2British EnglishBrEDFmeat or vegetables baked inside a pastry or potato covering 肉馅饼;蔬菜馅饼
I had steak and kidney pie with chips.
我吃了一份牛肉腰子馅饼加薯条。
3slice/share/piece of the pieSHAREa share of something such as money, profits etc 〔钱、利润等的〕一份
The smaller companies want a bigger share of the pie.
那些较小的公司想多分一杯羹。
Examples from the Corpus
slice/share/piece of the pie• Virtually every academicinstitution, it seemed, wanted a piece of the pie.• Smaller capitalist countries are maneuvering to gain a bigger share of the pie.• That meant nearly one in five students was moderately to severely work-inhibited-a considerableslice of the pie.
4pie in the skyPROBABLYsomething good that someone says will happen, but which you think is impossible or unlikely 空中楼阁,不大可能实现的允诺[建议]
pie in the sky• But that's all pie in the sky.• What used to be pie in the sky when you die has, quite rightly, become pie now, please.• Building a baseballfield downtown is just pie in the sky right now.• Any talk of getting a reasonableresponse from the terrorists is just pie in the sky.• So much pie in the sky, she remembered thinking later.• Do not be deceived into throwing away a decent offer in pursuit of pie in the sky.• Eventualpayment was promised at the rate of 5Op per deal, but this provedpie in the sky.• I was promised the pie in the sky by and by.
slice/piece of pie• With some of the money he got, he bought a piece of pie and a cup of coffee.• So I had a slice of pie and then he put the kettle on for coffee and went to the loo.• He lost his appetite for a girlfriend two seasons ago when she refused to share a piece of pie with him.
Originpie
(1300-1400) Perhaps from pie“magpie” ( → MAGPIE); because the different things in a pie are like the different things a magpie collects