning of ham is ‘bend’ – it comes from Germanic *kham- ‘be crooked’ – and up until the 16th century it denoted exclusively the ‘part of the leg at the back of the knee’ (a portion of the anatomy now without a word of its own in English). Hamstring [16] reflects this original meaning. From the mid-16th century, it gradually extended semantically to ‘back of the thigh’ and hence ‘thigh’ generally, and by the 17th century it was being used for the ‘thigh of a slaughtered animal, especially a pig, preserved and used for food’. Ham in the sense ‘performer who overacts’, first recorded in the late 19th century, apparently comes from an earlier hamfatter ‘bad actor’, which may have been inspired by the Negro minstrel song ‘The Ham-fat Man’.
ham (n.1)
"thigh of a hog used for food" (especially salted and cured or smoke-dried), 1630s, extended from earlier sense " part of the human leg behind the knee; hock of a quadruped," from Old English hamm "hollow or bend of the knee," from Proto-Germanic *hamma- (cognates: Old Norse höm, Middle Low German, Middle Dutch hamme, Old High German hamma), from PIE *kone-mo- "shin bone" (cognates: Greek kneme "calf of the leg," Old Irish cnaim "bone"). Ham-fisted (adj.) in reference to hard-hitting characters is from 1905; ham-handed "coarse, clumsy" is by 1896. With hammen ifalden "with folded hams" was a Middle English way of saying "kneeling."
ham (n.2)
"overacting inferior performer," 1882, American English, apparently a shortening of hamfatter (1880) "actor of low grade," which is said (since at least 1889) to be from the old minstrel show song, "The Ham-fat Man" (attested by 1856). The song, a comical black-face number, has nothing to do with acting, but the connection might be with the quality of acting in minstrel shows, where the song was popular (compare the definition of hambone in the 1942 "American Thesaurus of Slang," "unconvincing blackface dialectician"). Its most popular aspect was the chorus and the performance of the line "Hoochee, kouchee, kouchee, says the ham fat man." Ham also had a sports slang sense of "incompetent pugilist" (1888), perhaps from the notion in ham-fisted. The notion of "amateurish" led to the sense of "amateur radio operator" (1919).
ham (v.)
"over-act in performance," 1933, from ham (n.2). Related: Hammed; hamming. As an adjective in this sense by 1935.
1. Ham and eggs is my favorite breakfast.
火腿蛋是我最喜欢吃的早餐。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
2. A ham actor can turn a good play into a turkey.
自满的演员会把一台好戏演砸了。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
3. Heather sliced the ham for sandwiches.
希瑟把火腿切成片,好做夹肉面包。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
4. The actor is really ham it up to amuse the audience.
这些演员为博观众一粲,表演得实在太过火了。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
5. Ham was quite as earnest as he.
汉姆也和他一样地热诚恳切。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
6. Groups of ham actors took the barns by storm like soldiers.
一伙伙的蹩脚演员就象士兵攻占堡垒一样大闹各仓。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
7. Earls of Wilbraham, quasi wild boar ham.
威尔白莱罕(即“野猪大腿肉”)伯爵家。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
8. She heaped chicken and ham upon her plate.
她把鸡子火腿堆了她一盘子。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
9. Our meat market sells ham and fish that have been smoked.
我们肉市卖熏火腿和熏鱼。
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
10. Do you feel like ham and eggs?
你想来一客火腿蛋吗?
-- 来源 -- 英汉 - 辞典例句
ham




