n. 钢笔;作家;围栏
vt. 写;关入栏中
n. (Pen)人名;(法)庞;(俄、塞、英、意)佩恩;(柬)宾
英 [pen]美 [pɛn]
权威例句
- He won a head-to-head battle with NF leader Jean-Marie Le Pen.
他在和国民阵线领袖让-马里·勒庞的正面交锋中获得了胜利。
来自柯林斯例句 - This cuttlefish has a horny internal shell like a pen.
这只乌贼有一个笔状的角质内壳。
来自柯林斯例句 - Use different colours of felt pen on your sketch to avoid confusion.
用不同颜色的毡头笔画草图,以免搞混。
来自柯林斯例句 - Draw the basic outlines in black felt-tip pen (see fig. 4).
用黑色毡头笔画出基本轮廓(见图4)。
来自柯林斯例句 - He sat behind a desk laboriously writing with an Army issue pen.
他坐在书桌后吃力地写着,用的是一支部队发的钢笔。
来自柯林斯例句
中文词源
pen 钢笔,笔尖
来自拉丁语penna,羽毛,翎,来自PIEpetna,展开,翅膀,来自pet,展开,词源同feather,compete.原指鸟翎制成的笔,后词义通用化。拼写比较pan,patella.
pen 围栏,畜栏
来自古英语penne,围栏,畜栏,来自pinn,插销,栓子,楔子,词源同pin.
英语词源
pen: English has three words pen. The oldest, ‘enclosure’ [OE], is something of a mystery term. It has no known relatives in the other European languages, and even in English it is not unequivocally found in its current sense until the 14th century. Pent [16], as in ‘pent up’, originated in the past participle of the verb pen. The earliest writing implements known as ‘pens’ were of course made from feathers, and so it is not surprising that the word pen [13] comes from a word that meant ‘feather’.
This was Latin penna, source also of English pennon [14] and a distant relative of English feather. It entered English via Old French penne. Pen ‘female swan’ [16] is of unknown origin.
slang, "prison," 1884, shortening of penitentiary; earlier use (1845) probably is a figurative extension of pen (n.2).
"writing implement," late 13c., from Old French pene "quill pen; feather" (12c.) and directly from Latin penna "a feather, plume," in plural "a wing," in Late Latin, "a pen for writing," from Old Latin petna, pesna, from PIE *pet-na-, suffixed form of root *pet- "to rush; to fly" (see petition (n.)).
Latin penna and pinna "a feather, plume;" in plural "a wing;" also "a pinnacle; battlement" (see pin (n.)) are treated as identical in Watkins, etc., but regarded as separate (but confused) Latin words by Tucker and others, who derive pinna from PIE *spei- "sharp point" (see spike (n.1)) and see the "feather/wing" sense as secondary.
In later French, this word means only "long feather of a bird," while the equivalent of English plume is used for "writing implement," the senses of the two words thus are reversed from the situation in English. Pen-and-ink (adj.) is attested from 1670s. Pen name is recorded from mid-19c.
"to enclose in a pen," c. 1200, from Old English *pennian, from the source of pen (n.2). Related: Penned; penning.
"enclosure for animals," Old English penn, penne, "enclosure, pen, fold," of uncertain origin, perhaps related to Old English pinn "pin, peg" (see pin (n.)) on notion of a bolted gate or else "structure made of pointed stakes."
late 15c., from pen (n.). Related: Penned; penning.