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单词 yak
释义

yak1

nounPlural yaks jakjæk
  • A large domesticated wild ox with shaggy hair, humped shoulders, and large horns, used in Tibet as a pack animal and for its milk, meat, and hide.

    牦牛

    Genus Bos, family Bovidae; the domesticated B. grunniens, descended from the wild B. mutus, which is still found on rare occasions at high altitude

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Tinle, the man's father and a proud old chief, refuses to grant another young herder leadership of the annual yak caravan across the mountains to exchange salt for grain.
    • What an experience it was; I was smellier than a yak and dirtier than the local kids, worried that MAD wouldn't allow me home.
    • Now black yaks and white sheep graze peacefully on dry grassland, tended by Tibetan herdsmen clad in bright orange.
    • A woman in angular swaths of black was milking one of the yaks.
    • Regular oxygen infusions from my canister prevent me from fainting, but a fellow passenger is not so lucky when we stop for a yak photo-op.
    • After all, this ticket could say that I was taking a mud bath with a yak in the Gobi desert for all we know, right?
    • It was only after the Mongols tamed horses, yaks and camels that they took to a nomadic herding lifestyle.
    • Milk products were common in the form of sour cream and butter from cows and yaks.
    • In an entirely different style, Ma Yuan's The Top of the World Mountains is a stunning realist landscape of Tibet with a herd of yaks crossing a desert plateau.
    • We parallel the river, following an old yak trail.
    • If we break down we have to leave everything and make our own way to the finishing line - or home either on foot or by catching a ride on the next yak,’ said Neil.
    • We stopped in a yak meadow near the falls, at 10,000 feet.
    • Shaggy yaks stomp around threshing circles, ears of barley are thrashed with sticks and winnowed by singing villagers in twos and threes.
    • He once chased a yak to the top of the mountain to take its picture.
    • Here the goods are either loaded on the backs of yaks or on mule caravans to send into Tibet or to Nepal and Bhutan to be forwarded to Tibet.
    • Now watch me eat a whole yak dipped in barbecue sauce.
    • Butchers from Tibet come especially to slaughter yaks whose meat is then dried and smoked.
    • We all have a need to commune with our gods, whether they be male or female, sexual or chaste, whether they reside in the devil's asshole or in the soul of a yak.
    • The route has been used for centuries by Tibetan traders who would bring down yaks, salt and dried sheep meat from Tibet and return with goods from India, such as rice, corn and millet.
    • They look after the animals - sheep, yaks, goats and cows.
    • Outside the city, loggers have denuded the mountain slopes of their thick forests, and millions of sheep, goats, and yaks have left lush pastures rutted and barren.
    • Their yaks share these high, sunny pastures with blue sheep and plump marmots.
    • Williams - disappointed and frustrated - was inspired to let loose a profanity he speaks about as often as he dines on barbecued yak.
    • Located at the base of the snowcapped Ala-Too Mountains, the rich farm valley provides plenty of food for sheep, mountain goats and yaks.
    • Shaggy yaks tread the icy pastures, their huge bodies belying their importance in mountain life.
    • However, few families own more than a small number of cows, water buffalo, or yaks because the mountainous topography does not provide grazing land for large animals.
    • Your dad's impression of a yak may be ‘legendary’ in your family, but it really means nothing, in the same way that David Beckham or John Peel mean very little in the legendary stakes.
    • Altitude sickness, parasites, frostbite and being gored by a yak are some of the reasons most people prefer to travel in their armchairs.
    • During warmer periods the land turned into meadows and steppes, ideal grazing grounds for woolly mammoths, rhinoceroses, bison, horses, elk, and yaks.
    • For all its dark intensity, What Animal is a measured, almost quiet collection; if we come to the book as bewildered onlookers, we leave understanding the yak's sorrow is much like our own.
    • A team of Royal Navy marines joined the rescue effort before Conan endured a 17-hour journey back to base camp on the back of a yak.
    • In the valleys there are orchards, and up on the high pastures, where not even barley will grow, people husband yaks, cows or sheep.
    • We found a pastoral scene of verdant meadows and a scattered population of seminomadic Kyrgyz - Islamic subsistence farmers who come here in summer, tending yaks and cows.
    • He'd spent years traveling the Wakhan as a yak trader.
    • The monks' chanting is heard as a deep growling sound, which is the result of producing three octaves simultaneously (not unlike a female yak, we are led to believe).
    • I love that I don't have to make cheese from the juice of a yak, or headache pills from bark, or butter from the hooves of a caribou.
    • We walked through a yak herder's camp where great black beasts snorted columns of white steam.
    • The shrines in their homes are spattered with cooking fat and they recite a mantra (holy phrase) in the same breath as they yell at a yak.
    • Babu checks us into the Panorama Lodge, where many Everest mountaineers stay, in part because a flat stretch of land behind the lodge is a perfect staging ground for the yak trains that supply Base Camp.
    • About a third of the population are herdsmen, and many families raise one or two yak for themselves.
    • Donkeys, mules, oxen, and water buffalo carry loads, as do the offspring of the temperamental yaks, which are kept only to crossbreed with cattle.
    • It is the home of the yak, which has to be the coolest animal around.
    • Because they bulk up faster and on less feed than cattle, yaks are raised without growth hormones or steroids.

