flake

noun
🔊/fleɪk/
🔊/fleɪk/
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  1. a small, very thin layer or piece of something, especially one that has broken off from something larger小薄片;(尤指)碎片
    • flakes of snow/paint雪花;剥落的片片油漆
    • dried onion flakes干洋葱皮片
    see also cornflakes, snowflake, soap flakesTopics Weatherc2
  2. (North American English, informal) a person who is strange or unusual or who forgets things easily古怪的人;奇特的人;健忘的人
  3. Word Originnoun Middle English: the immediate source is unknown, the senses perhaps deriving from different words; probably of Germanic origin and related to flag ‘flagstone’ and flaw.

flake

verb
🔊/fleɪk/
🔊/fleɪk/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they flake
🔊/fleɪk/
🔊/fleɪk/
he / she / it flakes
🔊/fleɪks/
🔊/fleɪks/
past simple flaked
🔊/fleɪkt/
🔊/fleɪkt/
past participle flaked
🔊/fleɪkt/
🔊/fleɪkt/
-ing form flaking
🔊/ˈfleɪkɪŋ/
🔊/ˈfleɪkɪŋ/
Phrasal Verbs
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  1. [intransitive] flake (off) to fall off in small thin pieces(成小薄片)脱落,剥落
    • You could see bare wood where the paint had flaked off.油漆剥落处可以看见光秃秃的木头。🔊🔊
    • His skin was dry and flaking.他的皮肤干燥,脱皮屑。🔊🔊
  2. [transitive, intransitive] flake (something) to break something, especially fish or other food into small thin pieces; to fall into small thin pieces把(鱼、食物等)切成薄片;成为薄片
    • Flake the tuna and add to the sauce.把金枪鱼切成片,加上调味汁。🔊🔊
    • flaked almonds杏仁片
  3. Word Originverb Middle English: the immediate source is unknown, the senses perhaps deriving from different words; probably of Germanic origin and related to flag ‘flagstone’ and flaw. flake out. sense 1 late 15th cent. (in the senses ‘become languid’ and (of a garment) ‘fall in folds’): variant of obsolete flack and the verb flag ‘to become tired’. The current sense dates from the 1940s.