ÐÂÊÓÒ°´óѧӢÓïµÚÈý°æ¶Áд½Ì³ÌµÚÈý²á¿Îºó´ð°¸ ÏÂÔØ±¾ÎÄ

ÄÚÈÝ·¢²¼¸üÐÂʱ¼ä : 2026/4/14 0:27:11ÐÇÆÚÒ» ÏÂÃæÊÇÎÄÕµÄÈ«²¿ÄÚÈÝÇëÈÏÕæÔĶÁ¡£

Being a father of five children, he seems to have innumerable duties to fulfill. ×÷ΪÎå¸öº¢×ӵĸ¸Ç×£¬ËûËÆºõÓÐÊý²»ÇåµÄÔðÈÎÐèÒªÂÄÐС£

clasp

vt.

hold sb. or sth. tightly with your hand ½ôÎÕ£»×¥

To keep his daughter warm, he clasped her in his arms for it was extremely cold. ÌìÆøºÜÀ䣬ΪÁ˸øÅ®¶ù±£Å¯£¬Ëû°ÑËý½ô½ô±§ÔÚ»³Àï¡£ n.

[sing.] a way of holding sth. tightly ½ô±§£»Óµ±§£»ÎÕ½ô

He held his girlfriend's hand in a strong and warm clasp. ËûÎÕ×ÅÅ®ÓѵÄÊÖ£¬ÓÐÁ¦¶ø³äÂúÎÂÇé¡£

permeate

v.

1 (of an idea, an influence, a feeling, etc.) affect every part of sth. £¨Ë¼Ïë¡¢Ó°Ïì¡¢¸ÐÇéµÈ£©¸ÐȾ£¬´«²¥£¬À©É¢

The power of money permeates every aspect of our existence. ½ðÇ®µÄÁ¦Á¿½þ͸µ½ÎÒÃÇÉú»îµÄ·½·½ÃæÃæ¡£

2 (of a liquid, gas, etc.) spread to every part of an object or a place £¨ÒºÌå¡¢ÆøÌåµÈ£©ÉøÍ¸£¬ÃÖÂþ£¬À©É¢

The fragrance of flowers permeates every room. »¨¶äµÄ·Ò·¼ÃÖÂþ×Åÿ¸ö·¿¼ä¡£

casualty

n.

1 [C] sb. or sth. that is damaged or suffers as a result of sth. else Êܺ¦Õß

The car industry has been only one of the casualties of the economic recession; there are numerous others as well. Æû³µÐÐÒµÖ»ÊǾ­¼ÃË¥Í˵ÄÊܺ¦ÕßÖ®Ò»£¬»¹ÓÐÎÞÊýÆäËûÐÐÒµÒ²ÉîÊÜÓ°Ïì¡£

2 [C, usu. pl.] sb. who is injured or killed in an accident or military action £¨Ê¹ʡ¢Õ½ÕùÖеģ©ËÀÉËÕߣ¬ÉËÍöÈËÔ±

In this fire accident, most of the casualties were immigrant women. Õâ´Î»ðÔÖʹʵÄËÀÉËÕß´ó¶àÊÇÅ®ÐÔÒÆÃñ¡£

landmine

n.

[C] a bomb hidden under the ground that explodes when sb. moves over it µØÀ×

ammunition

n.

[U] bullets, bombs, etc. that can be fired from a weapon µ¯Ò©

The fighting should cease soon because both sides are running out of ammunition. Õ½¶·Ó¦¸ÃÂíÉϾͻá½áÊø£¬ÒòΪ˫·½¶¼Ã»Óе¯Ò©ÁË¡£

flush

vi.

become red in the face, e.g. when you are angry or embarrassed £¨ÉúÆø»òÞÏÞÎʱ£©Á³ºì It doesn't bother me that I flush whenever I am embarrassed because many people do so. ÎÒÒ»ÞÏÞξÍÁ³ºì£¬¶Ô´ËÎÒ¾õµÃÎÞËùν£¬ÒòΪºÜ¶àÈ˶¼ÕâÑù¡£ vt.

clean sth. by pouring a lot of water over it or through it ³åË¢£»³åÏ´

Without an adequate water infrastructure, city residents depended on rainwater to flush away human waste and refuse. ûÓÐ×ã¹»µÄÅÅË®»ù´¡ÉèÊ©£¬³ÇÊоÓÃñÒÀ¿¿ÓêË®°ÑÈËÀàÅÅйÎïºÍÀ¬»ø³å×ß¡£ n.

