1111 Flashcards
(40 cards)
tony
adj AmE informal [Date: 1800-1900; Origin: tone] fashionable and expensive We met in a tony restaurant uptown.
Mercs and Beemers
奔驰和宝马
I’m a bit hard up at the moment.
if you are hard up, you do not have much money
walk-up
‘walk-up
pre-empt
v. to make what someone has planned to do or say unnecessary or ineffective by saying or doing something first
go to hell in a handbasket
This phrase, meaning “to deteriorate rapidly”, originated in the U.S. in the early 20th century. A handbasket is just a basket with a handle. Something carried in a handbasket goes wherever it’s going without much resistance.
death toll
the total number of people who die in an accident, war etc
As the unrest continued, the death toll rose .
The official death toll stands at 53.
keep a low profile
to behave quietly and avoid doing things that will make people notice you
spillover
the effect that one situation or problem has on another situation
bouquet
a bunch of flowers tied together
implant
v.植入breast implantsSurgeons successfully implanted an artificial hip.
She’s been feeling a bit off-colour lately.
BrE
impromptu speech/party/meeting
n.a.ad. done or said without any preparation or planning
oust
to force someone out of a position of power, especially so that you can take their place oust sb from sth The Communists were finally ousted from power. ouster sb’s ouster/the ouster of sb the ouster of the brutal dictatorship
beseech
literary
admonish
from Latin admonere ‘to warn’, from ad- ‘to’ + monere ‘to warn’] formal to tell someone severely that they have done something wrong admonish sb for (doing) sth The witness was admonished for failing to answer the question.
herald
v.n. to be a sign of something that is going to come or happen soon
synopsis
a short description of the main events or ideas in a book, film etc = summary synopsis of a synopsis of the play
garner
from Latin granum ‘grain’] v. formal to take or collect something, especially information or support →glean The party garnered 70 percent of the vote.
quell
to end a situation in which people are behaving violently or protesting, especially by using force = put down quell the violence/disturbance/riot etc Police used live ammunition to quell the disturbances.
scowl
to look at someone in an angry way →frown Patrick scowled, but did as he was told.
vaulted ceiling/roof etc
in the shape of or consisting of several arches joined together
skew
v. if something skews the results of a test etc, it affects the results, making them incorrect All the people we questioned lived in the same area, which had the effect of skewing the figures. Among the 50 per cent of the women who had the highest amounts of cortisol before pregnancy, the sex ratio was clearly skewed towards girls
urchin
old-fashioned a poor dirty untidy child