punt
noun /pʌnt/
/pʌnt/
Idioms - enlarge imagea long shallow boat with a flat bottom and square ends which is moved by pushing the end of a long pole against the bottom of a river
方头平底船(用篙撑) Topics Transport by waterc2 - (British English, informal) a bet
赌博;打赌 - The investment is little more than a punt.
这项投资无异于一场赌博。
- The investment is little more than a punt.
- (in rugby or American football
) a long kick made after dropping the ball from your hands橄榄球或美式足球 Topics Sports: ball and racket sportsc2弃踢;碰踢 - the former unit of money in the Republic of Ireland (replaced in 2002 by the euro)
爱尔兰镑(爱尔兰共和国以前的货币单位,于 2002 年为欧元所取代)
词源noun sense 1 Old English, from Latin ponto, denoting a flat-bottomed ferry boat; readopted in the early 16th cent. from Middle Low German punte or Middle Dutch ponte ‘ferry boat’, of the same origin. noun sense 3 mid 19th cent.: probably from dialect punt ‘push forcibly’. Compare with bunt.
Idioms
take/have a punt (British English, informal)
- take/have a punt (on something/somebody) to choose something that involves some risk
赌博;打赌 - Our first impressions aren't great, but I'm willing to take a punt on it.
我们的第一印象并不好,但我愿意赌一把。 - Adventurous new investors might want to have a punt.
富有冒险精神的新投资者可能想赌一把。
- Our first impressions aren't great, but I'm willing to take a punt on it.
- take/have a punt (at something/doing something) to try to do something
赌博;打赌 - He took a punt at explaining why he'd done it.
他试图解释他为什么这样做。
- He took a punt at explaining why he'd done it.