[C, usu. sing.] a red color that appears on sb.'s face because they are hot or ill, or feeling angry, embarrassed, or excited Á³ºì£»³±ºì£»ºìÔÎ

A flush spread across her face when she realized that it was she who was the object of their joke. µ±ËýÒâʶµ½ËûÃÇ¿ªÍæÐ¦µÄ¶ÔÏóÊÇËý×Ô¼ºÊ±£¬ËýÕǺìÁËÁ³¡£

flushed

a.

looking red because you are hot or ill, or feel angry, embarrassed, or excited Á³ºìµÄ£»·¢ºìµÄ£»³±ºìµÄ

The patient's flushed face told the doctor that he was running a fever. Ò½Éú´Ó²¡È˳±ºìµÄÁ³ÉϵÃÖªËûÕýÔÚ·¢ÈÈ¡£

appalling

a.

very unpleasant and shocking ÁîÈËÕ𾪵ģ»º§È˵Ä

The story they told of their terrible experience during their kidnapping was appalling. ËûÃǽ²ÊöµÄ×Ô¼º±»°ó¼ÜµÄ¿Ö²À¾­Àúº§ÈËÌýÎÅ¡£

blaze

n.

1 [C, usu. sing.] a large fire that causes a lot of damage, esp. when a building is burning ÐÜÐÜ´ó»ð£»ÁÒ»ð

Forty-five women were killed in the blaze at a drug addiction treatment center. ½ä¶¾ÖÐÐĵĴó»ðʹ45ÃûÅ®×ÓÉ¥Éú¡£

2 [sing.] a strong bright light or area of color Ç¿ÁҵĹ⣻¹â»Ô£»ÉÁÒ«

At night, the city's downtown area is a blaze of bright lights and loud music spilling out from the many clubs. Õâ×ù³ÇÊеÄÄÖÊÐÇøÒ¹ÍíµÆ»ð»Ô»Í£¬³ä³â×Å´ÓÐí¶àÒ¹×ܻᴫ³öµÄÐúÏùµÄÒôÀÖ¡£ vi.

1 burn strongly and brightly ÐÜÐÜȼÉÕ

The campfire blazes, and men and women merrily dance around it. óô»ðÐÜÐÜȼÉÕÁËÆðÀ´£¬ÄÐÄÐŮŮΧ×ÅËü»¶¿ìµØÌø×ÅÎè¡£ 2 shine very brightly ·¢Ç¿¹â£»ÉÁÒ«

The sun strikes their plate-glass windows and makes them blaze as if the whole building were on fire. Ì«ÑôÕÕÔÚËûÃǵĴó²£Á§´°ÉÏ£¬·¢³öÒ«Ñ۵Ĺâ⣬ºÃÏñÕû¸ö½¨Öþ×Å»ðÁËÒ»Ñù¡£

overturn

vt.

1 turn sth. so that its bottom or side is upward ʹ·­×ª£»´ò·­

Playing with his toy cars, the boy made them crash into each other and overturned them all. ÄǸöÄк¢ÔÚÍæÍæ¾ß³µÊ±£¬ÈÃËüÃÇÏ໥ײ»÷£¬È«¶¼×²·­ÁË¡£

2 say officially that sth. such as a decision or law is wrong and change it ÍÆ·­£¬·Ï³ý£¨¾ö¶¨¡¢·¨Âɵȣ©£»Ê¹ÎÞЧ

He accused his opponents of wanting to overturn the government. ËûÖ¸¿ØËûµÄ¶ÔÊÖÆóÍ¼ÍÆ·­Õþ¸®¡£

massacre

n.

[C, U] the killing of a lot of people ´óÍÀɱ

There were terrible massacres of civilian residents in the cities during World War II. ¶þÕ½ÖÐÓÐÐí¶àÕë¶Ô³ÇÊÐÆ½ÃñµÄ´óÍÀɱ¡£ vt.

kill a lot of people ´óÍÀɱ

The enemy set fire to the houses and massacred all the villagers. µÐÈË·Å»ðÉÕÁË·¿×Ó£¬¶øÇÒÍÀɱÁËËùÓеĴåÃñ¡£

corpse

n.

[C] a dead body, esp. of a human being £¨ÓÈÖ¸È˵ģ©ËÀʬ£¬Ê¬Ìå

For over a year, Jack lay in his hospital bed; sadly, he had become a living corpse. Ò»Äê¶àÀ´£¬½Ü¿ËÌÉÔÚÒ½ÔºµÄ²¡´²ÉÏ£¬ÁîÈËÉËÐĵÄÊÇ£¬ËûÒѾ­³ÉÁËÒ»¸ö»îËÀÈË¡£

pervasive

a.

spreading through the whole of sth. and becoming a very obvious feature of it ¹á´©Ê¼Öյģ»ÏÔ¶øÒ×¼ûµÄ£»ËÄ´¦ÃÖÂþµÄ

Computer games have become a pervasive form of entertainment since the 1990s. µçÄÔÓÎÏ·´Ó20ÊÀ¼Í90Äê´ú¿ªÊ¼ÒѾ­±ä³ÉÁËÒ»ÖÖÆÕ±éµÄÓéÀֻ¡£

slum

n.

