Gird Meaning in English
word
释义
To fasten or encircle with a belt or band, or to prepare oneself for action. Used both literally (tying something) and figuratively (getting ready).
用法与细微差别
'Gird' is formal and somewhat old-fashioned. Common phrases: 'gird your loins' (prepare for something difficult). Literal meaning (tie or encircle) is rare; most often used figuratively. Not to be confused with 'grid' (network of lines).
Spanish: ceñir - rodearPortuguese (BR): cingir - rodearPortuguese (PT): cingir - rodearChinese (Simplified): 束上 - 环绕Chinese (Traditional): 束上 - 環繞Hindi: कसना - तैयार करनाArabic: يَشدّ - يُحيطBengali: বেঁধে নেওয়া - প্রস্তুত হওয়াRussian: опоясать - подготовитьсяJapanese: 締める - 準備するVietnamese: thắt (dây) - chuẩn bị (cho điều gì đó khó khăn)Korean: 동여매다 - 대비하다Turkish: kuşanmak - hazırlık yapmakUrdu: کمر باندھنا - تیار ہوناIndonesian: mengencangkan (ikat pinggang) - bersiap-siap
例句
Soldiers must gird themselves before battle.
basic
Villages were girded by stone walls.
basic
It's time to gird yourself for a busy week.
natural
He girded his waist with a leather belt.
basic
She told us to gird our loins for the upcoming changes at work.
natural
You'd better gird yourself—this exam is tougher than you think!
natural