puddle: [14] Old English pudd, a word of unknown origin but related to German dialect pfudel ‘puddle’, denoted ‘ditch, furrow’, and puddle was a diminutive formed from it. In Middle English, it was often used for quite large bodies of water, what we would now call a pond or pool, but by the 17th century it had largely narrowed down to its present-day meaning. => poodle
puddle (n.)
early 14c., "small pool of dirty water," frequentative or diminutive of Old English pudd "ditch," related to German pudeln "to splash in water" (compare poodle). Originally used of pools and ponds as well.
puddle (v.)
"to dabble in water, poke in mud," mid-15c., from puddle (n.); extended sense in iron manufacture is "turn and stir (molten iron) in a furnace." Related: Puddled; puddling.
实用例句
1. The dog licked up water in a puddle.
狗舔水坑中的水喝.
来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
2. She used to make all these chocolate puddle puddings, you know, with the sauce underneath and all this sort of thing.
她过去喜欢做巧克力夹心布丁,你知道吧,就是里面有巧克力酱之类的东西的。
来自柯林斯例句
3. I was wet and I must somewhere have stepped in a puddle.
我身上湿了,一定是在什么地方踩进过水坑.
来自辞典例句
4. The boy hopped the mud puddle and ran down the walk.