英语单词wielder怎么读
Ⅰ 英语in medieval times怎么翻译
英语 in medieval times 翻译为中文意思是在中世纪。例如,In medieval times, a lance couched under the rider's arm, unifying the force of rider and weapon, would throw its wielder backwards off the horse at impact. 在中世纪,一把长矛被放在骑手的臂膀下,以统一骑手和武器的力量,一旦受到冲击,持兵器者就会向后摔下马去。
Ⅱ 英语方面的趣味题和脑筋急转弯越多越好
Why is six afraid of seven?
-----------------------Because seven eight nine.
What do you call your father-in-law's only child's mother-in-law?
-----------------------Mom.
Why do lions eat raw meat?
-----------------------Because they never learn to cook.
Why did the chicken cross the road?
-----------------------To get to the other side.
Why did the fox cross the road?
-----------------------To get the chicken.
Why did the gum cross the road?
-----------------------It was on the chicken’s foot.
Why did the turkey cross the road twice?
-----------------------To prove it was not a chicken.
Why did the weasel cross the road twice?
-----------------------He was a double crosser.
Why didn't the skeleton cross the road?
-----------------------It didn’t have the guts.
What goes up a chimney down, but won't go down a chimney up?
-----------------------Ann umbrella.
What's black and white and red all over?
-----------------------A zebra that doesn’t know how to put lipstick on.
What is the largest ant in the world?
-----------------------An elephant.
How much is a skunk worth?
-----------------------One scent.
What kind of monkey can fly?
-----------------------A hot air baboon.
Why did the cake like to play baseball?
-----------------------Because it was a good batter.
What goes hahaha, plop?
-----------------------Someone laughing their head off.
Why didn't the lady run away from the attacking lion?
-----------------------They told her it was a maneating lion.
Why has no one ever spotted a leopard in Africa?
-----------------------Because leopards are already born with spots.
What did the banana do when it heard the ice scream?
-----------------------It split.
Swings by his thigh a thing most magical! Below the belt, beneath the folds of his clothes it hangs, a hole in its front end, stiff-set and stout, but swivels about. Levelling the head of this hanging instrument, its wielder hoists his hem above the knee: it is his will to fill a well-known hole that it fits fully when at full length. He has often filled it before. Now he fills it again.
----------------------- a key
I'm the world's wonder, for I make women happy --a boon to the neighborhood, a bane to no one,
though I may perhaps prick the one who picks me. I am set well up, stand in a bed, have a roughish root. Rarely (though it happens) a churl's daughter more daring than the rest --and lovelier! --lays hold of me, and lays me in larder.
She learns soon enough, the curly-haired creature who clamps me so, of my meeting with her: moist is her eye!
-----------------------an onion
A young man made for the corner where he knew she was standing; this strapping youth had come some way--with his own hands he whipped up her dress, and under her girdle (as she stood there) thrust something stiff, worked his will; they both shook. This fellow quickened: one moment he was forceful, a first rate servant, so strenuous that the next he was knocked up, quite blown by his exertion. Beneath the girdle a thing began to grow that upstanding men often think of, tenderly, and acquire.
----------------------- dough
I'm told a certain something grows in its pouch, swells and stands up, lifts its covering. A proud bride grasped that boneless wonder, the daughter of a king covered that swollen thing with clothing.
-----------------------a churn
A lovely woman, a lady, often locked me in a chest; at times she took me out with her fingers, and gave me to her lord and loyal master, just as he asked. Then he poked his head inside me, pushed it up until it fitted tightly. I, adorned, was bound to be filled with something rough if the loyal lord
could keep it up. Guess what I mean.
----------------------- helmet
Who makes it, has no need of it. Who buys it, has no use for it. Who uses it can neither see nor feel it.
---------------------coffin
Tell me what a dozen rubber trees with thirty boughs on each might be?
---------------------Months of the year
As I went over London Bridge I met my sister Jenny I broke her neck and drank her blood And left her standing empty.
---------------------Gin
It is said among my people that some things are improved by death. Tell me, what stinks while living, but in death, smells good?
