young
adj. 幼小的; 年輕的; 青年時代的
n. 年輕人; 幼崽
A young person, animal, or plant has not lived or existed for very long and is not yet mature.
In Scotland, young people can marry at 16...
在蘇格蘭,年輕人16歲就可以結婚。
You weren't so very young when she died; you were old enough to remember.
她去世的時候你不算太年幼,已經能記事了。
You use young to describe a time when a person or thing was young.
In her younger days my mother had been a successful fashionwear saleswoman.
我媽媽年輕時曾經是個成功的時裝銷售員。
Someone who is young in appearance or behaviour looks or behaves as if they are young.
I was twenty-three, I suppose, and young for my age...
我當時23歲,我想,看上去比實際年齡小。
He seemed to me very young and very lonely.
我覺得他似乎非常年輕,非常孤獨。
The young of an animal are its babies.
The hen may not be able to feed its young.
雌鳥可能無法給幼鳥餵食。
1. any immature animal
2. young people collectively;
1. (used of living things especially persons) in an early period of life or development or growth;
2. (of crops) harvested at an early stage of development; before complete maturity;
young, youthful, juvenile, adolescent
這些形容詞均有"年輕的,年幼的"之意。
with young
懷孕的
You are too young to join the army.
你年齡太小,還不能參軍.
Men and women , old and young, all pitched in.
男女老幼齊動手.
The young actor was given a minor part in the new play.
年輕的男演員在這出新戲裡被分派擔任一個小角色.
The lion fought to protect her young.
那頭獅子為了保護其幼獅而進行搏鬥.
The war swallowed up many young men into its maw.
戰爭把許多青年男子吞進了它的無底洞.