Origin

Late 18th century: from Tibetan gyag.

Rhymes

aback, alack, attack, back, black, brack, clack, claque, crack, Dirac, drack, flack, flak, hack, jack, Kazakh, knack, lack, lakh, mac, mach, Nagorno-Karabakh, pack, pitchblack, plaque, quack, rack, sac, sack, shack, shellac, slack, smack, snack, stack, tach, tack, thwack, track, vac, wack, whack, wrack, Zack

yak2

(also yack)
nounPlural yaksjakjæk
mass nouninformal
  • Trivial or unduly prolonged conversation.

    喋喋不休,连篇废话

    Example sentencesExamples
    • At no point do their jobs, careers or family obligations (do they have parents or were they virgin births?) impinge on their endless yackety-yak about relationships.
    • The need to fill 24-hour cycles creates the yak factor.
    • She'd been sitting quietly up until this point, but decided to have a great old yak in protest while Lee does this really appalling campy dance.
    • Certainly the bombast of cable's top yak show host, Bill O'Reilly, seems anything but cool.
    • He was quick to raise his voice through a cordless microphone to silence the gathering engaged in a yak.
    • There'll be a hell mood if you insist on grizzling about disgraceful this and outrageous that, yakkity yak.
    • Likewise, Laurie Brereton, Latham's numbers man, occasionally walked the floor to have a yak to colleagues.
    • He doesn't even write literature - he writes… yak!
verbyakking, yakked, yaksjakjæk
[no object]informal
  • Talk at length about trivial or boring subjects.

    喋喋不休,废话连篇

    she wondered what he was yakking about
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This is a sweet fella, wouldn't hurt a soul, but he yaks, and yaks, and yaks.
    • Why the HELL do women ALWAYS yak about jewellery and clothes.
    • If you think the city's sidewalks are crowded with folks yakking on cell phones, look at the streets around the NYU campus near Washington Square.
    • All too often, diners get to the table and yack away and make the waitress come back several times.
    • There were even surprise guest appearances by long lost aunts and uncles, teleported in from a time called Way Back, and I'm confident Mum will be yakking embarrassingly about this for months to come.
    • I'm outta here early this week so's I can make the haj to Kalamazoo and yak about Making Senses Out of Scripture.
    • You and your friend would proceed to seat on either side of the inconsiderate twit and yak to each other as if he/she is a table and not a person.
    • We'd usually cycle in gangs, groups of friends yakking away as we made our way to our respective parts of the village, peeling off from the pack as we reached our roads.
    • They all knew each other, and were yakking away about various reviews of their books in the broadsheet newspapers and their appearances at political ideas festivals, etc.
    • And he's sitting there in his car or his home, where Laci disappeared, yack yack yacking on the phone.
    • We hit it off straight away and before long we were yakking away about guitars, amps, and the fine art of making music on a Macintosh.
    • I sighed with relief and we just continued talking, till he told me he would call me on his house phone and we continued yakking for 3 hours.
    • It took us 15 minutes (10 of which were spent yakking about other things) and he'll likely bill me a minimum of $60.
    • But then again what's so attractive about noisy girls who keep yakking?
    • Maybe it's down to people just not paying attention to what they're doing while they're yakking on their mobile phones, arguing with their kids, spouses, significant other, or (saddest of all) the Radio as they drive.
    • I was mainly doing vocals and they'd tell me what they had been doing all day, mainly we'd get together and yak away, mix all the material up.
    • Csif people would often go over the lab and sit on the couch drinking coffee and just yak about film stuff.
    • And now I'm knackered and going to lie down on the bed, squish my new do with my headset and yak to Walker until it's time for work.
    • So it was easier to let the old blowhard yak away and just nod occasionally.
    Synonyms
    prattle, blather, blether, blither, babble (on), gabble, prate, drivel, rattle on/away, ramble, maunder, go on, run on, talk at length, talk incessantly, talk a lot, chatter, yap, gossip
    British talk nineteen to the dozen
    Scottish &amp Irish slabber on
    informal jabber, blabber, yatter, jaw, gab, gas, chit-chat, yackety-yak
    British informal rabbit, witter, waffle, natter, chunter, talk the hind legs off a donkey
    North American informal run off at the mouth
    Australian/New Zealand informal mag
    archaic twaddle, twattle, claver, clack

Origin

1950s: imitative.

yak1

nounjækyak
  • A large domesticated wild ox with shaggy hair, humped shoulders, and large horns, used in Tibet as a pack animal and for its milk, meat, and hide.

