First, pronunciation
English: [/e ɡ/]; Beauty: [/eɡ/]
Second, Chinese translation?
Eggs; Eggs (of birds); Eggs (of fish, insects, etc); Eggs; Egg cell; Eggs (used as food)
Encourage; encourage
Third, form.
Third person singular: egg
Plural number: eggs
Now participle: egging
Past tense: egged
Past participle: egged
Fourth, phrase collocation.
On eggs? instigate
A boiled egg? Boiled eggs?
Bacon eggs? Bacon fried eggs?
Fried eggs? Omelette
Poached eggs? Poached Egg
Scrambled eggs? omelette
Bilingual examples of verbs (abbreviation of verb)
1. each? Recipes? Designate? That? Size? Yes? Eggs? Where to? Is it? Used.
Each recipe specifies the size of the eggs used.
2. That? Broad? Majority? Yes? That? Eggs? Will it? Is it? It's cracked
Most eggs will be broken.
3. brush? Beaten? Eggs? Is it over? That? Cake. ?
Brush the beaten eggs on the pastry.
He is frying eggs.
He is scrambled eggs.
5. Beat? That? Eggs? And then what? Sugar? Until? They? Start? Where to? Thicken.
Stir the eggs and sugar together until they begin to thicken.
6. Where? That? Eggs? And then what? Sugar? Are you online? Answer? Large size? Basin.
Put the eggs and sugar in a big bowl.
Use of intransitive verbs
1. basically means "eggs, eggs" and refers to eggs laid by birds, reptiles, insects, etc. This solution is a countable noun when it is made. When egg refers to "egg" and "egg" in general, the plural form is often used;
2. It can also be interpreted as "eggs" and "eggs", which refer to eggs used as food, that is, eggs cooked with their shells open. It is an uncountable noun and can be used as? Bit egg means "a little egg";
In technical terms, egg can refer to egg cells.