十二星座ssat,sat单词
摩羯座Capricorn
caprice
[17] Etymologically, caprice means ‘hedgehog-head’. It comes, via French caprice, from an Italian noun capriccio, formed from capo ‘head’ (from Latin caput) and riccio ‘hedgehog’ (from Latin ericeus, source of English urchin). Originally this meant ‘horror, shuddering’, the reference being to the hair of a terror-stricken person standing on end. The word’s present-day meaning ‘whim, fickleness’ seems to be partly due to association with Italian capra ‘goat’, from the animal’s frisky behaviour
水瓶座Aquarius
双鱼座Pisces
piscatorial
pis ·ca ·to ·ri ·al /ˌpɪsk əˈt ɔːriəl/adj formal
[Date: 1800-1900; Language: Latin;Origin:piscatorius, from piscis'fish' ]
relating to fishing or people who go fishing
白羊座Aries
金牛座Taurus
双子座Gemini
巨蟹座Cancer
狮子座Leo
处女座Virgo
Virginia
VA a state on the east coast of the US, south of Washington, D.C., which is one of the 13 original states of the US →West Virginia
[U]
a type of tobacco grown originally in the US state of Virginia
virile
vir ·ile /ˈvɪra ɪl US ˈvɪr əl/adj
[Date: 1400-1500; Language: Old French;Origin:viril, from Latin virilis, from vir'man' ] having or showing traditionally male qualities such as strength, courage etc - use this to show approval
→macho
virtue
[13] Latin virtūs ‘bravery, strength, capacity, skill, merit’ was derived from vir ‘man’ (source also of English virago ‘manlike woman’ [14] and virile [15]), and so etymologically it
denoted ‘manliness’. It passed into English via Old French vertu. Derivatives include virtual
[14] which, preserving another semantic aspect of its source, originally meant ‘having
power, in effect’, but by the 17th century had evolved into its modern sense ‘so in effect or in essence’; and virtuoso [17], which was borrowed from Italian and goes back to the ancestral sense ‘skill’. , , ,
天秤座Libra
天蝎座Scorpio
scorpion
[Date: 1100-1200; Language: Old French;Origin:Latin scorpio, from Greek skorpios] a tropical animal like an insect with a curving tail and a poisonous sting
射手座Sagittarius