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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Phwoar!
Professor David Crystal
Interjections are words which express emotions and some of
them are very old: words like 'cooer', 'gosh' or 'phew'. You don't
get new interjections very often, but one did arrive in the 1980s. It
was a sort of expression of enthusiastic desire - usually by a man
about a woman.
Easy to say 'phwoar!' like that - less easy to write. How do you
spell such a thing? All interjections have this kind of problem. Well,
I've seen it spelled f-o-o-o-a-r for instance…all sorts of things
beginning with 'f'. But the one that is most widely used these days
is p-h-w-o-a-r: 'phwoar!' like that.
Well it's becoming very frequent1, in all kinds of television
programmes I've heard it used recently. Interestingly, although it
was originally2 a male noise, it's now being used by women. Women are using it
back to the men. 'Phwoar' these days could be a man looking at a woman in an
enthusiastic way, or a woman looking at a man in an enthusiastic way. Nobody's
ever said it to me; I just can't be an object of enthusiastic desire I suppose!
1 frequent | |
adj.经常的,频繁的;vt.常到,常去 | |
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2 originally | |
adv.本来,原来,最初,就起源而论,独创地 | |
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