join: [13] Join goes back ultimately to a prehistoric Indo-European *jug- (which also produced English adjust, conjugal, jostle, joust, jugular, juxtapose, subjugate, yoga, and yoke). Its Latin descendant was jungere ‘join’, which passed into English via joign-, the present stem of Old French joindre. The Latin past participial stem junct- gave English junction [18] and juncture [14], and also, via Spanish, junta [17] (etymologically a body of people ‘joined’ together for a particular purpose, hence a ‘governing committee’). => adjust, conjugal, joust, jugular, junction, junta, juxtapose, subjugate, yoga, yoke
join (v.)
c. 1300, from stem of Old French joindre "join, connect, unite; have sexual intercourse with" (12c.), from Latin iungere "to join together, unite, yoke," from PIE *yeug- "to join, unite" (see jugular). Related: Joined; joining. In Middle English, join sometimes is short for enjoin. Join up "enlist in the army" is from 1916. Phrase if you can't beat them, join them is from 1953. To be joined at the hip figuratively ("always in close connection") is by 1986, from the literal sense in reference to "Siamese twins."
1. I know you will join me in wishing them Godspeed.
我知道你会同我一起祝愿他们诸事顺遂的。
来自柯林斯例句
2. Organisers expect up to 300,000 protesters to join the march.
组织者们预计会有多达30万名的抗议者参加这次游行。
来自柯林斯例句
3. Angela says she longs to join an amateur dramatics class.
安杰拉说她渴望参加业余戏剧班。
来自柯林斯例句
4. You have to join the party at grass-roots level.
你得参加基层党组织。
来自柯林斯例句
5. De Gaulle vetoed Britain's application to join the EEC.
join: [13] Join goes back ultimately to a prehistoric Indo-European *jug- (which also produced English adjust, conjugal, jostle, joust, jugular, juxtapose, subjugate, yoga, and yoke). Its Latin descendant was jungere ‘join’, which passed into English via joign-, the present stem of Old French joindre. The Latin past participial stem junct- gave English junction [18] and juncture [14], and also, via Spanish, junta [17] (etymologically a body of people ‘joined’ together for a particular purpose, hence a ‘governing committee’). => adjust, conjugal, joust, jugular, junction, junta, juxtapose, subjugate, yoga, yoke
join (v.)
c. 1300, from stem of Old French joindre "join, connect, unite; have sexual intercourse with" (12c.), from Latin iungere "to join together, unite, yoke," from PIE *yeug- "to join, unite" (see jugular). Related: Joined; joining. In Middle English, join sometimes is short for enjoin. Join up "enlist in the army" is from 1916. Phrase if you can't beat them, join them is from 1953. To be joined at the hip figuratively ("always in close connection") is by 1986, from the literal sense in reference to "Siamese twins."
双语例句
1. I know you will join me in wishing them Godspeed.
我知道你会同我一起祝愿他们诸事顺遂的。
来自柯林斯例句
2. Organisers expect up to 300,000 protesters to join the march.
组织者们预计会有多达30万名的抗议者参加这次游行。
来自柯林斯例句
3. Angela says she longs to join an amateur dramatics class.
安杰拉说她渴望参加业余戏剧班。
来自柯林斯例句
4. You have to join the party at grass-roots level.
你得参加基层党组织。
来自柯林斯例句
5. De Gaulle vetoed Britain's application to join the EEC.