kitchen

英['kɪtʃɪn;-tʃ(ə)n] 美['kɪtʃɪn]
  • n. 厨房;炊具;炊事人员
  • n. (Kitchen)人名;(英)基钦

词态变化


复数: kitchens;

助记提示


1. cook => kitchen.
2. cook => kiln.

中文词源


kitchen 厨房

来自古英语cycene,来自Proto-Germanic*kukino,来自PIE*kekw,烧,煮,词源同cook,kiln.插入字母t,比较bate,batch.

英文词源


kitchen
kitchen: [OE] The Latin word for ‘kitchen’ was coquīna, a derivative of the verb coquere ‘cook’ (ultimate source of English cook, culinary, kiln, precocious, etc). It had a colloquial variant, *cocīna, which spread far and wide throughout the Roman empire. In French it became cuisine (borrowed by English in the 18th century), while prehistoric West Germanic took it over as *kocina. This has subsequently become German küche, Dutch keuken, and English kitchen – etymologically, a room where one ‘cooks’.
=> apricot, cook, culinary, kiln, precocious
kitchen (n.)
c. 1200, from Old English cycene, from Proto-Germanic *kokina (cognates: Middle Dutch cökene, Old High German chuhhina, German Küche, Danish kjøkken), probably borrowed from Vulgar Latin *cocina (source also of French cuisine, Spanish cocina), variant of Latin coquina "kitchen," from fem. of coquinus "of cooks," from coquus "cook," from coquere "to cook" (see cook (n.)).

The Old English word might be directly from Vulgar Latin. Kitchen cabinet "informal but powerful set of advisors" is American English slang, 1832, originally in reference to administration of President Andrew Jackson. Kitchen midden (1863) in archaeology translates Danish kjøkken mødding. Surname Kitchener ("one in charge of a monastic kitchen") is from early 14c. Old English also had cycenðenung "service in the kitchen."

双语例句


1. The study links the main living area to the kitchen.
书房把主要的生活区与厨房连在一起。

来自柯林斯例句

2. They ate, as they usually did, in the kitchen.
像平常一样,他们是在厨房吃的饭。

来自柯林斯例句

3. There was a sound of loud voices from the kitchen.
厨房传来一阵喧闹声。

来自柯林斯例句

4. Except for the remarkably tidy kitchen, the place was a mess.
除了厨房特别干净外,这地方一片狼藉。

来自柯林斯例句

5. A busy night in the restaurant can be frantic in the kitchen.
餐馆晚上生意好,厨房里可能会忙成一片。

来自柯林斯例句