---------------------Pig
All right. Riddle me this: what goes through the door without pinching itself? What sits on the stove without burning itself? What sits on the table and is not ashamed?
---------------------the Sun
What work is it that the faster you work, the longer it is before you're done, and the slower you work, the sooner you're finished?
--------------------- roasting meat on a spit
Whilst I was engaged in sitting I spied the dead carrying the living.
--------------------- a ship
I know a word of letters three. Add two, and fewer there will be.
--------------------- 'few'
I give you a group of three. One is sitting down, and will never get up. The second eats as much as is given to him, yet is always hungry. The third goes away and never returns.
--------------------- stove, fire, and smoke
Whoever makes it, tells it not. Whoever takes it, knows it not. And whoever knows it wants it not.
--------------------- counterfeit money
Two words, my answer is only two words. To keep me, you must give me. Solution your word Sir, I bear a rhyme excelling In mystic force and magic spelling Celestial sprites elucidate All my own striving can't relate
--------------------- Pi (digits given by length of words)
There is not wind enough to twirl That one red leaf, nearest of its clan, Which dances as often as dance it can.
--------------------- the sun, Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Half-way up the hill, I see thee at last Lying beneath me with thy sounds and sights -- A city in the twilight, dim and vast, With smoking roofs, soft bells, and gleaming lights.
--------------------- the past, Longfellow
I am, in truth, a yellow fork
From tables in the sky
By inadvertent fingers dropped
The awful cutlery.
Of mansions never quite disclosed
And never quite concealed
The apparatus of the dark
To ignorance revealed.
--------------------- lightning, Emily Dickinson
Many-maned scud-thumper,
Maker of worn wood,
Shrub-ruster,
Sky-mocker,
Rave!
Portly pusher,
Wind-slave.
--------------------- John Updike
Make me thy lyre, even as the forests are.
What if my leaves fell like its own --
The tumult of thy mighty harmonies
Will take from both a deep autumnal tone.
--------------------- the west wind, Percy Bysshe Shelley
This darksome burn, horseback brown,
His rollock highroad roaring down,
In coop and in comb the fleece of his foam
Flutes and low to the body falls home.
--------------------- river, Gerard Manley Hopkins
I've measured it from side to side,
'Tis three feet long and two feet wide.
It is of compass small, and bare
To thirsty suns and parching air.
--------------------- the grave of a child, Wordsworth
My love, when I gaze on thy beautiful face,
Careering along, yet always in place --
The thought has often come into my mind
If I ever shall see thy glorious behind.
--------------------- the moon, Sir Edmund Gosse
Then all thy feculent majesty recalls
The nauseous mustiness of forsaken bowers,
The leprous nudity of deserted halls --
The positive nastiness of sullied flowers.
And I mark the colours, yellow and black,
That fresco thy lithe, dictatorial thighs.
--------------------- spider, Francis Saltus Saltus
When young, I am sweet in the sun.
When middle-aged, I make you gay.
When old, I am valued more than ever.
--------------------- wine
I am always hungry,
I must always be fed,
The finger I lick
Will soon turn red.
--------------------- fire
All about, but cannot be seen,
Can be captured, cannot be held,
No throat, but can be heard.
--------------------- Wind
I am only useful
When I am full,
Yet I am always
Full of holes.
--------------------- sieve (or sponge)
If you break me
I do not stop working,
If you touch me
I may be snared,
If you lose me
Nothing will matter.
--------------------- Heart
If a man carried my burden
He would break his back.
I am not rich,
But leave silver in my track.
--------------------- Snail
Until I am measured
I am not known,
Yet how you miss me
When I have flown.
--------------------- Time
I drive men mad
For love of me,
Easily beaten,
Never free.
--------------------- Gold
When set loose
I fly away,
Never so cursed
As when I go astray.
--------------------- A fart
I go around in circles
But always straight ahead,
Never complain
No matter where I am led.
--------------------- Wagon wheel
Lighter than what
I am made of,
More of me is hidden
Than is seen.
