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  1. shunt

    • IPA[ʃʌnt]

    英式

    • v.
      push or pull (a train or part of a train) from the main line to a siding or from one line of rails to another;push or shove (someone or something)
    • n.
      an act of pushing or shoving something;a motor accident, especially a collision of vehicles travelling one close behind the other
    • verb: shunt, 3rd person present: shunts, gerund or present participle: shunting, past tense: shunted, past participle: shunted

    • noun: shunt, plural noun: shunts

    • 釋義

    動詞

    • 1. push or pull (a train or part of a train) from the main line to a siding or from one line of rails to another their train had been shunted into a siding
    • push or shove (someone or something) chairs were being shunted to and fro
    • direct or divert to a less important place or position amateurs were gradually being shunted to filing jobs
    • 2. provide (an electrical current) with a conductor joining two points of a circuit, through which more or less of the current may be diverted these components are designed to shunt electrical surges away from microcircuits

    名詞

    • 1. an act of pushing or shoving something the engine turnround was helped by a gravity shunt the car would turn into a fireball when hit by even quite gentle shunts
    • British informal a motor accident, especially a collision of vehicles travelling one close behind the other a lorry shed its load, causing an eight-vehicle shunt
    • 2. an electrical conductor joining two points of a circuit, through which more or less of a current may be diverted.
    • an alternative path for the passage of the blood or other body fluid shunt surgery
    • 更多解釋
    • IPA[SHənt]

    美式

    • v.
      push or pull (a train or part of a train) from the main line to a siding or from one track to ... their train had been shunted into a siding
    • n.
      an act of pushing or shoving something: the engine turnround was helped by a gravity shunt the car would turn into a fireball when hit by even quite gentle shunts

    Oxford American Dictionary