svelte

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

语言学习

2024-06-01

2 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 1, 2024 is: svelte SVELT adjective What It Means Someone described as svelte is considered slender or thin in an attractive or graceful way. Svelte can also be used to describe something sleek, such as a vehicle or an article of clothing. // The svelte dancer seemed to float across the stage. cynosure in Context “There’s more plastic than some would prefer, but it’s otherwise an attractive, functional cockpit with comfy seats and room enough for three adults in the rear, as long as all are relatively svelte.” — Josh Max, Forbes, 24 Feb. 2024 Did You Know? In Death on the Rocks, a 2013 mystery novel by Deryn Lake, the hero John Rawlings is described as having “svelte eyebrows” (he raises them also in 1995’s Death at the Beggar’s Opera). Lake’s oeuvre notwithstanding, svelte is not an adjective commonly applied to eyebrows, though it’s perfectly appropriate to do so—one of the word’s meanings is “sleek,” and it is often used to describe such disparate things as gowns and sports cars having clean lines. But “svelte eyebrows” also makes etymological sense; svelte came to English (by way of French) from the Italian adjective svelto, which itself comes from the verb svellere, meaning “to pluck out.” Since its debut in English in the early 19th century, however, svelte has more often been used with its original meaning to describe a person’s body—not just the tufts of hair above their eyes—as slender, graceful, or lithe.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 1st.

  • Today's word is Svelte, spelled S-V-E-L-T-E.

  • Svelte is an adjective.

  • Someone described as Svelte is considered slender or thin in an attractive or graceful way.

  • Svelte can also be used to describe something sleek, such as a vehicle or an article of clothing.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from Forbes by Josh Max.

  • There's more plastic than some would prefer, but it's otherwise an attractive,

  • functional cockpit with comfy seats and room enough for three adults in the rear,

  • as long as all are relatively svelte.

  • In Death on the Rocks, a 2013 mystery novel by Darren Lake,

  • the hero John Rawlings is described as having svelte eyebrows.

  • He raises them also in 1995's Death at the Beggar's Opera.

  • Lake Sauvre, notwithstanding, Svelte is not an adjective commonly applied to eyebrows,

  • though it's perfectly appropriate to do so.

  • One of the words' meanings is sleek,

  • and it's often used to describe such disparate things as gowns and sports cars having clean lines.

  • But Svelte eyebrows also makes etymological sense.

  • Svelte came to English by way of French from the Italian adjective Svelto,

  • which itself comes from the verb sfellere, meaning to pluck out.

  • Since its debut in English in the early 19th century, however,