--------------------- iceberg
I turn around once,
What is out will not get in.
I turn around again,
What is in will not get out.
--------------------- stopcock
Each morning I appear
To lie at your feet,
All day I will follow
No matter how fast you run,
Yet I nearly perish
In the midday sun.
--------------------- Shadow
Bright as diamonds,
Loud as thunder,
Never still,
A thing of wonder.
--------------------- waterfall? (fireworks?)
My life can be measured in hours,
I serve by being devoured.
Thin, I am quick
Fat, I am slow
Wind is my foe.
--------------------- candle
To unravel me
You need a simple key,
No key that was made
By locksmith's hand,
But a key that only I
Will understand.
--------------------- cipher
I am seen in the water
If seen in the sky,
I am in the rainbow,
A jay's feather,
And lapis lazuli.
--------------------- blue
Glittering points
That downward thrust,
Sparkling spears
That never rust.
--------------------- icicle
You heard me before,
Yet you hear me again,
Then I die,
'Till you call me again.
--------------------- echo
Three lives have I.
Gentle enough to soothe the skin,
Light enough to caress the sky,
Hard enough to crack rocks.
--------------------- water
You can see nothing else
When you look in my face,
I will look you in the eye
And I will never lie.
--------------------- your reflection
Lovely and round,
I shine with pale light,
grown in the darkness,
A lady's delight.
--------------------- pearl
At the sound of me, men may dream
Or stamp their feet
At the sound of me, women may laugh
Or sometimes weep
--------------------- music
When I am filled
I can point the way,
When I am empty
Nothing moves me,
I have two skins
One without and one within.
--------------------- glove
My tines be long,
My tines be short
My tines end ere
My first report.
What am I?
--------------------- lightning
With thieves I consort,
With the vilest, in short,
I'm quite at ease in depravity;
Yet all divines use me,
And savants can't lose me,
For I am the center of gravity.
--------------------- The letter 'v'.
As a whole, I am both safe and secure.
Behead me, and I become a place of meeting.
Behead me again, and I am the partner of ready.
Restore me, and I become the domain of beasts.
What am I?
--------------------- stable
I sought my first in starry skies
Where shines the April sun;
My second came before my eyes,
And warned me to be done.
'Tis very hard to lose one's sight;
I'm blind as bat or mole;
Once hills and fields were my delight,
Now I'm no more my whole.
Solution ?
My first is high,
My second damp,
My whole a tie,
A writer's cramp.
Solution ?
A hundred and one
by fifty divide,
And if a cipher
is rightly applied,
The answer is one from nine.
Solution ?
What does man love more than life
Fear more than death or mortal strife
What the poor have, the rich require,
and what contented men desire,
What the miser spends and the spendthrift saves
And all men carry to their graves?
--------------------- nothing
I build up castles.
I tear down mountains.
I make some men blind,
I help others to see.
What am I?
--------------------- sand
Ripped from my mother's womb,
Beaten and burned,
I become a blood-thirsty slayer
What am I?
--------------------- iron ore
Ⅲ 高分求英语高手翻译!又是关于游戏角色介绍的!
www.honcn.net就是最好的回答!
Ⅳ 急!!!英语翻译《剪刀手爱德华》
An elderly woman tells a story to her granddaughter of a man with scissors for hands named Edward, the creation of an inventor. The inventor was inspired to make an artificial man e to the anthropomorphic appearance of his other inventions. He raised Edward as his son and tutored him in various subjects, but died while in the act of offering a pair of hands to Edward. Many years later, local Avon saleswoman Peg Boggs, after failing to make profits in her suburban neighborhood, visits a Gothic mansion on a hill. There, she finds Edward, and convinces him to have her take him in. Edward befriends Peg's young son, Kevin and, after an initial misstep, her teenage daughter Kim.
