don

noun
🔊/dɒn/
🔊/dɑːn/
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  1. (British English) a teacher at a university, especially Oxford or Cambridge(尤指牛津大学和剑桥大学的)大学教师
    • an Oxford don牛津大学教师
    see also donnishTopics Educationc2
  2. (often used as a title常用作头衔) a Spanish gentleman
    • She imagined a Spanish don living here in the 1800s.她想象着一个西班牙人在1800年代住在这里。
    • Don Jose唐·何塞
  3. (informal) the leader of a group of criminals involved with the Mafia黑手党头目
  4. Word Originnoun early 16th cent. (referring to a Spanish title which came before a male first name): from Spanish, from Latin dominus ‘lord, master’.

don

verb
🔊/dɒn/
🔊/dɑːn/
(formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they don
🔊/dɒn/
🔊/dɑːn/
he / she / it dons
🔊/dɒnz/
🔊/dɑːnz/
past simple donned
🔊/dɒnd/
🔊/dɑːnd/
past participle donned
🔊/dɒnd/
🔊/dɑːnd/
-ing form donning
🔊/ˈdɒnɪŋ/
🔊/ˈdɑːnɪŋ/
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  1. don something to put clothes, etc. on披上;穿上;戴上
    • He donned his jacket and went out.他穿上短上衣出去了。🔊🔊
    Oxford Collocations DictionaryDon is used with these nouns as the object:
    • armour
    • coat
    • costume
    See full entry
    Word Originverb late Middle English: contraction of do on. Compare with doff.

Don

🔊/dɒn/
🔊/dɑːn/
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  1. a first name for boys, short for Donald