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词汇 merde
释义

Definition of merde in English:

merde

exclamation mɛːdmɛʀdmerd
  • Used as a mild, generally humorous substitute for ‘shit’

    Merde! What had she done!

    呸,她做了些什么呀!

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And they may be blown to merde, bloodied and scattered downslope!
    • It hardly captures the mood of the whole thing but tough merde.
    • Sure, it's as ugly as merde, but it's bigger than their Boeings.
    • The husky female voice on the other end explained in mangled Franglish that she would like to - merde!
    • The comments, overheard and gleefully printed in the Liberation newspaper, have landed the French president deep in the merde on the eve of this week's crucial G8 summit in Scotland.
    • Sometimes I fear we are on the cusp of another age du merde again - a catastrophic meltdown in taste not seen since the 70s.
    • Decay, dirt, and untidiness - generally, merde - is actually a rather common theme in modern art.
    • It's just too bad these guys don't come through town as often as the manufactured merde that passes for punk these days.
    • We're very good at it and the French are, quite frankly, merde!
    • Standing before an expectant audience of French speakers with nothing but a few pitiful phrases and a lot of arm-waving to offer, the whole idea now appears vraiment merde.
    • But, as he must have pronounced it, the word ‘mud’ had overtones of another of Dickens's favourite words, merde.
    • After all, the French have been throwing merde in the direction of anyone trying to call fizzy wine ‘champagne’ for years.
    • Take the omnipresent merde in the streets, for example.
    • The only way the French like to see us is with egg on our faces and our boots deep in the merde.
    • In some instances, employees may seek to demonstrate their sophistication by employing such expressions as merde or putain.
    • They emerge from the mud of modern history - the merde of the twentieth century - but it is not possible to say with what viewpoint.

Origin

French, from Latin merda 'excrement, dung'.

Definition of merde in US English:

merde

exclamationmerd
  • A French word for “shit,” used as a mild, generally humorous exclamation in English.

    Merde! What had she done!

    呸,她做了些什么呀!

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And they may be blown to merde, bloodied and scattered downslope!
    • It hardly captures the mood of the whole thing but tough merde.
    • They emerge from the mud of modern history - the merde of the twentieth century - but it is not possible to say with what viewpoint.
    • After all, the French have been throwing merde in the direction of anyone trying to call fizzy wine ‘champagne’ for years.
    • The husky female voice on the other end explained in mangled Franglish that she would like to - merde!
    • The comments, overheard and gleefully printed in the Liberation newspaper, have landed the French president deep in the merde on the eve of this week's crucial G8 summit in Scotland.
    • Decay, dirt, and untidiness - generally, merde - is actually a rather common theme in modern art.
    • Take the omnipresent merde in the streets, for example.
    • It's just too bad these guys don't come through town as often as the manufactured merde that passes for punk these days.
    • Standing before an expectant audience of French speakers with nothing but a few pitiful phrases and a lot of arm-waving to offer, the whole idea now appears vraiment merde.
    • We're very good at it and the French are, quite frankly, merde!
    • The only way the French like to see us is with egg on our faces and our boots deep in the merde.
    • In some instances, employees may seek to demonstrate their sophistication by employing such expressions as merde or putain.
    • But, as he must have pronounced it, the word ‘mud’ had overtones of another of Dickens's favourite words, merde.
    • Sometimes I fear we are on the cusp of another age du merde again - a catastrophic meltdown in taste not seen since the 70s.
    • Sure, it's as ugly as merde, but it's bigger than their Boeings.

Origin

French, from Latin merda ‘excrement, dung’.

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