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词汇 roe
释义

roe1

nounPlural ROEs, Plural roes rəʊroʊ
mass noun
  • 1The mass of eggs contained in the ovaries of a female fish or shellfish, especially when ripe and used as food; the full ovaries themselves.

    鱼卵(尤指用作食物的成熟鱼卵);卵巢

    lumpfish roe is most like caviar
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The fish was poached in seaweed and served warm with a tomato concassé, caper berries and finished off with herring roe and a little wasabi.
    • Increasing in popularity; the most affordable sturgeon roe has a small grain similar to Russian Sevruga.
    • You need smoked cod's roe, which many good fishmongers sell.
    • Thousands of tons of lumpfish are harvested for their roe and urchins for their gonads - both products prized on the Asian market.
    • I tried both the delicate, unsalty gravadlax and a tartare served with the roe and a very lemony asparagus salad.
    • A rice porridge called ciporosayo was prepared by adding salmon roe to boiled grains.
    • Sturgeons have been prized for their roe since ancient times, and markets for caviar have increased rapidly in recent years.
    • These boats stay on the water, processing fish as they're caught and dumping the roe from each fish into basins marked ‘beluga’ ‘osetra’ and ‘sevruga’.
    • Whereas pollock roe could be sold within a relatively short period of time, the rest of the production mainly consisted of finished fillets.
    • The state of California encouraged the fledgling industry in the 1970s when a lucrative market was found for sea urchin roe in Japan.
    1. 1.1 The ripe testes of a male fish, especially when used as food.
      雄鱼生殖腺;(尤指用作食物的)鱼白
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Add the sake to the codfish soft roe and mix to combine.

Origin

Late Middle English: related to Middle Low German, Middle Dutch roge.

Rhymes

aglow, ago, alow, although, apropos, art nouveau, Bamako, Bardot, beau, Beaujolais Nouveau, below, bestow, blow, bo, Boileau, bons mots, Bordeaux, Bow, bravo, bro, cachepot, cheerio, Coe, crow, Defoe, de trop, doe, doh, dos-à-dos, do-si-do, dough, dzo, Flo, floe, flow, foe, foreknow, foreshow, forgo, Foucault, froe, glow, go, good-oh, go-slow, grow, gung-ho, Heathrow, heave-ho, heigh-ho, hello, ho, hoe, ho-ho, jo, Joe, kayo, know, lo, low, maillot, malapropos, Marceau, mho, Miró, mo, Mohs, Monroe, mot, mow, Munro, no, Noh, no-show, oh, oho, outgo, outgrow, owe, Perrault, pho, po, Poe, pro, quid pro quo, reshow, righto, Rouault, row, Rowe, sew, shew, show, sloe, slow, snow, so, soh, sow, status quo, stow, Stowe, strow, tally-ho, though, throw, tic-tac-toe, to-and-fro, toe, touch-and-go, tow, trow, undergo, undersow, voe, whacko, whoa, wo, woe, Xuzhou, yo, yo-ho-ho, Zhengzhou, Zhou

roe2

(also roe deer)
nounPlural ROEs, Plural roes rəʊroʊ
  • A small Eurasian deer which lacks a visible tail and has a reddish summer coat that turns greyish in winter.

    (分布于欧亚大陆的)狍

    Genus Capreolus, family Cervidae: two species, in particular the European roe deer (C. capreolus)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Roe Lee (the old name may have been lea) means fields where roe deer roamed.
    • The roe deer lives in southern Armenia and is readily fed upon by the leopard.
    • The springtime calling of frogs had given way to the chirping of crickets and the distant barks of rutting roe deer.
    • He said the island is inhabited by hundreds of deer and roe deer but I saw none of them all the way.
    • He had seen nothing save roe deer and a few hares out feeding amid the early evening shadows.
    • Close to the thigh bone, archaeologists found a group of butchered Mesolithic animal bones, including aurochs, roe deer and otter.
    • A mixture of alder, cherry, oak and other native species has attracted red squirrels as well as roe deer, hares and kingfishers.
    • The only species occurring in East Lancashire is the roe deer.
    • She reminded Graham of the mother roe deer he sometimes saw hiding in the hedgerow as he cycled along.
    • The reserve is home to not only goats, red deer, and boars but also brown bears, chamois, lynx, roe deer, and wolves, as well as numerous eagles and large vultures called lammergeiers.
    • Mammals such as weasels, foxes, stoats and especially roe deer can wander safely without the risk of being killed by traffic.
    • I was walking through the reserve the other day counting butterflies for the Trust and, lo and behold, I saw this young roe deer.
    • Within an hour of setting off, he had shot a roe deer, skinned and cleaned it.
    • There have been sightings of roe deer in Bolton town centre, water voles on the streets of Wigan and bats in Manchester city centre.
    • Wolf, roe deer and wild boar roam these mountains and in the spring the capercaillie, king of the forest, screams his mating call.
    • Hunters, in organised groups of three to four people, will be allowed to shoot mouflons, wild boars, roes, red deer and fallow deer at Christmas.
    • New tools and weapons were invented to hunt the animals of the forests such as red deer, roe deer, wild boar, and cattle.
    • At the end of the Anglo-Saxon period they were pursuing red deer and roe deer, animals which are all but absent in earlier bone assemblages.
    • They preyed on roe deer, red deer, and wild boar, but were also much loathed and dreaded for their depredations against livestock, especially sheep.
    • The early miniature pinscher was called the reh pinscher, so named because Germans thought the dog resembled the small, nimble, red roe deer that populated their forests.

