snooker

英 ['snuːkə] 美 ['snukɚ]
  • n. 斯诺克台球
  • vt. 阻挠
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snooker 斯诺克,阻挠,欺骗

来自英国驻扎印度时期的俚词词 snooker,新兵,新手,实习军官,该词本身可能改写自 rookie, 俚语发音自 recruit.后用于指斯诺克台球,一个较流行的故事版本是约在 1874 年,当时的陆 军中尉 Sir Neville Chamberlain 和其它军官在击台球的时候,对方一个简单的球没有击入球 网,因此,他就戏谑的称其为 snooker.最终该俚语词神奇的成为了这种台球的正式名称,并 由于在击球中的技巧和战术引申词义阻挠,欺骗等。

snooker
snooker: [19] The most widely canvassed theory of the origins of the term snooker is that it is an adaptation of late 19th-century army slang snooker ‘new cadet’ (‘These embryo generals were called by the somewhat sneering terms of “snookers” or “last-joined”,’ Routledge’s Every Boy’s Annual 1872). The game was invented, as a diversion perhaps from the monotony of billiards, by British army officers serving in India in the 1870s, and the story goes that the term snooker was applied to it by Colonel Sir Neville Chamberlain (1856–1944), at that time a subaltern in the Devonshire Regiment stationed in Jubbulpore, in allusion to the inept play of one of his brother officers.

The ancestry of snooker ‘new cadet’, however, remains a mystery.

snooker (n.)
1889, the game and the word said in an oft-told story to have been invented in India by British officers as a diversion from billiards. The name is perhaps a reference (with regard to the rawness of play by a fellow officer) to British slang snooker "newly joined cadet, first-term student at the R.M. Academy" (1872). Tradition ascribes the coinage to Col. Sir Neville Chamberlain (not the later prime minister of the same name), at the time subaltern in the Devonshire Regiment in Jubbulpore. One of the first descriptions of the game is in A.W. Drayson's "The Art of Practical Billiards for Amateurs" (1889), which states in a footnote "The rules of the game of snooker are the copyright of Messrs. Burroughes & Watts, from whom they may be obtained," they being manufacturers of billiard tables.
snooker (v.)
"to cheat," early 1900s, from snooker (n.). Related: Snookered; snookering.
One of the great amusements of this game is, by accuracy in strength, to place the white ball so close behind a pool ball that the next player cannot hit a pyramid ball, he being "snookered" from all of them. If he fail to strike a pyramid ball, this failure counts one to the adversary. If, however, in attempting to strike a pyramid ball off a cushion, he strike a pool ball, his adversary is credited with as many points as the pool ball that is struck would count if pocketed by rule. [Maj.-Gen. A.W. Drayson, "The Art of Practical Billiards for Amateurs," 1889]
1. Williams has confirmed his position as the world's number one snooker player.
威廉姆斯巩固了自己世界头号斯诺克选手的地位。

来自柯林斯例句

2. They were playing snooker.
他们在打斯诺克。

来自柯林斯例句

3. a full-size snooker table
标准尺寸的斯诺克球台

来自《权威词典》

4. to play snooker
打斯诺克

来自《权威词典》

5. I find snooker riveting though I don't play myself.
虽然我自己不打斯诺克,但是我觉得它挺令人着迷。

来自辞典例句

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