[C, often pl.] a poor area of a town where the houses are in very bad condition ƶÃñÇø Born in a slum, living in an orphanage since his parents died, this kid has been kicked around all of his life. Õâ¸öº¢×ÓÔÚÆ¶Ãñ¿ßÀï³öÉú£¬¸¸Ä¸È¥ÊÀºóÔڹ¶ùÔº³¤´ó£¬Ò»±²×Ó¶¼ÈÎÈ˼ṳ̀¡£

minimal

a.

extremely small in amount or degree, or as small as possible ¼«Ð¡µÄ£»¼«µÍµÄ£»×îµÍÏ޶ȵÄ

Fortunately, the storm only did minimal damage to the crops. ÐÒÔ˵ÄÊÇ£¬±©·çÓê¶Ôׯ¼ÚÔì³ÉµÄË𺦺ÜС¡£

coverage

n. [U]

1 extent to which sth. is covered ¸²¸Ç·¶Î§£»¸²¸Ç³Ì¶È

People in remote areas need more satellites to provide telephone coverage. ±ßÔ¶µØÇøµÄÈËÃÇÐèÒª¸ü¶àÈËÔìÎÀÐÇÀ´À©´óµç»°¸²¸Ç·¶Î§¡£ 2 reporting of events, etc. ÐÂÎű¨µÀ

In California, stories about wild fires receive extensive coverage in the news media;

however, stories about international events receive relatively little coverage. ÔÚ¼ÓÖÝ£¬ÐÂÎÅýÌå¶Ôɽ»ð½øÐй㷺µÄ±¨µÀ£¬È»¶ø£¬¶Ô¹ú¼ÊʼþµÄÐÂÎű¨µÀÈ´Ï൱ÉÙ¡£

furnace

n.

[C] a large enclosed container in which you burn fuel, used for heating a building or for an industrial process such as making metal liquid »ð¯£»Å¯ÆøÂ¯£»ÈÛ¯

It's cold in here ¡ª should I turn on the furnace? ÕâÀïºÜÀ䣬ÎÒ¿ÉÒÔ°ÑÅ¯ÆøÂ¯´ò¿ªÂð£¿

robbery

n.

[C, U] the crime of taking money or property illegally, often by using threats or violence ÇÀ½Ù×ï

The bank robbery, which took place at dawn, shocked the people of the small town. ·¢ÉúÔÚÀèÃ÷ʱ·ÖµÄÒøÐÐÇÀ½Ù°¸Ê¹Õû¸öСÕòµÄÈ˶¼ºÜÕ𾪡£

brood

vi.

think and worry about sth. a lot ³Á˼£»ÓÇÉË£»µ£ÓÇ

So, you got a bad grade on your exam; don't brood over it, but study better for the next one. Õâô˵£¬Ä㿼µÃ²»ºÃ¡£±ðÏëÁË£¬µ«ÒªºÃºÃѧϰ׼±¸Ï´ο¼ÊÔ¡£ n.

[C] a group of young birds who all have the same mother and were born at the same time ͬÎÑÓ×Äñ

The hen brought up a brood of young chicks. ĸ¼¦´ø´óÁËÒ»ÎÑС¼¦¡£

resident

n.

[C] sb. who lives in a particular place ¾ÓÃñ£»¶¨¾ÓÕߣ»×¡¿Í

We had already closed the party down shortly after midnight, following complaints from residents. °ëÒ¹¸Õ¹ý£¬ÊÕµ½¾ÓÃñͶËߺó£¬ÎÒÃǵÄÅɶԾÍÍ£ÁË¡£

stray

a.

lost or without a home ÃÔ·µÄ£»×ßʧµÄ£»Î޼ҿɹéµÄ

Too many stray cats and dogs are homeless because their owners simply abandon them thinking the animals can survive on their own. Ì«¶àµÄÁ÷ÀËè¡¢Á÷À˹·Î޼ҿɹ飬ÒòΪËüÃǵÄÖ÷ÈËÈÏΪ¶¯ÎïÄܹ»×Ô¼ºÉú´æ¾ÍÅׯúÁËËüÃÇ¡£ vi.

move away from the correct place or path ×ßÀ룻ƫÀ룻×ßʧ£»ÃÔ·

In the tale of \\ÔÚ¡¶Ð¡ºìñ¡·µÄ¹ÊÊÂÖУ¬Ð¡¹ÃÄï×ßÃÔÁË·£¬±»¡°´ó»ÒÀÇ¡±¸ø³ÔµôÁË¡£

scrap

n.

