cordon

英['kɔːd(ə)n] 美['kɔrdn]
  • n. 警戒线;绶带;束带层
  • vt. 用警戒线围住;包围隔离
  • n. (Cordon)人名;(英、西)科登;(法、葡)科尔东

词态变化


复数: cordons;

中文词源


cordon 封锁线

cord, 绳,线。-on, 大词后缀。

英文词源


cordon (n.)
mid-15c., "cord or ribbon worn as an ornament," from Middle French cordon "ribbon," diminutive of Old French corde "cord" (see cord). Sense of "a line of people or things guarding something" is 1758. Original sense preserved in cordon bleu (1727) "the highest distinction," literally "blue ribbon," for the sky-blue ribbon worn by the Knights-grand-cross of the Holy Ghost (highest order of chivalry); extended figuratively to other persons of distinction, especially, jocularly, to a first-rate cook. Cordon sanitaire (1857), from French, a guarded line between infected and uninfected districts.
cordon (v.)
1560s, "to ornament with a ribbon;" 1891 as "to guard with a cordon;" from cordon (n.). Related: Cordoned; cordoning.

双语例句


1. Protesters tried to break through a police cordon.
抗议者们试图冲破警察的封锁线。

来自柯林斯例句

2. Police formed a cordon between the two crowds.
警察在两群人之间筑起了一道封锁线。

来自柯林斯例句

3. I took a cordon bleu cookery course.
我上了高级烹饪课程。

来自柯林斯例句

4. Demonstrators broke through the police cordon.
示威者冲破了警方的警戒线。

来自《权威词典》

5. a cordon bleu chef
烹饪大师

来自《权威词典》