中英
knacker
/ ˈnækə(r) /
/ ˈnækər /
  • 简明
  • 柯林斯
  • n.屠马业者;收买废屋船业者
  • vt.阉割;杀死
    • 复数

      knackers
    • 第三人称单数

      knackers
    • 现在分词

      knackering
    • 过去式

      knackered
    • 过去分词

      knackered
  • 网络释义
  • 英英释义
  • 1

     废屋船业者

    ... 废位赶出dethrone 废屋船业者knacker 废物rubbishcrapdiscardsdraffmullockoffscouringoffscouringsraffrafflerecrementtrashery ...

  • 2

     夹核桃钳子

    ... 机械电子工 Mechatroniker 夹核桃钳子 Knacker 卷发夹子 Lockenwickler ...

短语
查看更多
  • 双语例句
  • 权威例句
  • 1
    Then he came to a ditch where a knacker was skinning a horse.
    他又来到了一条水沟边。
  • 2
    Her horse was a show jumper whom the family rescued from the knacker 's yard.
    她的马擅长跨越障碍,是家人从废马屠宰场挽救回来的。
  • 3
    You, Boxer, the very day that those great muscles of yours lose their power, Jones will sell you to the knacker, who will cut your throat and boil you down for the foxhounds.
    布克瑟,在你失掉你有力的肌肉的那一天,琼斯会把你卖给屠夫,你就会被屠宰为猎狗的美餐。
查看更多
  • 同近义词
  • 词源
  • 百科
  • Knacker

    A knacker is a person in the trade of rendering animals that have died on farms or are unfit for human consumption, such as horses that can no longer work. This leads to the slang expression "knackered" meaning very tired, or "ready for the knacker's yard", where old horses are slaughtered and the by-products are sent for rendering. A knacker's yard or knackery is different from a slaughterhouse, where animals are slaughtered for human consumption. In most countries Knackery premises are regulated by law.A horse carcass, rendered, had many uses. In the U.S., the meat could end up in the food at a mink ranch or fox farm, or a greyhound race track, or for pet food, or to a pig farm. Bones were ground up for bone meal fertilizer. Hides went to leather and joints processed to make glue for the furniture and paper trades (hence the idea of old horses being sent to the glue factory).However, in modern usage, especially in Ireland, the word has come to describe both those from lower-class backgrounds who tend to engage in anti-social behaviour, as well as those of an Irish Traveller background. In this sense, the usage of the word "knacker" is akin to the usage of the term "chav" in England and ned in Scotland. Members of the travelling community in Ireland live in what would ordinarily be considered temporary accommodation, such as roadside trailers or caravans.[citation needed]The word "knacker" was first used in 1812. It is from the Scandinavian word represented by O.N. hnakkur saddle and hnakki "back of the neck".

查看更多