English主要词典
leg
Universal Words
noun, verb
noun
part of body
1 [C] one of the long parts that connect the feet to the rest of the body:
Sit on the floor, stretching your legs out in front of you. * I broke my leg playing football. * How many legs does a centipede have? * front / back legs * forelegs / hind legs * a wooden leg
seealsoBOWLEGS, DADDY-LONG-LEGS, LEGGY, LEGROOM, PEGLEG, SEALEGS
meat
2 [C,U] ~ (of sth) the leg of an animal, especially the top part, cooked and eaten:
frogs' legs * chicken legs * roast leg of lamb
of trousers / pants
3 [C] the part of a pair of trousers/pants that covers the leg:
a trouser / pant leg * These jeans are too long in the leg.
of table / chair
4 [C] one of the long thin parts on the bottom of a table, chair, etc. that support it:
a chair / table leg
-legged
5 (in adjectives) having the number or type of legs mentioned:
a three-legged stool * a long-legged insect
HELPNOTE When -legged is used with numbers, it is nearly always pronounced .
seealsoCROSS-LEGGED
of journey / race
6 [C] ~ (of sth) one part of a journey or race:
The final leg of the trip was by donkey. * The Spanish team won the third leg.
sports game
7 [C] one of a series of matches played between the same opponents in a sports competition
IDIOMS
break a leg! (spoken) used to wish sb good luck
get your leg over (BrE, informal) to have sex
not have a leg to stand on (informal) to be in a position where you are unable to prove sth or explain why sth is reasonable:
Without written evidence, we don't have a leg to stand on.
moreatARMn., FASTadv., LASTadj., PULLv., SHAKEv., STRETCHv., TAILn., TALKv.
seealsoLEG-UP
verb
(-gg-)
IDIOMS
leg it (informal, especially BrE) to run, especially in order to escape from sb:
We saw the police coming and legged it down the road.