vs.

    hippie 对比 gypsy
    分析 词典对比 组词对比
    (1).中国译典 hippie gypsy
    n.
    嬉皮士;颓废派的成员;
    扩展解释:n.
    嬉皮的
    n.
    ①吉普赛人;茨冈人;
    扩展解释:n.
    1. 吉卜赛人;像吉卜赛人的人,2. 吉卜赛语,3. 歌舞剧中的歌舞队员,a.1. 吉卜赛人的;像吉卜赛人的,2. 【口】无照的;没有加入工会的
    n. 【船舶工程】
    吉普赛人,绞绳筒;绞车副卷筒,锚机滚筒
    n.
    歌舞剧中女舞者,; 流浪者
    (2).维基词典 hippie gypsy
    A teenager who imitated the beatniks.
    One who chooses not to pacifism or anti-war sentiment, etc.
    (modern slang) A person who keeps an unkempt or sloppy appearance and wearing unusually long hair (for males), and because of it, often stereotyped as a deadbeat.
    Someone who dresses in a hippie style.
    One who is hip.
    Of or pertaining to hippies.
    Not conforming to generally accepted standards.
    alternative form of Gypsy|nodot=1: a member of the Romani people.
    An itinerant person or any person, not necessarily Romani; a tinker, a traveller or a carny.
    A move in contra dancing in which two dancers walk in a circle around each other while maintaining eye contact (but not touching as in a swing). whole gyp, half gyp, and gypsy meltdown, in which this step precedes a swing.}}
    A person with a dark complexion.
    A sly, roguish woman.
    alternative form of Gypsy|nodot=1: of or belonging to the Romani people or one of it sub-groups (Roma, Sinti, Romanichel, etc).
    Of or having the qualities of an itinerant person or group with qualities traditionally ascribed to Romani people; making a living from dishonest practices or theft etc.
    To roam around the country like a gypsy.
    To perform the gypsy step in contra dancing.
    (3).韦伯斯特词典 hippie gypsy
    Someone who rejects the established culture, dresses casually, and advocates extreme liberalism in politics and lifestyle. Used especially of those in the late 1960’s, mostly in their late teens and early twenties, who conspicuously rejected traditional culture by dressing casually, if male wore their hair long, and wore folksy or used clothing adorned with beads, headbands, and often flowers; they emphasized the importance of love and direct personal relations rather than success-oriented businesslike behavior, strove for spontaneity, sometimes lived communally, and in some cases tried to expand their consciousness by various psychological techniques such as meditation, or through the use of consciousness-altering drugs such as marijuana or LSD. By the end of the Vietnam war in the 1970’s, the numbers of people living a visibly hippie lifestyle had dramatically decreased, though some people continue to develop similar views and live with the same outlook.
    One of a vagabond race, whose tribes, coming originally from India, entered Europe in the 14th or 15th century, and are now scattered over Turkey, Russia, Hungary, Spain, England, etc., living by theft, fortune telling, horsejockeying, tinkering, etc. Cf. Bohemian, Romany.
    The language used by the gypsies.
    A dark-complexioned person.
    A cunning or crafty person.
    Pertaining to, or suitable for, gypsies.
    To play the gypsy; to picnic in the woods.
    简典