    牦牛

    Genus Bos, family Bovidae; the domesticated B. grunniens, descended from the wild B. mutus, which rarely is still found at high altitude

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Milk products were common in the form of sour cream and butter from cows and yaks.
    • Because they bulk up faster and on less feed than cattle, yaks are raised without growth hormones or steroids.
    • For all its dark intensity, What Animal is a measured, almost quiet collection; if we come to the book as bewildered onlookers, we leave understanding the yak's sorrow is much like our own.
    • We all have a need to commune with our gods, whether they be male or female, sexual or chaste, whether they reside in the devil's asshole or in the soul of a yak.
    • Butchers from Tibet come especially to slaughter yaks whose meat is then dried and smoked.
    • He once chased a yak to the top of the mountain to take its picture.
    • In the valleys there are orchards, and up on the high pastures, where not even barley will grow, people husband yaks, cows or sheep.
    • A team of Royal Navy marines joined the rescue effort before Conan endured a 17-hour journey back to base camp on the back of a yak.
    • It is the home of the yak, which has to be the coolest animal around.
    • Your dad's impression of a yak may be ‘legendary’ in your family, but it really means nothing, in the same way that David Beckham or John Peel mean very little in the legendary stakes.
    • Here the goods are either loaded on the backs of yaks or on mule caravans to send into Tibet or to Nepal and Bhutan to be forwarded to Tibet.
    • It was only after the Mongols tamed horses, yaks and camels that they took to a nomadic herding lifestyle.
    • In an entirely different style, Ma Yuan's The Top of the World Mountains is a stunning realist landscape of Tibet with a herd of yaks crossing a desert plateau.
    • If we break down we have to leave everything and make our own way to the finishing line - or home either on foot or by catching a ride on the next yak,’ said Neil.
    • Babu checks us into the Panorama Lodge, where many Everest mountaineers stay, in part because a flat stretch of land behind the lodge is a perfect staging ground for the yak trains that supply Base Camp.
    • Now watch me eat a whole yak dipped in barbecue sauce.
    • The route has been used for centuries by Tibetan traders who would bring down yaks, salt and dried sheep meat from Tibet and return with goods from India, such as rice, corn and millet.
    • Altitude sickness, parasites, frostbite and being gored by a yak are some of the reasons most people prefer to travel in their armchairs.
    • He'd spent years traveling the Wakhan as a yak trader.
    • We found a pastoral scene of verdant meadows and a scattered population of seminomadic Kyrgyz - Islamic subsistence farmers who come here in summer, tending yaks and cows.
    • They look after the animals - sheep, yaks, goats and cows.
    • A woman in angular swaths of black was milking one of the yaks.
    • However, few families own more than a small number of cows, water buffalo, or yaks because the mountainous topography does not provide grazing land for large animals.
    • Shaggy yaks tread the icy pastures, their huge bodies belying their importance in mountain life.
    • Williams - disappointed and frustrated - was inspired to let loose a profanity he speaks about as often as he dines on barbecued yak.
    • Now black yaks and white sheep graze peacefully on dry grassland, tended by Tibetan herdsmen clad in bright orange.
    • Tinle, the man's father and a proud old chief, refuses to grant another young herder leadership of the annual yak caravan across the mountains to exchange salt for grain.
    • Outside the city, loggers have denuded the mountain slopes of their thick forests, and millions of sheep, goats, and yaks have left lush pastures rutted and barren.
    • We parallel the river, following an old yak trail.
    • The monks' chanting is heard as a deep growling sound, which is the result of producing three octaves simultaneously (not unlike a female yak, we are led to believe).
    • Their yaks share these high, sunny pastures with blue sheep and plump marmots.
    • Shaggy yaks stomp around threshing circles, ears of barley are thrashed with sticks and winnowed by singing villagers in twos and threes.
    • We stopped in a yak meadow near the falls, at 10,000 feet.
    • What an experience it was; I was smellier than a yak and dirtier than the local kids, worried that MAD wouldn't allow me home.
    • Located at the base of the snowcapped Ala-Too Mountains, the rich farm valley provides plenty of food for sheep, mountain goats and yaks.
    • Donkeys, mules, oxen, and water buffalo carry loads, as do the offspring of the temperamental yaks, which are kept only to crossbreed with cattle.
    • We walked through a yak herder's camp where great black beasts snorted columns of white steam.
    • Regular oxygen infusions from my canister prevent me from fainting, but a fellow passenger is not so lucky when we stop for a yak photo-op.
    • During warmer periods the land turned into meadows and steppes, ideal grazing grounds for woolly mammoths, rhinoceroses, bison, horses, elk, and yaks.
    • About a third of the population are herdsmen, and many families raise one or two yak for themselves.
    • After all, this ticket could say that I was taking a mud bath with a yak in the Gobi desert for all we know, right?
    • I love that I don't have to make cheese from the juice of a yak, or headache pills from bark, or butter from the hooves of a caribou.
    • The shrines in their homes are spattered with cooking fat and they recite a mantra (holy phrase) in the same breath as they yell at a yak.

