Vocabulary
relish, consort, maraud, smolder
Korean 마스크맨
2015. 6. 23. 05:14
relish
"give flavor to" (implied in relished), from relish (n.). The transferred sense of "to enjoy, take pleasure in" is from 1590s. Related: Relishing.

- I like to eat hot dogs with mustard and relish.
- (relish: 보통 피클 절여서 만든 소스를 뜻한다, 위의 문장에서)
- She plays the role with great relish.
- He took particular relish in pointing out my error.
- (내 잘못을 지적하는 것으로 기쁨을 누렸다. 무슨 뉘앙스더라..?..
- 내 잘못을 지적하는 것을 즐겼다,
- 내 잘못을 지적한는 데 재미들렸었다.>
consort
early 15c., "partner," from Middle French consort "colleague, partner, wife" (14c., Old French consorte), from Latin consortem (nominative consors) "partner, comrade; wife, brother, sister," noun use of adjective meaning "having the same lot, of the same fortune," from com- "with" (see com-) + sors "a share, lot" (see sort (n.)). Sense of "husband or wife" ("partner in marriage") is 1630s in English.
<he ruled in consort with his father>
to keep company <consorting with criminals>(보통 나쁜 사람들과)
<the illustrations consort admirably with the text — >
- <at college she began consorting with drug users, eventually becoming an addict herself> 어울리다.(나쁜 사람들과
- <the restaurant's sophisticated menu consorts seamlessly with its sleek, modern ambience>

- <just for kicks, bored teenagers marauded neighborhood houses while their owners were away>
Smolder
c. 1300 (implied in smoldering), "to smother, suffocate," related to Middle Dutch smolen, Low German smelen, Flemish smoel "hot," from Proto-Germanic *smel-, *smul-. The intransitive meaning "burn and smoke without flame" is first recorded 1520s, fell from use 17c. (though smolderingpersisted in poetry) and was revived 19c. Figurative sense "exist in a suppressed state; burn inwardly" is from 1810. Related: Smouldered; smolderingly. Middle English also had a noun smolder meaning "smoky vapor, a stifling smoke."
: to burn slowly without flames but usually with smoke
(불이 불꽃은 없이 서서히) 타다
: to feel a strong emotion but keep it hidden
: to be felt strongly by someone without being directly shown or expressed
- The remains of the campfire smoldered.
- Her eyes smoldered with anger.
- Anger smoldered in my heart.