Peg's neighbors become curious and thrilled at Edward's masterful skills at hedge clipping and haircutting. However, two of the townspeople, a religious fanatic named Esmeralda and Kim's jock boyfriend Jim, dislike him immediately. Joyce, a "lonely housewife", suggests that Edward open a haircutting salon with her. While examining a proposed site, she attempts to sece him, confusing Edward, who escapes the room in a state of panic. Edward attempts to bring up the subject of her actions while the family is having dinner, but no one reacts to the news.
Wanting money for a van, Jim takes advantage of Edward's ability to pick locks and breaks into his father's house. The burglar alarm sounds and all but Edward escape, despite Kim's angry insistence that they return for him. Edward is arrested, but released when a psychological examination reveals that his isolation allowed him to live without a traditional sense of ethics. The arresting officer, Allen, befriends the timid Edward, sensing his intrinsic goodness. The neighbors start to question Edward's personality. Meanwhile, infuriated by Edward's rejection, Joyce gets revenge on him by claiming that he tried to rape her. Many of the neighbors begin to gossip and slowly turn against Edward. During Christmas, Edward is therefore hated and feared by almost everyone around him except the Boggs family, thus making him an outcast.
While the family is setting up Christmas decorations, Edward carves an ice sculpture from a block of ice. The ice shavings create the effect of falling snow, under which Kim dances. Jim catches Kim's attention, whereupon Edward accidentally cuts Kim's hand. Jim assumes that Edward deliberately harmed her, and uses this as a pretext to attack Edward in a jealous rage. Kim gets really angry with Jim and breaks up with him. He angrily storms off. The situation worsens when Kevin is almost run over by Jim's drunken friend. Edward pushes Kevin out of the way, and unintentionally cuts his face while trying to make sure he's okay. The neighbors misunderstand the situation, thinking Edward attacked Kevin. Edward flees back to his hill-top mansion. That was the last straw for the neighbors as they form an angry mob and pursue him. Peg tells the neighbors that Kevin is fine, but they don't listen to her. Officer Allen unsuccessfully attempts to turn back the mob by giving them the impression that Edward is dead. He fires his gun a few times and tries to tell them that it's all over. They continue to the mansion, presumably to kill Edward themselves and/or to verify Officer Allen's claims that Edward is dead.
Kim rushes to the mansion before the mob can get there and reunites with Edward and tells him that Kevin is alright. Jim follows them and battles Edward and Kim, and is eventually stabbed by Edward and pushed through a window landing on the ground a couple of stories below. The mob arrives shortly after and reacts to Jim's lifeless body with shock. Kim professes her love for Edward and kisses him goodbye. She then goes out of the mansion and convinces the mob that Edward and Jim killed each other in the fight. All the neighbors return to their homes, while Joyce is seen guilty and ashamed for making up the rumor about Edward which led to his ostracism and alleged death. The elderly woman from the beginning reappears, as she finishes telling her granddaughter the story. It is revealed that Edward is still alive and "creating snow" from his ice sculptures, which fall upon the valley below. The elderly woman reveals to her granddaughter that she is, in fact, Kim. She refuses to visit Edward because she wants Edward to remember her the way she was in her youth.
这是英文的故事梗概,没有按照你的中文翻译的,我查找了维基网络,希望有所帮助
Ⅳ 小学四年级英语元宵字谜
Swings by his thigh a thing most magical! Below the belt, beneath the folds of his clothes it hangs, a hole in its front end, stiff-set and stout, but swivels about. Levelling the head of this hanging instrument, its wielder hoists his hem above the knee: it is his will to fill a well-known hole that it fits fully when at full length. He has often filled it before. Now he fills it again.
----------------------- a key
I'm the world's wonder, for I make women happy --a boon to the neighborhood, a bane to no one,
though I may perhaps prick the one who picks me. I am set well up, stand in a bed, have a roughish root. Rarely (though it happens) a churl's daughter more daring than the rest --and lovelier! --lays hold of me, and lays me in larder.
She learns soon enough, the curly-haired creature who clamps me so, of my meeting with her: moist is her eye!
