loo

        英 [lu?] 美[lu]
        • n. 廁所,洗手間;賭金;盧牌戲(一種紙牌賭博)
        • vt. 使罰賭金
        • n. (Loo)人名;(德、法)洛

        低頻詞擴展詞匯

        詞態變化


        復數:?loos;

        中文詞源


        loo 廁所

        俚語詞,可能來自Waterloo,抽水馬桶品牌,或直接來自擬聲詞,抽水馬桶沖水聲。

        英文詞源


        loo
        loo: [20] Loo presents one of the more celebrated puzzles of English etymology. Not the least of its problematical points is that there is no reliable evidence of its existence before the 1920s, whereas most of its suggested sources have a more dated air than that. Amongst them, the most widely touted is of course gardy loo!, a shout of warning (based on French gardez l’eau ‘beware of the water’) supposedly used when emptying chamber pots from upper-storey windows in the days before modern plumbing; but that is chronologically most unlikely.

        Other possibilities are that it is short for Waterloo, which was a trade name for cast-iron lavatory cisterns in the early part of the 20th century (‘O yes, mon loup. How much cost? Waterloo. Watercloset’, James Joyce, Ulysses 1922), and that it comes from louvre, from the use of slatted screens for a makeshift lavatory. But perhaps the likeliest explanation is that it derives from French lieux d’aisances, literally ‘places of ease’, hence ‘lavatory’ (perhaps picked up by British servicemen in France during World War I).

        loo (n.1)
        "lavatory," 1940, but perhaps 1922, probably from French lieux d'aisances, "lavatory," literally "place of ease," picked up by British servicemen in France during World War I. Or possibly a pun on Waterloo, based on water closet.
        loo (n.2)
        type of card game, 1670s, short for lanterloo (1660s), from French lanturelu, originally (1620s) the refrain of a popular comic song; according to French sources the refrain expresses a mocking refusal or an evasive answer and was formed on the older word for a type of song chorus, turelure; apparently a jingling reduplication of loure "bagpipe" (perhaps from Latin lura "bag, purse").
        From its primary signification -- a kind of bagpipe inflated from the mouth -- the word 'loure' came to mean an old dance, in slower rhythm than the gigue, generally in 6-4 time. As this was danced to the nasal tones of the 'loure,' the term 'loure' was gradually applied to any passage meant to be played in the style of the old bagpipe airs. ["Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians," London, 1906]
        The refrain sometimes is met in English as turra-lurra.

        雙語例句


        1. The shop stocks everything from cigarettes to recycled loo paper.
        商店貨品齊全,從香煙到再生廁紙應有盡有。

        來自柯林斯例句

        2. I asked if I could go to the loo.
        我問是否可以上廁所。

        來自柯林斯例句

        3. She's gone to the loo.
        她去盥洗室了。

        來自《權威詞典》

        4. The kernel function model selected by LOO estimation can approach the best value satisfactorily.
        應用LOO估算 選擇的核函數模型能夠較好地退近最佳值.

        來自互聯網

        5. In British English the toilet in private houses is called the lavatory, toilet, WC ( dated ), or loo ( informal )
        在英式英語中,私人住宅中的廁所稱為thelavatory, toilet, WC ( 已陳舊 ) 或loo ( 用于口語 ).

        來自互聯網

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