drape: [15] The verb drape originally meant ‘weave wool into cloth’. It was borrowed from Old French draper, which was a derivative of drap ‘cloth’ (source of English drab). This in turn came from late Latin drappus, which was ultimately of Celtic origin. Other offspring of drap which found their way into English are draper [14], drapery [14], and trappings. The use of drapery for ‘loose voluminous cloth covering’ eventually fed back into the verb drape, producing in the 19th century its current sense ‘cover loosely with cloth’. => drab, draper, trappings
drape (v.)
c. 1400, "to ornament with cloth hangings;" mid-15c., "to weave into cloth," from Old French draper "to weave, make cloth" (13c.), from drap "cloth, piece of cloth, sheet, bandage," from Late Latin drapus, perhaps of Gaulish origin (compare Old Irish drapih "mantle, garment"). Meaning "to cover with drapery" is from 1847. Meaning "to cause to hang or stretch out loosely or carelessly" is from 1943. Related: Draped; draping.
drape (n.)
1660s, from drape (v.). Jive talk slang for "suit of clothes" is attested from 1945.
中文解释
1. drap- + -e.2. => ornament with cloth hangings, cover with drapery.
实用例句
1. Don't drape your feet over the chair.
坐得端正些,不要把腿悬空架在椅子边上.
来自辞典例句
2. Humboldt wanted to drape the world in radiance.
洪堡想把世界装饰得光彩夺目.
来自辞典例句
3. You just drape your skirt over it and nobody suspects a thing.
你只需要用裙子把它遮住,没人会发现的.
来自电影对白
4. We have drape for living room, but we need kitchen curtain.
我们为客厅准备了窗帘, 但是我们还需要厨房的窗帘.
来自互联网
5. I'm going to cover you with a drape, across your thighs.