-----------------------an onion
A young man made for the corner where he knew she was standing; this strapping youth had come some way--with his own hands he whipped up her dress, and under her girdle (as she stood there) thrust something stiff, worked his will; they both shook. This fellow quickened: one moment he was forceful, a first rate servant, so strenuous that the next he was knocked up, quite blown by his exertion. Beneath the girdle a thing began to grow that upstanding men often think of, tenderly, and acquire.
----------------------- dough
I'm told a certain something grows in its pouch, swells and stands up, lifts its covering. A proud bride grasped that boneless wonder, the daughter of a king covered that swollen thing with clothing.
-----------------------a churn
A lovely woman, a lady, often locked me in a chest; at times she took me out with her fingers, and gave me to her lord and loyal master, just as he asked. Then he poked his head inside me, pushed it up until it fitted tightly. I, adorned, was bound to be filled with something rough if the loyal lord
could keep it up. Guess what I mean.
----------------------- helmet
When young, I am sweet in the sun.
When middle-aged, I make you gay.
When old, I am valued more than ever.
--------------------- wine
I am always hungry,
I must always be fed,
The finger I lick
Will soon turn red.
--------------------- fire
All about, but cannot be seen,
Can be captured, cannot be held,
No throat, but can be heard.
--------------------- Wind
I am only useful
When I am full,
Yet I am always
Full of holes.
--------------------- sieve (or sponge)
If you break me
I do not stop working,
If you touch me
I may be snared,
If you lose me
Nothing will matter.
--------------------- Heart
If a man carried my burden
He would break his back.
I am not rich,
But leave silver in my track.
--------------------- Snail
Until I am measured
I am not known,
Yet how you miss me
When I have flown.
--------------------- Time
I drive men mad
For love of me,
Easily beaten,
Never free.
--------------------- Gold
When set loose
I fly away,
Never so cursed
As when I go astray.
--------------------- A fart
I go around in circles
But always straight ahead,
Never complain
No matter where I am led.
--------------------- Wagon wheel
Lighter than what
I am made of,
More of me is hidden
Than is seen.
--------------------- iceberg
I turn around once,
What is out will not get in.
I turn around again,
What is in will not get out.
--------------------- stopcock
Each morning I appear
To lie at your feet,
All day I will follow
No matter how fast you run,
Yet I nearly perish
In the midday sun.
--------------------- Shadow
Bright as diamonds,
Loud as thunder,
Never still,
A thing of wonder.
--------------------- waterfall? (fireworks?)
My life can be measured in hours,
I serve by being devoured.
Thin, I am quick
Fat, I am slow
Wind is my foe.
--------------------- candle
To unravel me
You need a simple key,
No key that was made
By locksmith's hand,
But a key that only I
Will understand.
--------------------- cipher
I am seen in the water
If seen in the sky,
I am in the rainbow,
A jay's feather,
And lapis lazuli.
--------------------- blue
Glittering points
That downward thrust,
Sparkling spears
That never rust.
--------------------- icicle
You heard me before,
Yet you hear me again,
Then I die,
'Till you call me again.
--------------------- echo
Three lives have I.
Gentle enough to soothe the skin,
Light enough to caress the sky,
Hard enough to crack rocks.
--------------------- water
You can see nothing else
When you look in my face,
I will look you in the eye
And I will never lie.
--------------------- your reflection
Lovely and round,
I shine with pale light,
grown in the darkness,
A lady's delight.
--------------------- pearl
At the sound of me, men may dream
Or stamp their feet
At the sound of me, women may laugh
Or sometimes weep
--------------------- music
When I am filled
I can point the way,
When I am empty
Nothing moves me,
I have two skins
One without and one within.
--------------------- glove
My tines be long,
My tines be short
My tines end ere
My first report.
What am I?
--------------------- lightning
With thieves I consort,
With the vilest, in short,
I'm quite at ease in depravity;
Yet all divines use me,
And savants can't lose me,
For I am the center of gravity.
--------------------- The letter 'v'.
As a whole, I am both safe and secure.
Behead me, and I become a place of meeting.
Behead me again, and I am the partner of ready.
Restore me, and I become the domain of beasts.
What am I?
