beggar
	英 ['begə]
美 ['bɛɡɚ]
	    
	
    - n. 乞丐;穷人;家伙
 
- vt. 使贫穷;使沦为乞丐
     
	 
		英文词源
	
	- beggar (n.)
 - c. 1200, from Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, lay brothers of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert "mendicant," of uncertain origin, with pejorative suffix (see -ard). Compare Beguine. Early folk etymology connected the English word with bag. Form with -ar attested from 14c., but begger was more usual 15c.-17c. The feminine form beggestere is attested as a surname from c. 1300. Beggar's velvet was an old name for "dust bunnies." "Beggers should be no choosers" is in Heywood (1562).
 - beggar (v.)
 - "reduce to poverty," mid-15c., from beggar (n.). Related: Beggared; beggaring. Figurative use by 1640s.
 
 
		双语例句
	
	- 1. He warned that lifting copyright restrictions could beggar the industry. 
  - 他警告说解除版权限制会使这个行业一贫如洗。
  来自柯林斯例句
 
- 2. He's a sly old beggar if ever there was one. 
  - 他确确实实是个老奸巨猾的家伙。
  来自柯林斯例句
 
- 3. The statistics beggar belief. 
  - 统计数据让人难以置信。
  来自柯林斯例句
 
- 4. Aren't you dressed yet, you lazy beggar? 
  - 你这个懒汉还没穿好衣服吗?
  来自《权威词典》
 
- 5. The beggar begged from the rich but they refused. 
  - 那个乞丐向富人们乞讨,但遭到了拒绝.
  来自《简明英汉词典》