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当前位置 : 首页 > 在国外要慎用的8个英语单词 |
在国外要慎用的8个英语单词 |
发布者:管理员 发布时间:2014-4-14 阅读:731 次 |
You may think it's easy to communicate when you're visiting another English-speaking country, but think again! Certain words mean something entirely different on the other side of the world. Read on to see which eight words could cause you embarrassment across the pond or down under. 也许你以为置身另一个讲英语的国家交流起来会很容易,不过别想得太简单了!有些词在美国是这个意思,但是在地球的另外半边却完全是另外一个意思。看看哪8个单词会令你在世界另一端感到尴尬吧。 1. Pants 长裤还是内裤? Be careful who you tell in the U.K. that you have to go pants shopping—across the pond, "pants" means "underwear." When you're talking about jeans and khakis, you should call them "trousers." 2. Fanny 屁股还是私处? Own a fanny pack? In most other English-speaking countries, they're called "bum bags" because "fanny" is slang for a part of the female anatomy (and no, we're not talking about the rear end). So don't tell someone to stop being lazy and get off their fanny, either! 3. Pissed 生气还是喝醉? In America, we may get "pissed off" when we're angry, but the Brits and Irish who are "pissed" are extremely intoxicated. "Taking the piss," however, means "to make fun of," not "to get drunk." 4. Bangs 刘海还是刘海? Prepare for weird looks if you're bragging about your new "bangs" in England. A forehead-covering haircut over there is referred to as a "fringe" instead. Overseas, "bangs" is more commonly used as the somewhat vulgar slang that it is interchangeable with in America. 5. Knob 门把手还是生殖器? Americans hear the word "knob" and think "doorknob" or "lever." It has a much dirtier meaning in other countries, like Australia and the U.K., where it's an insult or slang for a part of the male anatomy. Now you'll know to be offended if someone calls you a "knob head." 6. Root 根还是性? Americans may "root around" looking for a lost object, but Australians and New Zealanders use the term to refer to having sex. 7. Pull 拉还是泡妞成功? If someone "pulled" last night in the U.K., they're probably not talking about pulling a muscle or drawing something apart. It's commonly used as slang for successfully picking up someone while out on the town. Likewise, "going on the pull" means that someone is going out with the express goal of getting some action. 8. Bugger 昵称还是骂人的话? If you affectionately call your child or pet "little bugger," you might want to reconsider doing so in pretty much any other English-speaking country. In most other places, from Canada to Australia, it is commonly used as an expletive similar to the f-word. 文本来源:佛山英语培训 首选爱德华国际英语 |
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