--------------------- stable
I sought my first in starry skies
Where shines the April sun;
My second came before my eyes,
And warned me to be done.
'Tis very hard to lose one's sight;
I'm blind as bat or mole;
Once hills and fields were my delight,
Now I'm no more my whole.
Solution ?
My first is high,
My second damp,
My whole a tie,
A writer's cramp.
Solution ?
A hundred and one
by fifty divide,
And if a cipher
is rightly applied,
The answer is one from nine.
Solution ?
What does man love more than life
Fear more than death or mortal strife
What the poor have, the rich require,
and what contented men desire,
What the miser spends and the spendthrift saves
And all men carry to their graves?
--------------------- nothing
I build up castles.
I tear down mountains.
I make some men blind,
I help others to see.
What am I?
--------------------- sand
Ⅵ 地下党英文怎么说
地下党
网络释义
地下党:Wielder
地下党成员:Dark Wielder
威尼斯地下党:Venice Underground
Ⅶ 英语字谜
Swings by his thigh a thing most magical! Below the belt, beneath the folds of his clothes it hangs, a hole in its front end, stiff-set and stout, but swivels about. Levelling the head of this hanging instrument, its wielder hoists his hem above the knee: it is his will to fill a well-known hole that it fits fully when at full length. He has often filled it before. Now he fills it again.
----------------------- a key
I'm the world's wonder, for I make women happy --a boon to the neighborhood, a bane to no one,
though I may perhaps prick the one who picks me. I am set well up, stand in a bed, have a roughish root. Rarely (though it happens) a churl's daughter more daring than the rest --and lovelier! --lays hold of me, and lays me in larder.
She learns soon enough, the curly-haired creature who clamps me so, of my meeting with her: moist is her eye!
-----------------------an onion
A young man made for the corner where he knew she was standing; this strapping youth had come some way--with his own hands he whipped up her dress, and under her girdle (as she stood there) thrust something stiff, worked his will; they both shook. This fellow quickened: one moment he was forceful, a first rate servant, so strenuous that the next he was knocked up, quite blown by his exertion. Beneath the girdle a thing began to grow that upstanding men often think of, tenderly, and acquire.
----------------------- dough
I'm told a certain something grows in its pouch, swells and stands up, lifts its covering. A proud bride grasped that boneless wonder, the daughter of a king covered that swollen thing with clothing.
-----------------------a churn
A lovely woman, a lady, often locked me in a chest; at times she took me out with her fingers, and gave me to her lord and loyal master, just as he asked. Then he poked his head inside me, pushed it up until it fitted tightly. I, adorned, was bound to be filled with something rough if the loyal lord
could keep it up. Guess what I mean.
----------------------- helmet
Ⅷ 谁看过英文指环王1问里面甘道夫的一句台词
Gandalf: Fly, you fools!
(Gandalf loses his grip and falls into the abyss)
甘道夫:快跑,你们这些傻瓜!
〔甘道夫抓不住悬崖边,跌入了深渊〕
来自魔戒一的加长版剧本
http://www.councilofelrond.com/moles.php?op=modload&name=Subjects&file=index&req=viewpage&pageid=66
Ⅸ 英语翻译~高手进~
……is one of my favourate movies,it is a beautiful fairytale of love.
i like the pureness and kindness in the charactor of hero, edward.
he lived alone in a cold and dim castle, it was miss.pag's appearance that took him into the complicated world,full of stragers and crowd.
he was so innocent that he even went to break into other's house only for a requirement of the heroin, and was arrested by the police.enven so, he didn't tell the truth in order to protect his beloved.
although he was soon released for his "disability of judging", poeple around him still consider him as a big danger which is threatening other's property. everyone avoid contacting with him and miss pag.
after being threough so much, he remained to have a pure heart. at last, he cannot addapt to the complex life of normal people and had to go back to the castle where he came from.
fierce conflict arise between adward and the others who had ugly and twinsted heart under a normal appearance.
the story is very touching, it makes peoplr to think: it is those who are selfish and wickid that should be examined and blame.