Origin

Late 18th century: from Tibetan gyag.

yak2

(also yack)
nounjækyak
informal
  • Trivial or unduly persistent conversation.

    喋喋不休,连篇废话

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He was quick to raise his voice through a cordless microphone to silence the gathering engaged in a yak.
    • Likewise, Laurie Brereton, Latham's numbers man, occasionally walked the floor to have a yak to colleagues.
    • There'll be a hell mood if you insist on grizzling about disgraceful this and outrageous that, yakkity yak.
    • The need to fill 24-hour cycles creates the yak factor.
    • He doesn't even write literature - he writes… yak!
    • Certainly the bombast of cable's top yak show host, Bill O'Reilly, seems anything but cool.
    • She'd been sitting quietly up until this point, but decided to have a great old yak in protest while Lee does this really appalling campy dance.
    • At no point do their jobs, careers or family obligations (do they have parents or were they virgin births?) impinge on their endless yackety-yak about relationships.
verbjækyak
[no object]informal
  • Talk at length about trivial or boring subjects.

    喋喋不休,废话连篇

    she wondered what he was yakking about
    Example sentencesExamples
    • There were even surprise guest appearances by long lost aunts and uncles, teleported in from a time called Way Back, and I'm confident Mum will be yakking embarrassingly about this for months to come.
    • They all knew each other, and were yakking away about various reviews of their books in the broadsheet newspapers and their appearances at political ideas festivals, etc.
    • All too often, diners get to the table and yack away and make the waitress come back several times.
    • I sighed with relief and we just continued talking, till he told me he would call me on his house phone and we continued yakking for 3 hours.
    • This is a sweet fella, wouldn't hurt a soul, but he yaks, and yaks, and yaks.
    • And now I'm knackered and going to lie down on the bed, squish my new do with my headset and yak to Walker until it's time for work.
    • So it was easier to let the old blowhard yak away and just nod occasionally.
    • Why the HELL do women ALWAYS yak about jewellery and clothes.
    • We'd usually cycle in gangs, groups of friends yakking away as we made our way to our respective parts of the village, peeling off from the pack as we reached our roads.
    • I'm outta here early this week so's I can make the haj to Kalamazoo and yak about Making Senses Out of Scripture.
    • Csif people would often go over the lab and sit on the couch drinking coffee and just yak about film stuff.
    • And he's sitting there in his car or his home, where Laci disappeared, yack yack yacking on the phone.
    • We hit it off straight away and before long we were yakking away about guitars, amps, and the fine art of making music on a Macintosh.
    • Maybe it's down to people just not paying attention to what they're doing while they're yakking on their mobile phones, arguing with their kids, spouses, significant other, or (saddest of all) the Radio as they drive.
    • But then again what's so attractive about noisy girls who keep yakking?
    • You and your friend would proceed to seat on either side of the inconsiderate twit and yak to each other as if he/she is a table and not a person.
    • It took us 15 minutes (10 of which were spent yakking about other things) and he'll likely bill me a minimum of $60.
    • If you think the city's sidewalks are crowded with folks yakking on cell phones, look at the streets around the NYU campus near Washington Square.
    • I was mainly doing vocals and they'd tell me what they had been doing all day, mainly we'd get together and yak away, mix all the material up.
    Synonyms
    prattle, blather, blether, blither, babble, babble on, gabble, prate, drivel, rattle away, rattle on, ramble, maunder, go on, run on, talk at length, talk incessantly, talk a lot, chatter, yap, gossip

Origin

1950s: imitative.

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