pucker

pucker — 動詞

IPA/ˈpʌkə(r)/
KK[pˈʌkɚ]IPA/ˈpʌkər/
  • puckerpresent simple I / you / we / they
  • puckershe / she / it
  • puckeredpast simple
  • puckering-ing form

1. to pull skin, fabric, or another flexible surface together so that fine gathered

1.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

皺起;起皺

皮膚或布料縮攏形成細小皺紋

to pull skin, fabric, or another flexible surface together so that fine gathered lines or ridges appear on it; or for such a surface to develop those lines or ridges naturally.

例句

Tamar puckered her lips and blew her father a kiss from across the room.

Tamar 噘起嘴唇,從房間另一頭給了父親一個飛吻。

transitive: pucker + body part (lips)

The linen curtains puckered badly after being soaked in a rainstorm.

那套亞麻窗簾淋過一場大雨後嚴重起皺了。

intransitive: fabric + puckered

同義詞
  • wrinkle

    more general term; can apply to paper and skin in any context, while 'pucker' implies being drawn together

  • crease

    suggests a sharper, more defined line, often from folding or pressing

  • crumple

    implies rougher, messier wrinkling, usually of fabric or paper

反義詞
  • smooth

    to make a surface flat and free of folds or bumps

  • flatten

    to press something so that it becomes level and unwrinkled

文法句型

pucker + body part or fabric (transitive)

pucker + up + body part (phrasal)

pucker (intransitive, no object)

用法筆記

Commonly describes lips or eyebrows drawing together (transitive), or fabric/skin forming unwanted wrinkles (intransitive). The phrasal form 'pucker up' is frequent in informal contexts, especially for preparing to be kissed.

常見錯誤

She puckered her nose at the bad smell.
She wrinkled her nose at the bad smell.
💡'wrinkle' is the usual verb for the nose; 'pucker' is for lips or the brow.
The dress was puckered on purpose by the designer.
The dress was gathered on purpose by the designer.
💡For intentional sewing folds, use 'gather' or 'tuck', not 'pucker', which suggests unwanted creases.

pucker — 名詞

IPA/ˈpʌk.ər/
KK[pˈʌkɚ]IPA/ˈpʌk.ɚ/