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Từ điển Oxford Advanced Learner 8th
chalk
chalk [chalk chalks chalked chalking] noun, verb BrE [tʃɔːk] NAmE [tʃɔːk] noun 1. uncountable a type of soft white stone •the chalk cliffs of southern England 2. uncountable, countable a substance similar to chalk made into white or coloured sticks for writing or drawing •a piece/stick of chalk •drawing diagrams with chalk on the blackboard •a box of coloured chalks more at not by a long chalk/shot at ↑long adj. Word Origin: Old English cealc (also denoting lime), related to Dutch kalk and German Kalk, from Latin calx, lime, probably from Greek khalix ‘pebble, limestone’. Example Bank: •My two horses are as different as chalk and cheese. •She had scrawled a note in chalk across the blackboard. •to write with chalk Idiom: ↑chalk and cheese Derived: ↑chalk something up to something ▪ ↑chalk up something verb ~ sth (up) (on sth) to write or draw sth with ↑chalk •She chalked (up) the day's menu on the board. •A message was chalked on the door—‘Back at 11 o'clock.’ •a chalked outline of a human body •The scores were chalked up on the wall. see chalk sth up to experience at ↑experience n. Verb forms: Word Origin: Old English cealc (also denoting lime), related to Dutch kalk and German Kalk, from Latin calx, lime, probably from Greek khalix ‘pebble, limestone’.
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