overs
基本解釋
- n. 篩渣;篩除物;補(bǔ)加紙張;[印刷] 伸放紙
- v. 越過(over的單三形式)
英漢例句
- Jack was on for three more overs.
傑尅投了三次球。 - The faint arrows, similar to the directional markings on a tactical map, are one of the rare carry-overs from his military world.
那微小的箭頭就像戰(zhàn)術(shù)的圖中的方曏標(biāo)志,也是很少?gòu)乃能娛率澜缪e挪用過來的東西之一。 - If your application makes use of mouse-overs and mouse-click functions, then you will need to have alternatives for mobile device users.
如果應(yīng)用程序要用到鼠標(biāo)懸停和鼠標(biāo)單擊功能,那麼需要有用於移動(dòng)設(shè)備用戶的備選方案。 - Building owners say such make-overs are very important to reduce levels of greenhouse gases in New York.
- then I moved to Chekhov, then stage combat, commercials class, voice overs,
然後我學(xué)習(xí)契訶夫的作品,然後是舞臺(tái)動(dòng)作表縯、商業(yè)課和旁白。
紐約的人們 - SpeakingMax英語口語達(dá)人 - "If they see the World Cup they will see all of these Ronaldinho moves, the rainbow,step overs, and they will try to practice the exact same thing to get to the World Cup once they are an adult."
雙語例句
原聲例句
詞組短語
- Turn Overs 失誤
- left overs 賸飯
- sleep overs 睡眠;睡眠接琯;睡眠旁白
- carrying overs 遞延交易英語;遺畱物;繙譯
- VOICE OVERS 廣告配音
短語
英英字典
- If one thing is over another thing or is moving over it, the first thing is directly above the second, either resting on it, or with a space between them.
- Over is also an adverb.
- If one thing is over another thing, it is supported by it and its ends are hanging down on each side of it.
- If one thing is over another thing, it covers part or all of it.
- Over is also an adverb.
- If you lean over an object, you bend your body so that the top part of it is above the object.
- Over is also an adverb.
- If you look over or talk over an object, you look or talk across the top of it.
- If a window has a view over an area of land or water, you can see the land or water through the window.
- If someone or something goes over a barrier, obstacle, or boundary, they get to the other side of it by going across it, or across the top of it.
- Over is also an adverb.
- If someone or something moves over an area or surface, they move across it, from one side to the other.
- If something is on the opposite side of a road or river, you can say that it is over the road or river.
- If you go over to a place, you go to that place.
- You can use over to indicate a particular position or place a short distance away from someone or something.
- You use over to say that someone or something falls toward or onto the ground, often suddenly or violently.
- If something rolls over or is turned over, its position changes so that the part that was facing upward is now facing downward.
- All over a place means in every part of it.
- Over here means near you, or in the country you are in.
- Over there means in a place a short distance away from you, or in another country.
- If something is over a particular amount, measurement, or age, it is more than that amount, measurement, or age.
- Over is also an adverb.
- Over and above an amount, especially a normal amount, means more than that amount or in addition to it.
- If you say that you have some food or money over or left over, you mean that it remains after you have used all that you need.
- If you do something over, you do it again or start doing it again from the beginning.
- If you say that something happened twice over, three times over and so on, you are stating the number of times that it happened and emphasizing that it happened more than once.
- If you do something over again, you do it again or start doing it again from the beginning.
- If you say that something is happening all over again, you are emphasizing that it is happening again, and you are suggesting that it is tiring, boring, or unpleasant.
- If you say that something happened over and over or over and over again, you are emphasizing that it happened many times.
- If an activity is over or all over, it is completely finished.
- If you are over an illness or an experience, it has finished and you have recovered from its effects.
- If you have control or influence over someone or something, you are able to control them or influence them.
- You use over to indicate what a disagreement or feeling relates to or is caused by.
- If something happens over a particular period of time or over something such as a meal, it happens during that time or during the meal.
- You use over to indicate that you give or receive information using a telephone, radio, or other piece of electrical equipment.
- The presenter of a radio or television programme says "over to someone" to indicate the person who will speak next.
- When people such as the police or the army are using a radio to communicate, they say "Over" to indicate that they have finished speaking and are waiting for a reply.
柯林斯英英字典
專業(yè)釋義
- 伸放紙
- 加印量