Tie the knot Meaning in English
expression
ˈtaɪ/ /ˈðə/, /ðə/, /ði/ /ˈnɑt
TYE-thuh-NOT
tˈaɪ/ /ðə, ði/ /nˈɒt
TYE-thuh-NOT
释义
To get married; to enter into marriage with someone. This is an informal, idiomatic expression.
用法与细微差别
Very informal and friendly, used mostly in speech or casual writing. Common with 'getting ready to tie the knot,' 'finally tied the knot,' etc. Not used in formal wedding invitations or legal contexts.
Spanish: casarsePortuguese (BR): casar-sePortuguese (PT): casar-seChinese (Simplified): 结婚Chinese (Traditional): 結婚Hindi: शादी करनाArabic: يتزوجBengali: বিয়ে করাRussian: пожениться - выйти замужJapanese: 結婚するVietnamese: kết hôn - cưới (ai đó)Korean: 결혼하다Turkish: evlenmekUrdu: شادی کرناIndonesian: menikah
例句
They're going to tie the knot next spring.
basic
After dating for five years, they finally decided to tie the knot.
basic
My brother will tie the knot this weekend.
basic
Did you hear? Sarah and Mike are about to tie the knot!
natural
A lot of couples choose to tie the knot in a small, private ceremony these days.
natural
We all knew they would tie the knot sooner or later.
natural