hallow
                    
      英 [ˈhæl.əʊ]                            
                        美 [ˈhæl.oʊ]                    
                    
                    
                    
                 
                
             
                        
            
                1. 万圣节halloween就来源于此单词。
2. Halloween: Scottish shortening of Allhallow-even "Eve of All Saints, last night of October".
3. 形近词:wallow, tallow, swallow, shallow, sallow, hallow, callow, fallow.            
                        
            
                
- hallow
- 
hallow: [OE] Hallow is essentially the same word as holy. The noun, as in Halloween, the eve of All Hallows, or All Saints, comes from a noun use of Old English Hālig, which as an adjective developed into modern English holy; and the verb was formed in prehistoric Germanic times from the root *khailag-, source also of holy.
 => holy
- hallow (v.)
- Old English halgian "to make holy, sanctify; to honor as holy, consecrate, ordain," related to halig "holy," from Proto-Germanic *hailagon (cognates: Old Saxon helagon, Middle Dutch heligen, Old Norse helga), from PIE root *kailo- "whole, uninjured, of good omen" (see health). Used in Christian translations to render Latin sanctificare. Related: Hallowed; hallowing.
- hallow (n.)
- "holy person, saint," Old English haliga, halga, from hallow (v.). Obsolete except in Halloween.
 
                
- 1. Hallow is usually used as a verb. 
- 
Hallow一 词经常被用做动词.
- 2. An open enemy is better than a hallow friend. 
- 公开的敌人胜过虚假的朋友.
- 3. A charm from the skies seems hallow us there. 
- 好似从空而降的魔力,使我们依恋着家的神圣.
- 4. Hallow out the tomatoes a spoon. 
- 以汤匙把番茄的中间部份挖空.
- 5. But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate - we can not 6 consecrate hallow - this ground. 
- 可是, 从更广的意义上说, 我们并不能奉献这块土地 - 们不能使之神圣-们也不能使之光荣.