英[ˌkæmɪ'kɑːzi]美[ˌkæmɪ'kɑːzi]
记忆方法
词源词根法
来自日语,kami,神,可能来自日本化汉语神,kaze,风,可能来自日本化汉语风。公元1274年,蒙古忽古烈汗命令大军大举进攻日本,但是在海上遇到台风,几近全军覆没,日本人称之为神风。后在二战末期,日军败局已定,为挽回败局,日军组织了自杀式的袭击队伍,即神风敢死队,向美国发起了大规模自杀式攻击,因此引申词义自杀式的。见百度百科。
adjective(形容词)
双解例句
adjective(形容词)
小知识
A kamikaze is a word for either the pilot or the plane used in suicide missions by the Japanese in World War II.
Any job in combat is difficult and could result in death, but one duty is considerably riskier than others: being a kamikaze. These Japanese pilots engaged in suicide missions: their goal was not only to harm the enemy, but they sacrificed their lives while doing so, crashing their planes. A kamikaze could be the pilot or the plane, and you can also speak of kamikaze missions. Today, the word is sometimes used for any situation that seems suicidal or risky.