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tyke    音标拼音: [t'ɑɪk]
n. 劣犬,野狗,乡下佬

劣犬,野狗,乡下佬

Tyke
n 1: a native of Yorkshire
2: a crude uncouth ill-bred person lacking culture or refinement
[synonym: {peasant}, {barbarian}, {boor}, {churl}, {Goth},
{tyke}, {tike}]
3: a young person of either sex; "she writes books for
children"; "they're just kids"; "`tiddler' is a British term
for youngster" [synonym: {child}, {kid}, {youngster}, {minor},
{shaver}, {nipper}, {small fry}, {tiddler}, {tike}, {tyke},
{fry}, {nestling}]


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  • british english - Why is the Yorkshire dialect called Tyke? - English . . .
    Those varieties are often referred to as Broad Yorkshire or Tyke Why is the Yorkshire dialect called 'Tyke'? Can the accent be referred to as tyke as well? ODO's definition of tyke includes a number of negative senses Is this sense also derogatory?
  • What does gotcha mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Following from Jasper Loy's statement It is short for "Got you!", itself having the subject implied "I have got you " It regularly means, at least in the UK, "I understand [what you mean]" A: You turn left, then right, go straight on and it is on your left B: Gotcha! and A: They'll never know who did it <manic laughter> B: Gotcha! You little tyke!
  • Differences between dyke, levee and berm? - English Language Usage . . .
    A dyke and a levee are both walls to keep out water It appears that levee is associated only with rivers while dyke can also apply to the sea A berm isn't necessarily associated with damming water It's just a raised area (mound or ledge) of dirt
  • phrases - Is it a driver license or a drivers license or a . . .
    Using of driver driver's or driving license depends very much on what we are trying to say: For example I would say: a I lost my driving license b It was about a driver license c I renewed my driver's license (Provided that it is clear that I am talking about my driver's driving license ) But again, in daily conversations, they are used almost interchangeably thus causing such confusions
  • grammatical number - Does staff take a plural verb? - English . . .
    In British English, one can say "our staff do", because they use plural verbal agreement to emphasize when an entity is made up of a group of people, whether this entity itself is marked as plural or not This is also true of companies, bands, sports teams and other things which are commonly used in plural forms as well as singular forms The verbs are usually plural for one band or many bands
  • colloquialisms - Etymology of got the monk on - English Language . . .
    He's allus got the monk on abaht summat " (For the meaning of Tyke, see Why is the Yorkshire dialect called 'Tyke'?) A search for the phrase turns up several fairly recent publications that use it precisely in the sense of "sulking " From Ajay Close, Forspoken (1998) [combined snippets]: 'Don't be so nesh '
  • Where did a racist bone in [ones] body and a mean bone in [ones . . .
    Say! why by my troth it was fair cheating ; but it's just like their rascally tricks ; for there's not an honest bone in the hide of never a greasy tyke of 'em all
  • The term “handy” in “Of Mice and Men”
    From "January Searle" [George Searle Phillips], Myra, the Gipsy Prophetess, serialized in Frank Leslie's New Family Magazine (May 1858): "Ye may say that, ye may well say that, ye ill-favored tyke! There's no lad on all the head fit to stand in his shoon
  • Is puppy a synonym of dog? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    9 I'm a bit confused as to why some thesauruses, e g Oxford Dictionaries, state that puppy is a synonym of dog To me they are related but not a synonym dog hound, canine, mongrel, cur, tyke; male dog; bitch, pup, puppy, whelp informal: doggy, pooch, mutt Australian informal: mong, bitzer ENGLISH THESAURUS Can anyone shed some light on the
  • Usage of the cubalow - Has anyone heard the phrase?
    When I was a child in the 1950s I remember my mother calling the domestic hot water tank 'the cubalow', sounding like 'queuebelow' Has anyone else heard this word being used?





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