stutter
stutter 英 [ˈstʌtə(r)] 美 [ˈstʌtɚ]
vi. 结结巴巴地说话 n. 口吃,结巴 vt. 结结巴巴地说出
进行时:stuttering 过去式:stuttered 过去分词:stuttered 第三人称单数:stutters 名词复数:stutters
- If you've ever heard a young child stammer and trip over his words, you know what it means to stutter.
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- vi. 结结巴巴地说话
- n. 口吃,结巴
- vt. 结结巴巴地说出
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1. The little girl speaks with a little stutter.
那小女孩说话有点口吃。
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2. Second, he communicated better with animals than with people, a skill he says is common to all people who stutter.
第二,对他来说,动物比人要更好交流。 他说,与动物交流是所有口吃的人都具备的本领。
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3. However, we should not blame those who cannot speak well because of a physical defect such as a natural lisp, stutter or dyslexia.
不过,因身体缺陷如天生口齿不清、结巴、诵读困难等而不能讲好英语者,我们不应当责怪。
- stutter (v.) 1560s, frequentative form of stutt "to stutter," from Middle English stutten "to stutter, stammer" (late 14c.), cognate with Middle Low German stoten "to knock, strike against, collide," from Proto-Germanic *staut- "push, thrust" (source also of Old Saxon stotan, Old High German stozan, Gothic stautan "to push, thrust;" German stutzen "to cut short, curtail; to stop short, hesitate," Dutch stuiten "to stop, check, arrest, stem."), from PIE *(s)teu- (1) "to hit, beat, knock against" (see steep (adj.)). The noun is attested from 1854. Related: Stuttered; stuttering; stutterer.
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