英语释义
1. a device or token especially of membership in a society or group
2. a characteristic mark
3. an emblem awarded for a particular accomplishment
4. button sense 1b
Solicitors have reacted with dismay after Staffordshire courts ordered them to remove "political" badges.
— Birmingham Post
5. to mark or distinguish (someone or something) with or as if with a badge
Guests arrived and were counted and badged.
— The New Yorker They were dressed in uniform, too, but theirs were everyday uniforms, not ceremonial. Dark olive cloth, worn and creased, badged here and there with the unfamiliar insignia of their rank.
— Lee Child My daughter's hands were raw and scraped from shucking four hundred oysters the night before, her knuckles badged with tiny, brilliant, forming scabs.
— William Boyd
6. a small object (such as a tag, pin, or metal shield) that is worn or held up by a person so that it can be easily seen, that has writing (such as a person's name) and often a picture on it, and that shows who the person is
7. a cloth patch that can be sewn onto clothing and that is awarded to a person (such as a Boy Scout or Girl Scout) for doing something
8. something that represents or is a sign of something else
9. something worn to show that a person belongs to a certain group or rank