1.茅舍,棚舍
2.陋室,放杂物的小房间
3.窑的圆锥形外壳
1.a small and dirty or messy house
1.He dreamt an old dream of a hovel by the sea, three dogs whimpering, a woman's tears.
他梦到一个曾经做过的梦:海边的旅馆,三只狗在呜咽,一个女人在流泪。
2.He had led her to the rendezvous in a hovel on the city's outskirts, leaving Onn just at dusk.
他俩在薄暮时分离开安城,他领着她来到郊外一间约定好的小茅舍。
3.Never shall he be wed to the child of such a wretched soul living in this miserable hovel.
他决不能和住在这个破茅屋里的可怜虫的孩子结婚。
4.The hovel of a cutter of wood into lengths for burning, was the only house at that end; all else was wall.
那里唯一的房屋是一个把柴锯成短段便于烧壁炉的工人的小棚屋,此外便只有墙壁。
5.Kaz's family should content themselves with the hovel, because by the standards of Hiroshima after the bomb, it was a mansion.
和子的家人对他们的棚子应该满足了,因为按原子弹爆炸后广岛的标准,那就是一所豪宅。
6.Now, it chanced that an old man sleeping in a hovel on a pallet of straw was, awakened by these cries.
恰好有位老人正在一个窝棚里的茅草床上睡觉,他被这些喊声惊醒了。
7.There was no bread in the hovel, but there was still tobacco.
穷窟里已没有面包,却还有烟。
8.When China effectively embraced capitalism in the 1980s, Huaxi was an agrarian hovel, reachable by dirt roads. Mr.
上世纪80年代,当中国以实际行动拥抱资本主义时,华西还是一片乡间低矮的屋棚,道路泥泞。
9.You are not here to live in a hovel, to dress in rags, or to go hungry.
你来人世走一遭并不是为了住在牛棚里,并不是为了衣不遮体,并不是为了挨饿。
10.This was our word for a hovel, built by us of salvaged boards or crates and big enough for us to crawl into for secret conclaves.
这样的陋室是我们用废弃的纸板或货箱搭建而成的,其大小只可供我们爬进去召开秘密会议,我们管这样的陋室叫“bunk”。