「square」

adj. 平方的;正方形的;直角的;正直的
vt. 使成方形;与…一致
vi. 一致;成方形
n. 平方;广场;正方形
adv. 成直角地

英 [skweə]美 [skwɛr]

权威例句

  1. I stopped at the square and got out to stretch my legs.
    我在广场处停下来,下车活动活动腿脚。
    来自柯林斯例句
  2. The Philippines has just 6,000 square kilometres of forest left.
    菲律宾只剩下6,000平方公里的森林了。
    来自柯林斯例句
  3. Marilyn made her last public appearance at Madison Square Garden.
    玛丽莲最后一次公开亮相是在麦迪逊广场花园。
    来自柯林斯例句
  4. Take the time in seconds, square it, and multiply by 5.12.
    记下用了多少秒时间,将其平方,再乘以5.12。
    来自柯林斯例句
  5. Exmoor National Park stretches over 265 square miles of moor.
    埃克斯穆尔高地国家公园位于高原贫瘠之地,占地265平方英里。
    来自柯林斯例句

英语词源

square

square: [13] Etymologically a square is a ‘four’- sided figure. The word comes via Old French esquare or esqire (squire was the Middle English form of square) from Vulgar Latin *exquadra, a derivative of *exquadrāre ‘square’. This was a compound verb formed from the intensive prefix ex- and Latin quadrāre ‘square’, a derivative of the Latin stem quat-, quad- ‘four’, from which English gets quadrantquarantinequarter, etc, as well as cadre, and, via Italian, squad and squadron. The use of the adjective square for ‘stuffy, old-fashioned’ originated in jazz circles in the USA in the 1940s.
=> cadrequadrantquartersquadron

square (n.)

mid-13c., "tool for measuring right angles, carpenter's square," from Old French esquire "a square, squareness," from Vulgar Latin *exquadra, back-formation from *exquadrare "to square," from Latin ex- "out" (see ex-) + quadrare "make square, set in order, complete," from quadrus "a square" (see quadrant).

Meaning "square shape or area" is recorded by late 14c. (Old English used feower-scyte). Geometric sense "four-sided rectilinear figure" is from 1550s; mathematical sense of "a number multiplied by itself" is first recorded 1550s. Sense of "open space in a town or park" is from 1680s; that of "area bounded by four streets in a city" is from c. 1700. As short for square meal, from 1882. Square one "the very beginning" (often what one must go back to) is from 1960, probably a figure from board games.

square (adj.)

early 14c., "containing four equal sides and right angles," from square (n.), or from Old French esquarre, past participle of esquarrer. Meaning "honest, fair," is first attested 1560s; that of "straight, direct" is from 1804. Of meals, from 1868.

Sense of "old-fashioned" is 1944, U.S. jazz slang, said to be from shape of a conductor's hand gestures in a regular four-beat rhythm. Square-toes meant nearly the same thing late 18c.: "precise, formal, old-fashioned person," from the style of men's shoes worn early 18c. and then fallen from fashion. Squaresville is attested from 1956. Square dance attested by 1831; originally one in which the couples faced inward from four sides; later of country dances generally.

[T]he old square dance is an abortive attempt at conversation while engaged in walking certain mathematical figures over a limited area. [March 1868]

square (v.)

late 14c. of stones, from Old French esquarrer, escarrer "to cut square," from Vulgar Latin *exquadrare (see square (adj.)). Meaning "regulate according to standard" is from 1530s; sense of "to accord with" is from 1590s. With reference to accounts from 1815. In 15c.-17c. the verb also could mean "to deviate, vary, digress, fall out of order." Related: Squared; squaring.

square (adv.)

1570s, "fairly, honestly," from square (adj.). From 1630s as "directly, in line." Sense of "completely" is American-English, colloquial, by 1862.

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