embargo

英 [em'bɑːgəʊ; ɪm-] 美[ɪm'bɑrɡo]
  • vt. 禁止出入港口;禁止或限制贸易;征用或扣押
  • n. 禁令;禁止;封港令

词态变化


复数: embargoes;第三人称单数: embargoes;过去式: embargoed;过去分词: embargoed;现在分词: embargoing;

中文词源


embargo 贸易禁运令

em-, 进入,使。bar, 阻止。-g, 来自形容词后缀-ic.

英文词源


embargo
embargo: [16] Something that has been embargoed has been literally ‘placed behind bars’ (compare EMBARRASS). The word comes from Vulgar Latin *imbarricāre, which was formed from the Latin prefix in- ‘in’ and Vulgar Latin *barra (source of English bar). This passed into Spanish as embargar ‘impede, restrain’, and its derived noun embargo was borrowed into English.
=> bar, barrier
embargo (n.)
"order forbidding ships from certain other nations from entering or leaving a nation's ports," 1590s, from Spanish embargo "seizure, arrest; embargo," noun of action from embargar "restrain, impede, arrest, embargo," from Vulgar Latin *imbarricare, from assimilated form of in- "into, upon" (see in- (2)) + *barra (see bar (n.1)). As a verb, from 1640s. Related: Embargoed.

双语例句


1. Britain was signalling its readiness to have the embargo lifted.
英国表示愿意取消贸易禁令。

来自柯林斯例句

2. The ship was impounded under the terms of the UN trade embargo.
该船因触犯联合国贸易禁运条款而被扣押。

来自柯林斯例句

3. The embargo won't hurt us because we're used to going without.
禁运不会对我们有妨害,因为我们已经习惯了没有供应的日子。

来自柯林斯例句

4. The embargo would only hurt innocent civilians.
禁运只会殃及无辜的百姓。

来自柯林斯例句

5. an arms embargo
武器禁运

来自《权威词典》