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.


relish (n.) Look up relish at Dictionary.com
1520s, "taste, flavor," alteration of reles "scent, taste, aftertaste," (c. 1300), from Old French relaisreles, "something remaining, that which is left behind," from relaisser"to leave behind" (see release (v.)). Meaning "enjoyment of the taste or flavor of something" is attested from 1640s. Sense of "condiment, that which imparts flavor" is first recorded 1797. The stuff you put on hot dogs is a sweet green pickle relish.

  1. I like to eat hot dogs with mustard and relish
  2. (relish: 보통 피클 절여서 만든 소스를 뜻한다, 위의 문장에서)
  3. She plays the role with great relish.
  4. He took particular relish in pointing out my error.
  5. (내 잘못을 지적하는 것으로 기쁨을 누렸다. 무슨 뉘앙스더라..?..
  6. 내 잘못을 지적하는 것을 즐겼다, 
  7. 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>  

group, assembly  <a consort of specialists>

 to keep company <consorting with criminals>(보통 나쁜 사람들과)

<the illustrations consort admirably with the text — >

  1. <at college she began consorting with drug users, eventually becoming an addict herself> 어울리다.(나쁜 사람들과
  2. <the restaurant's sophisticated menu consorts seamlessly with its sleek, modern ambience>
(통치자의) 배우자 - 부군
Maraud(약탈하다) 약탈[습격]하다 ((on, upon))
maraud (v.) Look up maraud at Dictionary.com
1690s, from French marauder (17c.), from Middle French maraud "rascal" (15c.), of unknown origin, perhaps from French dialectal maraud "tomcat," echoic of its cry. A word popularized in several languages during the Thirty Years War (Spanish merodear, German marodirenmarodieren "to maraud,"marodebruder "straggler, deserter") by punning association with Count Mérode, imperialist general. Related: Maraudedmarauding.


  to roam about and raid in search of plunder
  1. <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: Smoulderedsmolderingly. 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


 (불만 등이 속으로) 들끓다[가득 차다]


  1. The remains of the campfire smoldered.
  2. Her eyes smoldered with anger.
  3. Anger smoldered in my heart.