Origin

Old English rā(ha), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ree and German Reh.

ROE3

abbreviation
  • 1Finance
    Return on equity.

  • 2Rules of engagement (in combat).

roe1

nounroʊ
  • 1The mass of eggs contained in the ovaries of a female fish or shellfish, typically including the ovaries themselves, especially when ripe and used as food.

    鱼卵(尤指用作食物的成熟鱼卵);卵巢

    lumpfish roe is most like caviar
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The fish was poached in seaweed and served warm with a tomato concassé, caper berries and finished off with herring roe and a little wasabi.
    • I tried both the delicate, unsalty gravadlax and a tartare served with the roe and a very lemony asparagus salad.
    • Sturgeons have been prized for their roe since ancient times, and markets for caviar have increased rapidly in recent years.
    • Increasing in popularity; the most affordable sturgeon roe has a small grain similar to Russian Sevruga.
    • The state of California encouraged the fledgling industry in the 1970s when a lucrative market was found for sea urchin roe in Japan.
    • You need smoked cod's roe, which many good fishmongers sell.
    • These boats stay on the water, processing fish as they're caught and dumping the roe from each fish into basins marked ‘beluga’ ‘osetra’ and ‘sevruga’.
    • Whereas pollock roe could be sold within a relatively short period of time, the rest of the production mainly consisted of finished fillets.
    • A rice porridge called ciporosayo was prepared by adding salmon roe to boiled grains.
    • Thousands of tons of lumpfish are harvested for their roe and urchins for their gonads - both products prized on the Asian market.
    1. 1.1 The ripe testes of a male fish, especially when used as food.
      雄鱼生殖腺;(尤指用作食物的)鱼白
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Add the sake to the codfish soft roe and mix to combine.

Origin

Late Middle English: related to Middle Low German, Middle Dutch roge.

roe2

(also roe deer)
nounroʊ
  • A small Eurasian deer which lacks a visible tail and has a reddish summer coat that turns grayish in winter.

    (分布于欧亚大陆的)狍

    Genus Capreolus, family Cervidae: two species, in particular the European roe deer (C. capreolus)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The reserve is home to not only goats, red deer, and boars but also brown bears, chamois, lynx, roe deer, and wolves, as well as numerous eagles and large vultures called lammergeiers.
    • The only species occurring in East Lancashire is the roe deer.
    • The springtime calling of frogs had given way to the chirping of crickets and the distant barks of rutting roe deer.
    • New tools and weapons were invented to hunt the animals of the forests such as red deer, roe deer, wild boar, and cattle.
    • Close to the thigh bone, archaeologists found a group of butchered Mesolithic animal bones, including aurochs, roe deer and otter.
    • The roe deer lives in southern Armenia and is readily fed upon by the leopard.
    • He said the island is inhabited by hundreds of deer and roe deer but I saw none of them all the way.
    • They preyed on roe deer, red deer, and wild boar, but were also much loathed and dreaded for their depredations against livestock, especially sheep.
    • At the end of the Anglo-Saxon period they were pursuing red deer and roe deer, animals which are all but absent in earlier bone assemblages.
    • A mixture of alder, cherry, oak and other native species has attracted red squirrels as well as roe deer, hares and kingfishers.
    • She reminded Graham of the mother roe deer he sometimes saw hiding in the hedgerow as he cycled along.
    • Hunters, in organised groups of three to four people, will be allowed to shoot mouflons, wild boars, roes, red deer and fallow deer at Christmas.
    • The early miniature pinscher was called the reh pinscher, so named because Germans thought the dog resembled the small, nimble, red roe deer that populated their forests.
    • Wolf, roe deer and wild boar roam these mountains and in the spring the capercaillie, king of the forest, screams his mating call.
    • There have been sightings of roe deer in Bolton town centre, water voles on the streets of Wigan and bats in Manchester city centre.
    • I was walking through the reserve the other day counting butterflies for the Trust and, lo and behold, I saw this young roe deer.
    • Roe Lee (the old name may have been lea) means fields where roe deer roamed.
    • He had seen nothing save roe deer and a few hares out feeding amid the early evening shadows.
    • Within an hour of setting off, he had shot a roe deer, skinned and cleaned it.
    • Mammals such as weasels, foxes, stoats and especially roe deer can wander safely without the risk of being killed by traffic.

Origin

Old English rā(ha), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ree and German Reh.

ROE3

abbreviation
  • Rules of engagement (in combat).

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