[C] (~ of) a small piece of sth. such as paper or cloth £¨Ö½¡¢²¼µÈµÄ£©Ë鯬£¬Ð¡¿é£¬Áãм I wrote down his phone number on a scrap of paper. ÎÒÔÚÒ»ÕÅСֽƬÉÏдÏÂÁËËûµÄµç»°ºÅÂë¡£ vt.

decide not to continue with sth. such as a plan or an event ·ÅÆú£»Åׯú

If negotiations succeed, intended plans to lengthen military service from 15 to 18 months

will also be scrapped. Èç¹û̸Åгɹ¦µÄ»°£¬´òË㽫·þ±øÒÛʱ¼ä´Ó15¸öÔÂÑÓ³¤ÖÁ18¸öÔµļƻ®Ò²»á±»·ÅÆú¡£

edible

a.

fit or suitable to be eaten ÊÊÒËʳÓõÄ

The apple got rotten, so it is no longer edible. Æ»¹û¸¯ÀÃÁË£¬ËùÒÔ²»ÄܳÔÁË¡£

warehouse

n.

[C] a big building where large amounts of goods are stored »õ²Ö£»²Ö¿â

summon

vt.

1 also (~ up) manage to produce a quality or a reaction that helps you deal with a difficult situation ¹ÄÆð£¨ÓÂÆø£©£»Õñ×÷£¨¾«Éñ£©

After her long, sleepless night, Ruth took a deep breath and summoned all her courage to put into words what she had decided to say. ¾­ÀúÁËÒ»¸öÂþ³¤µÄÎÞÃßÖ®Ò¹ºó£¬Â¶Ë¿ÉîÎüÒ»¿ÚÆø£¬¹ÄÆðËùÓеÄÓÂÆø°ÑËý¾ö¶¨ÒªËµµÄÊÂÇé½²Á˳öÀ´¡£

2 (fml.) officially order sb. to come to a place, esp. a court of law ÕÙ¼û£¬ÕÙ»½£¬´«»½£¨Ä³È˵½Í¥£©

The dean has summoned all teaching staff to a meeting for a discussion of the school's budget cuts this afternoon. ½ñÌìÏÂÎçÔº³¤ÒѾ­ÕÙ¼¯ËùÓнÌʦ¿ª»á£¬ÌÖÂÛѧУԤËãËõ¼õµÄÎÊÌâ¡£

jealous

a.

1 (fml.) (~ of) wanting very much to protect or keep sth. СÐÄÊØ»¤µÄ£»Î¨¿ÖʧȥµÄ Don't complain any longer. You should be more jealous of all that you possess at the moment. ²»ÒªÔÙ±§Ô¹ÁË£¡ÄãÓ¦¸Ã¸ü¼ÓÕäϧÄãÏÖÔÚÓµÓеÄÒ»ÇС£

2 slightly angry because sb. else has sth. you would like, or can do sth. you would like to do ¶Ê¼ÉµÄ£»¶ÊÏÛµÄ

Professor Paine is in a delicate situation because one of her colleagues is very jealous of her success. ÅåÒò½ÌÊڵĴ¦¾³ºÜ΢ÃÒòΪËýµÄÒ»¸öͬÊ·dz£¼µ¶ÊËýµÄ³É¹¦¡£

jealously

ad.

1 protectively; watchfully СÐÄÊØ»¤µØ£»Î¨¿ÖʧȥµØ

They had become very famous and strangers often bothered them; so, they guarded their privacy jealously. ËûÃÇÒѷdz£³öÃû£¬¾­³£±»Ä°ÉúÈËɧÈÅ¡£ËùÒÔ£¬ËûÃÇСÐÄÒíÒíµØ±£»¤×Å×Ô¼ºµÄÒþ˽¡£

2 with envy ¶ÊÏ۵أ»¶Ê¼ÉµØ

She gazed jealously at her friend's new red sports car. Ëý¶Ê¼ÉµØ¶¢×ÅËýÅóÓѵĺìÉ«ÐÂÅܳµ¡£

residue

n.

[C] the part of sth. that remains after the rest has gone or ended ²ÐÓࣻʣÓà

Peeling fruit and vegetable skins will help avoid eating residues of farm chemicals. ¶ÔË®¹ûÊß²ËȥƤÓÐÖúÓÚ±ÜÃâʳÈë²ÐÁôũҩ¡£