释义 |
Definition of peregrinate in English: peregrinateverb ˈpɛrɪɡrɪˌneɪtˈpɛrəɡrəˌneɪt humorous, archaic no object, with adverbial Travel or wander from place to place. 〈古或幽默〉旅行,漫游 we peregrinated over Stanmore, and visited the Castles of Bowes and Brougham Example sentencesExamples - The problem - or at least the difference - is simply that it was based not only on the author's experience but on the soap-operatic adventures of her boozing, man-loving, peregrinating mother.
- Of course the Irish also ‘peregrinated’ to their neighbours in England, for this was the first port of call.
- It peregrinates around the limbs of trees.
- Dealers have responded to this urge by peregrinating around the country offering their wares at book fairs.
- The latter part of the performance elucidated the duo's versatility and interpretation ability to its fullest extent, as the duo peregrinated throughout classical Latin American tradition.
Synonyms stroll, amble, saunter, walk, dawdle, potter, ramble, maunder, meander
Derivativesnoun humorous, archaic With the fast-food fad having gained considerable ground, among the local people and peregrinators for some time now, there has been a healthy competition between bondas and bhajis on one side and hot-dogs and hamburgers on the other. Example sentencesExamples - Yiddish is like a wanderer, a peregrinator who goes from inn to inn on a long road, and at each end he has a little drink, - I mean language - and he assimilated drink into his own mind and into his own heart, and he becomes enriched.
- Famous representatives of this genre, such as Herodotus and Marco Polo, as well as a host of minor peregrinators, never actually encountered the phenomenon in question.
OriginLate 16th century (earlier (Middle English) as peregrination): from Latin peregrinat- 'travelled abroad', from the verb peregrinari, from peregrinus 'foreign, travelling'. pilgrim from Middle English: This is one of the earliest words that came into English from French, just after the Norman Conquest in 1066. It goes back to Latin peregrinus, ‘foreign, alien’, the source of peregrinate ‘to wander from place to place’, and of peregrine. The peregrine falcon was called the ‘pilgrim falcon’ because falconers caught individuals fully grown on migration rather than taking them from the nest. The Pilgrim Fathers were the English Puritans who sailed across the Atlantic in the Mayflower and founded the colony of Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1620.
Definition of peregrinate in US English: peregrinateverbˈpɛrəɡrəˌneɪtˈperəɡrəˌnāt humorous, archaic no object, with adverbial Travel or wander around from place to place. 〈古或幽默〉旅行,漫游 we peregrinated over Stanmore, and visited the Castles of Bowes and Brougham Example sentencesExamples - The latter part of the performance elucidated the duo's versatility and interpretation ability to its fullest extent, as the duo peregrinated throughout classical Latin American tradition.
- Of course the Irish also ‘peregrinated’ to their neighbours in England, for this was the first port of call.
- Dealers have responded to this urge by peregrinating around the country offering their wares at book fairs.
- It peregrinates around the limbs of trees.
- The problem - or at least the difference - is simply that it was based not only on the author's experience but on the soap-operatic adventures of her boozing, man-loving, peregrinating mother.
Synonyms stroll, amble, saunter, walk, dawdle, potter, ramble, maunder, meander
OriginLate 16th century (earlier ( Middle English) as peregrination): from Latin peregrinat- ‘traveled abroad’, from the verb peregrinari, from peregrinus ‘foreign, traveling’. |