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  1. buoy

    • IPA[ˈbo͞oē]

    美式

    • n.
      an anchored float serving as a navigation mark, to show reefs or other hazards, or for mooring.
    • v.
      keep (someone or something) afloat;cause to become cheerful or confident
    • verb: buoy, 3rd person present: buoys, gerund or present participle: buoying, past tense: buoyed, past participle: buoyed

    • 釋義
    • 相關詞

    名詞

    • 1. an anchored float serving as a navigation mark, to show reefs or other hazards, or for mooring.

    動詞

    • 1. keep (someone or something) afloat I let the water buoy up my weight
    • cause to become cheerful or confident the party was buoyed by an election victory
    • cause (a price) to rise to or remain at a high level the price is buoyed up by investors
    • 2. mark with a buoy the wreck is often buoyed during summer months
    • n.
      a lifebuoy with canvas breeches attached that, when suspended from a rope, can be used to ...

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • n.
      a buoy made of a spar with one end moored so that the other stands up.

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • n.
      a buoy equipped with a bell rung by the motion of the sea, warning shipping of shallow waters.

    Oxford Dictionary

    • n.
      a buoy equipped with a bell rung by the motion of the sea, warning nearby vessels of shoal waters.

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • n.
      a lifebuoy with canvas breeches attached which, when suspended from a rope, can be used to hold ...

    Oxford Dictionary

    • n.
      a buoy which is circular in the middle and tapering to each end.

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • n.
      a buoy made of a spar with one end moored so that the other stands up.

    Oxford Dictionary

    • n.
      a buoy which is circular in the middle and tapering to each end.

    Oxford Dictionary

    • 更多解釋
    • IPA[bɔɪ]

    英式

    • n.
      an anchored float serving as a navigation mark, to show reefs or other hazards, or for mooring.
    • v.
      keep (someone or something) afloat: the creatures could swim, both buoyed up and cooled by the water

    Oxford Dictionary