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词汇 lisp
释义

lisp1

noun lɪsplɪsp
  • A speech defect in which s is pronounced like th in thick and z is pronounced like th in this.

    咬舌(将/s/读成/θ/,将/z/读成/ð/的发音错误)

    he spoke with a slight lisp
    Example sentencesExamples
    • You think they'd notice if you had six fingers, or a lisp, or if you were two feet shorter?
    • He had a slight lisp and his right hand had a way of flopping around a bit.
    • They were the ones who gave me a hard time about my braces and my lisp and… well… everything.
    • The class waited, all attention, pretending to be helpful, ready for the slightest weakness, a lisp, a twitch, wariness, ready to move in for the kill.
    • Consequently, treatment of lisps is best accomplished by speech therapy.
    • ‘His lisp was a natural speech impediment, but I think [the producers] were concerned over how it would be received,’ he says.
    • I could have just written a hundred pages of lisps and grunts and the film would have came out exactly the same.
    • Then he talked about how I lisped and how you can't trust anyone with a lisp.
    • I should mention now that I have a slight lisp.
    • His school uniform always looked a mess and, according to friends, he jabbered rather than talked clearly, having inherited a slight lisp from his father.
    • He would often practise his speeches for many hours and had a slight stammer and lisp.
    • Many of the loyal troops would have joined the revolt if the rebels had shown more activity, but on-the-spot leadership was provided by a high-voiced officer with a lisp, who failed to change the rebels' plan and seize the initiative.
    • Each pause was highlighted, every sound a lisp.
    • The splint holding my tooth in has given me a slight lisp, that achey feeling in the gum line from the forcing of the tooth and the annoyingly protracted brushing process that I used to hate.
    • Drew was missing his two front baby teeth and had possessed a slight lisp from birth, causing his s's to come out as th's.
    • In fact he had a curiously dry - albeit pleasant - soft spoken voice that was more soothing than intimidating, and he even had a slight lisp.
    • "He's awake now, " she said proudly, with a slight lisp.
    • Each character is hideously depicted via limp dialogue, grating accents, silly lisps, unnatural body movements, and an overall disagreeable personality.
    • She had the slightest hint of a lisp, and so the last word came out of her mouth sounding like ‘thresses.’
    • Among the aspiring singers were those with cracked voices, nasal tones, and lisps.
    Synonyms
    speech defect, speech impediment, stammer, stutter
verb lɪsplɪsp
[no object]
  • Speak with a lisp.

    发音咬舌

    she spoke softly, lisping slightly
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Now if all this is right, and what you've found here is just how humans have evolved to be able to speak the way they do, does it tell you anything about speech pathology, about children who lisp, or anything like that?
    • I saw him play more than once at Central Park in New York, his toothless mouth soulfully lisping his unique and beautiful song style.
    • Gay males are often more effeminate, yes, but I don't know any females who lisp like that.
    • ‘Man… dey get knock out,’ she lisped, seeing my surprise.
    • The third soldier lisped, with a slight Siberian accent, motioning them out with his rifle.
    • She lisped madly, stretching out her arms and webbed fingers towards John.
    • His tongue lisped over his fangs as he whispered - the low sound did not suit his gravelly voice well.
    • Audrey doesn't really lisp, she just knows it makes her irresistibly adorable.
    • In fact I don't think I've ever had anybody that lisped on the program yet.
    • Chris, for some reason, frequently denies that he lisps, not realising perhaps quite how much we love him for it, but it's like the Atlantic Ocean denying that it contains salt.
    • Luckily, this hasn't happened in a long time and, therefore, I haven't lisped since eighth grade.
    • ‘My mum says we're twins,’ she lisped, shyly holding out her hand.
    • If you were a school kid in the 60's, chances are you spent at least one Christmas lisping along with Alvin and the Chipmunks.
    • So much for Portia's lisping about the gentle rain that blesseth the giver as well as him that takes!
    • Then he talked about how I lisped and how you can't trust anyone with a lisp.
    • ‘It has been burning this entire time,’ she lisped, her voice weary, strained.
    • If one goes by the findings of behavioural studies, one would think twice before assigning baby-sitting functions for the telly or hold back from going ga ga over the toddler who lisps ad-lib.
    • By the mid-1930s she was a superstar, singing, lisping and tap-dancing her way through such films as Poor Little Rich Girl and Bright Eyes, in which she famously sang On the Good Ship Lollipop.
    • The inebriated man drew a sword and sloppily lisped out, ‘You embarrreshed me!’
    • He was the kind of guy who would call himself ‘straight - acting’, which meant that he didn't lisp or mince, and wasn't inclined to wear frocks.

