nurse

/nɜːs/ (bre, ipa) · [nˈɚs] /nɜːrs/ (ame, ipa) · [nˈɚs] /ˈnərs/ (ame, mw) · [nˈɚs] /nɝːs/ (ame, ipa)

nurse — 名詞

  • nursesingular
  • nursesplural

1. someone whose work is to give medical care to ill or hurt patients, and also the

1.名詞A2
釋義

護士

照顧病患的醫護人員

someone whose work is to give medical care to ill or hurt patients, and also the title used for that worker.

例句

Nadia asked the nurse whether her father could drink water yet.

Nadia 問護士,她父親現在能不能喝水了。

ask the nurse whether + clause

A night nurse checked Karim's temperature every hour after the surgery.

夜班護士在手術後每小時替 Karim 量一次體溫。

night nurse + checked + patient detail

同義詞
  • carer

    broader word that is not limited to medical work

  • medical attendant

    formal and much less common in everyday speech

文法句型

ask/call the nurse

school/night/ward nurse

用法筆記

Often appears with compounds such as 'school nurse' and 'night nurse'. The word can name both the profession and the person who is caring for a patient at that moment.

2. a woman paid to look after babies or very young children, especially in the fami

2.名詞B2
釋義

保母

受雇在家照看幼兒的女子

a woman paid to look after babies or very young children, especially in the family's home.

例句

The twins ran to their nurse when thunder shook the windows.

打雷震動窗戶時,那對雙胞胎就跑向他們的保母。

their nurse = child carer in the home

In the diary, the nurse walked the baby around the garden at dusk.

在日記裡,那位保母在黃昏時推著嬰兒繞花園散步。

the nurse + cared for the baby

同義詞
  • nanny

    the usual modern word in everyday British English

  • childminder

    often used for someone caring for children as a regular job

文法句型

hire/keep a nurse

the children's nurse

用法筆記

This sense is mainly found in older British writing. In present-day everyday English, people more often say 'nanny' or another childcare term.

nurse — 動詞