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单词 button
释义

button

See also: Button

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) IPA(key): /ˈbʌ.tən/, /ˈbʌʔ.n̩/, [ˈbʌʔ.tən], [ˈbʌʔ.tⁿn̩]
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ʌtən

Etymology 1

From Middle English boton, botoun, from Old French boton (Modern French bouton), from Old French bouter, boter (to push; thrust), ultimately from a Germanic language. Doublet of Biden. More at butt.

Shirt button (sense 1)
Push button (sense 2)
Buttons on a GUI (sense 3)
badge worn on clothes, fixed with a pin (sense 4)
The button of a violin (sense 22).

Noun

button (plural buttons)

  1. A knob or disc that is passed through a loop or (buttonhole), serving as a fastener. [from mid-13th c.]
    • 1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter I, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., OCLC 222716698:
      I liked the man for his own sake, and even had he promised to turn out a celebrity it would have had no weight with me. I look upon notoriety with the same indifference as on the buttons on a man's shirt-front, or the crest on his note-paper.
    April fastened the buttons of her overcoat to keep out the wind.
  2. A mechanical device meant to be pressed with a finger in order to open or close an electric circuit or to activate a mechanism.
    Pat pushed the button marked "shred" on the blender.
  3. (graphical user interface) An on-screen control that can be selected as an activator of an attached function.
    Click the button that looks like a house to return to your browser's home page.
  4. (US) A badge worn on clothes, fixed with a pin through the fabric.
    The politician wore a bright yellow button with the slogan "Vote Smart" emblazoned on it.
  5. (botany) A bud.
    • c. 1613–1614, Shakespeare, William; Fletcher, John, The Two Noble Kinsmen, act 3, scene 1, lines 4–6:
      O queen Emilia, / Fresher than May, sweeter / Than her gold buttons on the boughs,
  6. The head of an unexpanded mushroom.
  7. (slang) The clitoris.
  8. (curling) The center (bullseye) of the house.
  9. (fencing) The soft circular tip at the end of a foil.
  10. (poker) A plastic disk used to represent the person in last position in a poker game; also dealer's button.
  11. (poker) The player who is last to act after the flop, turn and river, who possesses the button.
  12. (archaic) A person who acts as a decoy.
  13. A raised pavement marker to further indicate the presence of a pavement-marking painted stripe.
  14. (aviation) The end of a runway.
    • 1984, Synopses of Aircraft Accidents: Civil Aircraft in Canada (page 42)
      In attempting to touch down on the button of the runway, he misjudged his altitude and struck a pile of rocks short of the runway. The right wheel was torn off and the gear leg bent backwards.
    • 1999, Les Morrison, Of Luck and War (page 69)
      The second and slightly higher aircraft on the approach showed no reaction to this barrage of pyrotechnics and continued blissfully down toward the button of the runway.
  15. (South Africa, slang) A methaqualone tablet (used as a recreational drug).
  16. A piece of wood or metal, usually flat and elongated, turning on a nail or screw, to fasten something, such as a door.
  17. A globule of metal remaining on an assay cupel or in a crucible, after fusion.
  18. A knob; a small ball; a small, roundish mass.
  19. A small white blotch on a cat's coat.
  20. (UK, archaic) A unit of length equal to 112 inch.
  21. (generally with the) The means for initiating a nuclear strike or similar cataclysmic occurrence.
    • 1986, "Weird Al" Yankovic (lyrics and music), “Christmas at Ground Zero”, in Polka Party!:
      It's Christmas at ground zero / The button has been pressed / The radio / Just let us know / That this is not a test
  22. (lutherie) In an instrument of the violin family, the near-semicircular shape extending from the top of the back plate of the instrument, meeting the heel of the neck.
  23. (lutherie) Synonym of endbutton, part of a violin-family instrument.
  24. (lutherie, bowmaking) Synonym of adjuster.
  25. The least amount of care or interest; a whit or jot.
    • 1863, Sheridan Le Fanu, The House by the Churchyard:
      'She has heard from us this morning,' said Mr. Gamble, grinning on his watch, 'and she knows all by this time, and 'tisn't a button to her.'
    • 1922, Van Tassel Sutphen, In Jeopardy:
      As to that I did not care a button, but I had wanted to hear about Betty, and now her name was barely mentioned.
  26. (television) The punchy or suspenseful line of dialogue that concludes a scene.
    Synonym: blow
    • 2006, David Kukoff, Vault Guide to Television Writing Careers (page 77)
      One thing you definitely don't want to do is write past the button. For example, a scene's natural button might run something like this:
      TONY: That kind of talk is exactly what I'm talking about.
      Whereas an example of writing past the button would sound something like this:
      TONY: That kind of talk is exactly what I'm talking about.
      CARMELLA: Okay. 'Bye.
      TONY: Bye.
  27. (comedy) The final joke at the end of a comedic act (such as a sketch, set, or scene).
    • 2002 November 8, Jean Ann Wright, “Animation Comedy and Gag Writing”, in Animation World Network:
      Scenes usually go out on a laugh line, a stinger or a button. End your script with a twist!
    • 2014 June 18, Daniel Schindel, “3 Comedy Sketches that Changed Key and Peele's Lives”, in Los Angeles Magazine:
      With our show, one thing we wanted to do was give our best effort to always put a button on the scene.
    • 2016 July 12, Jessica Goldstein, “How to best end a comedy sketch? It’s hard to go wrong with gruesome death”, in The Washington Post:
      Is there a best way to end a comedy sketch? Endings — or outs, or buttons as writers call them — are notoriously difficult to nail. The ideal ending needs to be satisfying and surprising while staying true to the comedic game that preceded it.
  28. (slang) A button man; a professional assassin.
    • 1973, Mario Puzo, Francis Ford Coppola, The Godfather Part II (screenplay, second draft)
      FREDO: Mikey, why would they ever hit poor old Frankie Five-Angels? I loved that ole sonuvabitch. I remember when he was just a 'button,' when we were kids.
  29. The final segment of a rattlesnake's rattle.
    • 1936, Laurence Monroe Klauber, A Statistical Study of the Rattlesnakes, page 26:
      Hardly a rattler is ever reported in the newspapers unless it is stated to have had "blank rattles and a button". But here button usually means the terminal lobe of the last rattle, even though the string may not be complete, the true button and additional rattles having been lost.
  30. (dated, Southern US) A clove (of garlic).
  31. (zoology) Pedicle; the attachment point for antlers in cervids.
Usage notes