Derivatives

  • lisper

  • noun
  • lisping

  • adjectiveˈlɪspɪŋˈlɪspɪŋ
    • (of a voice or speech) characterized by a lisp.

      a lisping American drawl
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Afterwards one of them, a lisping seven-year-old by the name of Jimmy Poole, sidles up to him in his office and offers him a half-sucked gobstopper dug up from a fluff-filled corner of his pocket.
      • Freud, born into a secular Jewish family in Berlin in 1922, left Germany in the teeth of the gathering storm and talks in a lisping German accent after nearly 70 years in London.
      • ‘I'm so sensitive,’ he says in a lisping comedy accent.
  • lispingly

  • adverb ˈlɪspɪŋliˈlɪspɪŋli

Origin

Old English wlispian (recorded in āwlyspian), from wlisp (adjective) 'lisping', of imitative origin; compare with Dutch lispen and German lispeln.

Rhymes

crisp, will-o'-the-wisp, wisp

Lisp2

noun lɪsplɪsp
mass noun
  • A high-level computer programming language devised for list processing.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Interestingly, they wrote their code primarily in Lisp, an artificial intelligence language most commonly used at universities.
    • His interests also include hiking, amateur radio and programming in Lisp.
    • It's a mail reader, news reader, web browser, program development environment, Lisp interpreter and psychotherapist.
    • Unless a return object is explicitly specified with the return statement, the last expression evaluated will be returned, as in Lisp.
    • A few programming languages - notably Lisp and its offspring - provide integers of unlimited size and exact rationals as built-in data types.

Origin

1950s: from lis(t) p(rocessor).

lisp1

nounlɪsplisp
  • A speech defect in which s is pronounced like th in thick and z is pronounced like th in this.

    咬舌(将/s/读成/θ/,将/z/读成/ð/的发音错误)

    he spoke with a slight lisp
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Many of the loyal troops would have joined the revolt if the rebels had shown more activity, but on-the-spot leadership was provided by a high-voiced officer with a lisp, who failed to change the rebels' plan and seize the initiative.
    • Drew was missing his two front baby teeth and had possessed a slight lisp from birth, causing his s's to come out as th's.
    • "He's awake now, " she said proudly, with a slight lisp.
    • ‘His lisp was a natural speech impediment, but I think [the producers] were concerned over how it would be received,’ he says.
    • She had the slightest hint of a lisp, and so the last word came out of her mouth sounding like ‘thresses.’
    • Each pause was highlighted, every sound a lisp.
    • Each character is hideously depicted via limp dialogue, grating accents, silly lisps, unnatural body movements, and an overall disagreeable personality.
    • In fact he had a curiously dry - albeit pleasant - soft spoken voice that was more soothing than intimidating, and he even had a slight lisp.
    • The splint holding my tooth in has given me a slight lisp, that achey feeling in the gum line from the forcing of the tooth and the annoyingly protracted brushing process that I used to hate.
    • They were the ones who gave me a hard time about my braces and my lisp and… well… everything.
    • You think they'd notice if you had six fingers, or a lisp, or if you were two feet shorter?
    • He would often practise his speeches for many hours and had a slight stammer and lisp.
    • Then he talked about how I lisped and how you can't trust anyone with a lisp.
    • Among the aspiring singers were those with cracked voices, nasal tones, and lisps.
    • I could have just written a hundred pages of lisps and grunts and the film would have came out exactly the same.
    • I should mention now that I have a slight lisp.
    • The class waited, all attention, pretending to be helpful, ready for the slightest weakness, a lisp, a twitch, wariness, ready to move in for the kill.
    • Consequently, treatment of lisps is best accomplished by speech therapy.
    • He had a slight lisp and his right hand had a way of flopping around a bit.
    • His school uniform always looked a mess and, according to friends, he jabbered rather than talked clearly, having inherited a slight lisp from his father.
    Synonyms
    speech defect, speech impediment, stammer, stutter
verblɪsplisp
[no object]
  • Speak with a lisp.

