| 释义 | 
		Definition of hobbit in English: hobbitnoun ˈhɒbɪtˈhäbət A member of an imaginary race similar to humans, of small size and with hairy feet, in stories by J. R. R. Tolkien. 穴居矮人(J·R·R·托尔金的故事中一种想象的种族,身材矮小,脚上多毛,类似人类) Example sentencesExamples -  Because of its size and location, many hobbits desire to live there.
 -  Creatures such as elves, ogres, hobbits, dwarfs, and orcs roamed this realm freely.
 -  After a few moments of silence, the hobbits begin the story of their nine-day ordeal.
 -  But the hobbits, like the Riders and the other mortal inhabitants of Middle-Earth, seem to have no religion at all, not even a pagan one.
 -  The hobbits needed to appear about three to four feet tall - tiny compared with the seven-foot Gandalf.
 -  Aragorn, thinking that the hobbits are dead, kicks a discarded orc helmet and falls to his knees howling in anguish.
 -  We are watching hobbits go on a journey to destroy a magic ring.
 -  I would have liked to have seen more of the world from a hobbit's point of view.
 -  As they leave Rivendell, he teaches the hobbits swordsmanship.
 -  Now hobbits and men and elf and dwarf are scattered across Middle Earth, the story jumping back and forth between them.
 -  In Middle Earth, there live humans, and hobbits, which are very much similar to miniature people.
 -  After a few years, he once again splashed back onto the scene as Frodo, the hobbit we've all come to know and love, in The Lord of the Rings trilogy.
 -  We were living in this outer realm, where hobbits existed and wars were fought between inhuman creatures.
 -  I keep looking at the hobbits ' scarves and wondering if I couldn't knit one for myself.
 -  In his hobbits he created an image of heroic action that was both admirable and plausible.
 -  The four main hobbits were pretty good, although the foolishness of Pippin gets rather tiresome.
 -  As he travels to Mount Doom with the hobbits, Sam and Frodo, their relationship becomes more precarious.
 -  This hair is used to keep the hobbit's feet warm because they do not wear boots.
 
 
 Origin1937: invented by Tolkien in his book The Hobbit, and said by him to mean 'hole-dweller'. RhymesCobbett, gobbet, obit, probit    Definition of hobbit in US English: hobbitnounˈhäbət A member of an imaginary race similar to humans, of small size and with hairy feet, in stories by J. R. R. Tolkien. 穴居矮人(J·R·R·托尔金的故事中一种想象的种族,身材矮小,脚上多毛,类似人类) Example sentencesExamples -  As he travels to Mount Doom with the hobbits, Sam and Frodo, their relationship becomes more precarious.
 -  I keep looking at the hobbits ' scarves and wondering if I couldn't knit one for myself.
 -  Creatures such as elves, ogres, hobbits, dwarfs, and orcs roamed this realm freely.
 -  Because of its size and location, many hobbits desire to live there.
 -  After a few moments of silence, the hobbits begin the story of their nine-day ordeal.
 -  After a few years, he once again splashed back onto the scene as Frodo, the hobbit we've all come to know and love, in The Lord of the Rings trilogy.
 -  Now hobbits and men and elf and dwarf are scattered across Middle Earth, the story jumping back and forth between them.
 -  We were living in this outer realm, where hobbits existed and wars were fought between inhuman creatures.
 -  As they leave Rivendell, he teaches the hobbits swordsmanship.
 -  We are watching hobbits go on a journey to destroy a magic ring.
 -  I would have liked to have seen more of the world from a hobbit's point of view.
 -  But the hobbits, like the Riders and the other mortal inhabitants of Middle-Earth, seem to have no religion at all, not even a pagan one.
 -  The hobbits needed to appear about three to four feet tall - tiny compared with the seven-foot Gandalf.
 -  Aragorn, thinking that the hobbits are dead, kicks a discarded orc helmet and falls to his knees howling in anguish.
 -  This hair is used to keep the hobbit's feet warm because they do not wear boots.
 -  In Middle Earth, there live humans, and hobbits, which are very much similar to miniature people.
 -  The four main hobbits were pretty good, although the foolishness of Pippin gets rather tiresome.
 -  In his hobbits he created an image of heroic action that was both admirable and plausible.
 
 
 Origin1937: invented by Tolkien in his book The Hobbit, and said by him to mean ‘hole-dweller’.     |