thaw

thaw — 動詞

IPA/θɔː/
KK[θˈɔ]IPA/θɔː/
  • thawpresent simple I / you / we / they
  • thawshe / she / it
  • thawedpast simple
  • thawing-ing form

1. to cause frozen things (ice, snow, or food items) to become no longer frozen whe

1.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

融化;解凍

冰或食物遇暖解凍變軟

to cause frozen things (ice, snow, or food items) to become no longer frozen when the temperature rises, or to change in this way naturally — for example, ice thawing on a pond after a warm day, or a cook thawing frozen chicken for dinner.

例句

The ice on the lake began to thaw after three days of warm rain.

下了三天溫暖的雨之後,湖面的冰開始融化。

intransitive: ice / snow / permafrost thaws

Kevin forgot to thaw the chicken before putting it in the oven.

Kevin 忘了在放進烤箱之前先解凍雞肉。

transitive: thaw + frozen food object

同義詞
  • melt

    wider use — for any solid becoming liquid (ice cream, butter, metal); 'melt' does not necessarily imply it was frozen

反義詞
  • freeze

    the opposite process — from liquid to solid because of cold

文法句型

thaw (something)

thaw out

用法筆記

This sense can be used with or without an object. With an object ('thaw the meat'), it means making something unfrozen. Without an object ('the ice thawed'), it describes a natural change. The phrasal verb 'thaw out' is also common in informal speech.

常見錯誤

I thawed the butter on the counter.
The butter melted on the counter.
💡'thaw' is for something made frozen by cold returning to its natural state; 'melt' is for any solid turning to liquid from heat. 'The ice melted' is perfectly fine English — ice is frozen water, so both 'thaw' and 'melt' can describe it, but with different emphasis: 'thaw' focuses on it no longer being frozen; 'melt' focuses on it becoming liquid.
I melted the frozen fish in the fridge overnight.
I thawed the frozen fish in the fridge overnight.
💡'thaw' is the correct word for defrosting food.

2. to start acting in a warmer, less guarded way toward someone after a time of col

2.動詞不及物C1
釋義

變和緩;解凍

關係、氣氛變得友善融洽

to start acting in a warmer, less guarded way toward someone after a time of coldness, awkwardness, or distance — for example, two colleagues who had been arguing finally thawing toward each other during a coffee break.

例句

Eli thawed a little after his brother told a silly joke about their shared childhood.

Eli 的兄弟講了一個他們童年時代的蠢笑話後,他的態度稍微緩和了一些。

thaw after [something happens]

The relationship between the two neighbours slowly thawed over cups of tea.

兩位鄰居一起喝了幾杯茶之後,彼此之間的關係慢慢融冰了。

同義詞
  • warm up

    more informal; can be used for both people and social situations

  • relent

    implies giving up resistance or harshness, often after pressure

反義詞
  • freeze up

    to become tense, silent, or distant in a social situation

  • harden

    to become more strict or unfriendly in attitude

文法句型

thaw (toward / between)

用法筆記

Often used with 'toward' or 'between' to show the relationship that is warming. Common subjects: atmosphere, tension, silence, coldness, relationship. This sense does not take an object.

常見錯誤

I thawed when my friend apologized.' (vague)
I thawed toward my friend after she apologized for forgetting my birthday.
💡add 'toward' or a similar preposition to make the object of the new friendliness clear.

thaw — 名詞

IPA/θɔː/
KK[θˈɔ]IPA/θɑː/