adj. 宽的,辽阔的;显著的;大概的
n. 宽阔部分
adv. 宽阔地
n. (Broad)人名;(英、德)布罗德
英 [brɔːd] 美 [brɔd]
权威例句
- The hills rise green and sheer above the broad river.
这些小山碧绿陡峭,矗立在这条宽阔的河流之上。
来自柯林斯例句 - It rapidly became apparent that rock'n'roll was a very broad church indeed.
摇滚乐实际无所不包,这一点很快就显而易见了。
来自柯林斯例句 - A girl was attacked on a train in broad daylight.
光天化日之下,一个女孩在火车上遭到了袭击。
来自柯林斯例句 - The fat, broad tyres had a good depth of tread.
这种宽大的轮胎有很深的胎面花纹。
来自柯林斯例句 - He was following a broad trail through the trees.
他沿着林间的一条阔路行进。
来自柯林斯例句
中文词源
broad 宽的
词源不详。可能来自break, 分开。比较wide, 宽,来自PIE *wi, 分开,原义见widow, 寡妇。
英文词源
broad
**broad: **[OE] Broad’s close relatives are widespread in the Germanic languages (German breit, for example, Dutch breed, and Swedish bred), pointing to a prehistoric Germanic ancestor *braithaz, but no trace of the word is found in any non-Germanic Indo-European language. The original derived noun was brede, which was superseded in the 16th century by breadth. The 20th-century American slang noun use ‘woman’ may come from an obsolete American compound broadwife, short for abroadwife, meaning ‘woman away from her husband’; this was a term applied to female slaves in relation to their new ‘masters’.
=> breadth
broad (adj.)
Old English brad "broad, flat, open, extended," from Proto-Germanic *braithaz (cognates: Old Frisian bred, Old Norse breiðr, Dutch breed, German breit, Gothic brouþs), which is of unknown origin. Not found outside Germanic languages. No clear distinction in sense from wide. Related: Broadly. Broad-brim as a style of hat (1680s, broad-brimmed) in 18c.-19c. suggested "Quaker male" from their characteristic attire.
broad (n.)
"woman," slang, 1911, perhaps suggestive of broad (adj.) hips, but it also might trace to American English abroadwife, word for a woman (often a slave) away from her husband. Earliest use of the slang word suggests immorality or coarse, low-class women. Because of this negative association, and the rise of women's athletics, the track and field broad jump was changed to the long jump c. 1967.