creep
Reikšmė
-
- To move slowly with the abdomen close to the ground.
- To grow across a surface rather than upwards.
- To move slowly and quietly in a particular direction.
- To make small gradual changes, usually in a particular direction.
- To move in a stealthy or secret manner; to move imperceptibly or clandestinely; to steal in; to insinuate itself or oneself.
- To slip, or to become slightly displaced.
- To move or behave with servility or exaggerated humility; to fawn.
- To have a sensation as of insects creeping on the skin of the body; to crawl.
- To drag in deep water with creepers, as for recovering a submarine cable.
- (slang) To covertly have sex (with a person other than one's primary partner); to cheat with.
Dažnis
Tariama kaip (IPA)
/kɹiːp/
Etimologija
From Middle English crepen, from Old English crēopan (“to creep, crawl”), from Proto-West Germanic *kreupan, from Proto-Germanic *kreupaną (“to twist, creep”), from Proto-Indo-European *grewbʰ- (“to turn, wind”). Cognate with West Frisian krippe, krûpe, West Frisian crjippa (“to creep”), Low German krepen and krupen, Dutch kruipen (“to creep, crawl”), Middle High German kriefen (“to creep”), Danish krybe (“to creep”), Norwegian krype (“to creep”), Swedish krypa (“to creep, crawl”), Icelandic krjúpa (“to stoop”). The noun is derived from the verb. Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *grewbʰ- Proto-Indo-European *-yéti Proto-Germanic *kreupaną Proto-West Germanic *kreupan Old English crēopan Middle English crepen English creep
Pagerinkite savo tarimą
Pradėkite mokytis anglų naudodami learnfeliz .
Treniruokitės kalbėti ir įsiminti " creep " ir daug kitų žodžių ir sakinių anglų .
Eikite į mūsų kurso puslapį anglų
Notes
Sign in to write sticky notes