    发音咬舌

    she spoke softly, lisping slightly
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Luckily, this hasn't happened in a long time and, therefore, I haven't lisped since eighth grade.
    • The inebriated man drew a sword and sloppily lisped out, ‘You embarrreshed me!’
    • She lisped madly, stretching out her arms and webbed fingers towards John.
    • Now if all this is right, and what you've found here is just how humans have evolved to be able to speak the way they do, does it tell you anything about speech pathology, about children who lisp, or anything like that?
    • ‘My mum says we're twins,’ she lisped, shyly holding out her hand.
    • I saw him play more than once at Central Park in New York, his toothless mouth soulfully lisping his unique and beautiful song style.
    • The third soldier lisped, with a slight Siberian accent, motioning them out with his rifle.
    • In fact I don't think I've ever had anybody that lisped on the program yet.
    • Audrey doesn't really lisp, she just knows it makes her irresistibly adorable.
    • By the mid-1930s she was a superstar, singing, lisping and tap-dancing her way through such films as Poor Little Rich Girl and Bright Eyes, in which she famously sang On the Good Ship Lollipop.
    • Then he talked about how I lisped and how you can't trust anyone with a lisp.
    • He was the kind of guy who would call himself ‘straight - acting’, which meant that he didn't lisp or mince, and wasn't inclined to wear frocks.
    • ‘Man… dey get knock out,’ she lisped, seeing my surprise.
    • ‘It has been burning this entire time,’ she lisped, her voice weary, strained.
    • If one goes by the findings of behavioural studies, one would think twice before assigning baby-sitting functions for the telly or hold back from going ga ga over the toddler who lisps ad-lib.
    • So much for Portia's lisping about the gentle rain that blesseth the giver as well as him that takes!
    • If you were a school kid in the 60's, chances are you spent at least one Christmas lisping along with Alvin and the Chipmunks.
    • His tongue lisped over his fangs as he whispered - the low sound did not suit his gravelly voice well.
    • Chris, for some reason, frequently denies that he lisps, not realising perhaps quite how much we love him for it, but it's like the Atlantic Ocean denying that it contains salt.
    • Gay males are often more effeminate, yes, but I don't know any females who lisp like that.

Origin

Old English wlispian (recorded in āwlyspian), from wlisp (adjective) ‘lisping’, of imitative origin; compare with Dutch lispen and German lispeln.

Lisp2

(also LISP)
nounlisplɪsp
  • A high-level computer programming language devised for list processing.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • His interests also include hiking, amateur radio and programming in Lisp.
    • It's a mail reader, news reader, web browser, program development environment, Lisp interpreter and psychotherapist.
    • A few programming languages - notably Lisp and its offspring - provide integers of unlimited size and exact rationals as built-in data types.
    • Interestingly, they wrote their code primarily in Lisp, an artificial intelligence language most commonly used at universities.
    • Unless a return object is explicitly specified with the return statement, the last expression evaluated will be returned, as in Lisp.

Origin

1950s: from lis(t) p(rocessor).

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