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calve    
vt.
vi. 生小牛,下仔,(使)分离

生小牛,下仔,(使)分离

calve
v 1: release ice; "The icebergs and glaciers calve" [synonym:
{calve}, {break up}]
2: birth; "the whales calve at this time of year" [synonym: {calve},
{have young}]

Calve \Calve\ (k[aum]v), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Calved} 3; p. pr.
& vb. n. {Calving}.] [AS. cealfian. See {Calf}.]
1. To bring forth a calf. "Their cow calveth." --Job xxi. 10.
[1913 Webster]

2. To bring forth young; to produce offspring.
[1913 Webster]

Canst thou mark when the hinds do calve? --Job
xxxix. 1.
[1913 Webster]

The grassy clods now calved. --Molton.
[1913 Webster]

3. (Phys. Geog.) To throw off fragments which become
icebergs; -- said of a glacier.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]


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  • What does calve exactly mean? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    The verb "calve" is also used when an iceberg breaks off from the parent glacier, as by analogy the iceberg is "born" "Calve" is also used in some other cases where a smaller thing breaks off from a larger I believe it is sometimes used of comets, for example Dictionary com defines the verb "calve" as: verb (used without object), calved
  • It was, and the next morning the producers had entered vs entered . . .
    I'd understand it as a shortened version of It was, and the next morning we discovered that the producers had entered us for a race on it In the real world, schedules like that are usually "planned", even if not everyone knows the full plan
  • How time flies or flew? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    How time flies! We still wanted to do many other interesting things But it was time to say goodbye I can't figure out whether to use flies or flew here Is it talking about general facts that the
  • articles - How to figure out when to use a and when to use the for a . . .
    Australia doesn't set a limit for the number of the Working Holiday visas issued each year; Canada sets the limit for a number of WH visas issued each year Which usage of a the is correct, and, ho
  • What is the person who takes minutes in a meeting called?
    Is the recording of minutes one of the person's primary responsibilities, and is it ongoing? That will make the distinction between a recording secretary and a rapporteur, for example
  • word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Can you do it for tomorrow? Vs Can you do it by tomorrow? Can you do it for tomorrow? —From Collins dictionary Why I should choose quot;for quot; in place of quot;by quot;??
  • what is the difference between out of and off?
    @Lambie two reasons One, error-checking is off-topic here I answered this because I think the real cause of misunderstanding is the multiple uses of "off" And two, because I don't think the very first example is gramatically wrong, it just isn't idiomatic I could get a cake "out of" a bakery, just like I could get the car out of the garage We just wouldn't say it
  • meaning - What is the difference between pretty and handsome in . . .
    To get a better idea of what the meaning was when Dickens wrote, I am giving the relevant definitions from Walker's Critical Pronouncing Dictionary from 1831, twenty years before Dickens wrote Bleak House Handsome: Beautiful, graceful; elegant Pretty: Neat, elegant; beautiful without grandeur or dignity; it is used in a kind of diminutive contempt in poetry and in conversation So you can
  • meaning - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I hear controversial opinions on the difference between coincidently and coincidentally Some say they mean the same, others say they are different quot;Coincidently quot; means it's happening at
  • should I or do I need to? which one is more appropriate?
    I would say that "should" implies some sort of option, where it is more of a suggestion Whereas "need to" implies necessity (obviously ;-) which means that any other option leaves something out In the case of your original question, if you do not write "…" (horizontal ellipsis U+2026) at the end, then you are referencing a (possibly) finite set





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