字典

look的意思

look
英式音标[lʊk]
美式英标[lʊk]

基本解释

vt. 看;期待;注意;面向;看上去像

vi. 看;看起来;注意;面向

n. 看;样子;面容

n. (Look)人名;(瑞典)洛克;(英)卢克

中文词源

look 看

词源不详。

英文词源

look
look: [OE] For such a common word, look is surprisingly isolated. It goes back to prehistoric West Germanic *lōkōjan, which has no other descendants in the modern Germanic languages, and its only distant relative is the German verb lugen ‘show, be visible’.
look (v.)
Old English locian "use the eyes for seeing, gaze, look, behold, spy," from West Germanic *lokjan (cognates: Old Saxon lokon "see, look, spy," Middle Dutch loeken "to look," Old High German luogen, German dialectal lugen "to look out"), of unknown origin, perhaps cognate with Breton lagud "eye." In Old English, usually with on; the use of at began 14c. Meaning "seek, search out" is c. 1300; meaning "to have a certain appearance" is from c. 1400. Of objects, "to face in a certain direction," late 14c.

Look after "take care of" is from late 14c., earlier "to seek" (c. 1300), "to look toward" (c. 1200). Look into "investigate" is from 1580s; look up "research in books or papers" is from 1690s. To look down upon in the figurative sense is from 1711; to look down one's nose is from 1921. To look forward "anticipate" is c. 1600; meaning "anticipate with pleasure" is mid-19c. To not look back "make no pauses" is colloquial, first attested 1893. In look sharp (1711) sharp originally was an adverb, "sharply."
look (n.)
c. 1200, "act or action of looking," from look (v.). Meaning "appearance of a person" is from late 14c. Expression if looks could kill ... attested by 1827 (if looks could bite is attested from 1747).

实用例句

1. It was just then that I chanced to look round.
就在那时,我恰好环顾了下四周。
来自柯林斯例句
2. She had the look of someone deserted and betrayed.
她一副遭人遗弃和背叛的样子。
来自柯林斯例句
3. Does this dress make my legs look too stumpy?
这条裙子会使我的腿看上去又短又粗吗?
来自柯林斯例句
4. Banks are built to look solid to reassure their customers.
银行往往建得看上去很坚固,好让顾客放心。
来自柯林斯例句
5. Leather jeans that are too big will make you look larger.
过于肥大的皮裤会让你看起来块头更大。
来自柯林斯例句