toboggan
toboggan 英 [tə'bɒg(ə)n] 美 [tə'bɑɡən]
n. 平底雪橇 vi. 急剧下降;乘橇滑下(过去式tobogganed,过去分词tobogganed,现在分词tobogganing,第三人称单数toboggans)
进行时:tobogganing 过去式:tobogganed 过去分词:tobogganed 第三人称单数:toboggans 名词复数:toboggans
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- n. 平底雪橇
- vi. 急剧下降;乘橇滑下(过去式tobogganed,过去分词tobogganed,现在分词tobogganing,第三人称单数toboggans)
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1. On land, they waddle and toboggan across the ice—sliding on their bellies , and propelling themselves with their flippers.
在陆地,它们摇摆而行和像平底雪橇越过冰面变化在它们的腹部,推进它们自己靠鳍状肢。
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2. And the image of a man being slurped on a moving toboggan by a pesky dog is too cartoonishly good to be true - unless the reader realizes how much universal Lab behavior is immortalized here.
另外,一辆下滑的雪橇载着一只正在舔舐主人的缠人的狗,这情景也因为过于漫画而不像是真的——除非读者能够认识到这里所纪念的是多么常见的拉布拉多行为。
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3. ZioF. T., the patron saint of giggling, naughty children who toboggan downstaircases, throw bread balls at restaurants and even put toddler cousins inlarge salad bowls and spin them across floors.
叔叔是欢笑的守护神,是捣蛋的孩子,站在雪橇上滑下楼梯,在餐馆里扔面包球,还曾把蹒跚学步的标的塞进大沙拉碗里,放地上转动着。
- toboggan (n.) "long, flat-bottomed sled," 1829, from Canadian French tabagane, from an Algonquian language, such as Maleseet /thapaken/. The verb is recorded from 1846. As American English colloquial for a type of long woolen cap, it is recorded from 1929 (earlier toboggan cap, 1928), presumably because one wore such a cap while tobogganing.
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