For senses 2 and 3, a button is often marked by a verb rather than a noun, and the button itself is named with the verb followed by button. For example, a button to start something is generally called a start button.

Hypernyms
  • (graphical user interface): widget
Hyponyms
  • bachelor's button
  • belly button
  • billy buttons
  • eject button
  • fire button
  • hot button
  • panic button
  • power button
  • radio button
  • red button
  • shirt-button
  • snooze button
  • start button
  • stay-button
  • tummy button
Derived terms
  • bachelor's button
  • bachelors button
  • bebuttoned
  • beg button
  • bell button
  • belly-button
  • belly button
  • belly button ring
  • big red button
  • billy buttons
  • blue button
  • boss button
  • boy in buttons
  • bright as a button
  • bright as a new button
  • button accordion
  • buttonball
  • buttonbush
  • button cell
  • button day
  • button ear
  • buttonfront
  • button grass
  • button-hole
  • button hole
  • buttonhole
  • buttonhook
  • buttonize
  • buttonless
  • button lift
  • buttonlike
  • button lock
  • buttonmaker
  • buttonmaking
  • button man
  • button masher
  • button mashing
  • buttonmould
  • button mushroom
  • button nose
  • buttonologist
  • buttonology
  • button punch
  • button-quail
  • buttonquail
  • button scurvy
  • button smuggler
  • button-up
  • button up one's lip
  • buttonweed
  • buttonwillow
  • buttonwood
  • button wrinklewort
  • buttony
  • buzz button
  • call button
  • campaign button
  • care a button
  • cheese button
  • chest button
  • chicken button
  • chicory button
  • collar-button abscess
  • cough button
  • cute as a button
  • disbutton
  • Dorset button
  • electric button
  • endbutton
  • end button
  • end-button
  • fire button
  • fussbutton
  • hamburger button
  • happy button
  • high button shoe
  • hold by the button
  • hot-button
  • hot button
  • keybutton
  • love button
  • multibuttoned
  • Murphy's button
  • neat as a button
  • on the button
  • option button
  • panic button
  • placebo button
  • prebutton
  • press someone's buttons
  • push-button, push button, pushbutton
  • push someone's buttons
  • push the right buttons
  • Quaker buttons
  • radial button
  • radio button
  • reset button
  • sew buttons
  • sew buttons on your underwear
  • shirt-button
  • sleeve-button
  • snooze button
  • spin button
  • Start button
  • stay-button
  • Szechuan button
  • tummy button
  • turn button
Descendants
  • German: Button
  • Hindi: बटन (baṭan)
  • Gujarati: બટન (baṭan)
  • Korean: 버튼 (beoteun)
  • Maori: pātene
  • Urdu: بٹن (baṭan)
Translations
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
See also
  • switch
  • toggle
  • trigger

Etymology 2

From Middle English butonen, botonen, from the noun (see above).

Verb

button (third-person singular simple present buttons, present participle buttoning, simple past and past participle buttoned)

  1. (transitive) To fasten with a button. [from late 14th c.]
    • 1838 March – 1839 October, Charles Dickens, chapter 50, in The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, London: Chapman and Hall, [], published 1839, OCLC 1057107260:
      He was a tall, fat, long-bodied man, buttoned up to the throat in a tight green coat.
  2. (intransitive) To be fastened by a button or buttons.
    The coat will not button.
  3. (Can we clean up(+) this sense?) (informal) To stop talking.
Derived terms
  • buttonable
  • button-down
  • buttoner
  • button one's lip
  • button up
  • button it
  • misbutton
  • rebutton
  • unbutton
Translations

Further reading

  • button on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • not but

Middle English

Noun

button

  1. Alternative form of botoun
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