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side
- IPA[sʌɪd]
英式
- a position to the left or right of an object, place, or central point;either of the two halves of an object, surface, or place regarded as divided by an imaginary central line
- support or oppose in a conflict, dispute, or debate;provide with a side or sides; form the side of
verb: side, 3rd person present: sides, gerund or present participle: siding, past tense: sided, past participle: sided
noun: side, plural noun: sides
- 釋義
- 相關詞
- 片語
名詞
- 1. a position to the left or right of an object, place, or central point a town on the other side of the river on either side of the entrance was a garden
- ▪ either of the two halves of an object, surface, or place regarded as divided by an imaginary central line she lay on her side of the bed the left side of the brain 同義詞
- ▪ the right or the left part of a person's or animal's body, especially of the human torso he has been paralysed down his right side since birth
- ▪ a place or position closely adjacent to someone his wife stood at his side
- ▪ either of the lateral halves of the body of a butchered animal, or of an animal prepared for eating a side of beef
- 2. an upright or sloping surface of a structure or object that is not the top or bottom and generally not the front or back a car crashed into the side of the house line the sides of the cake tin
- ▪ the part of the hull of a boat extending from stem to stern between the gunwale and the waterline he hefted the anchor over the side
- ▪ each of the flat surfaces of a solid object cubes with a different decoration on each of the six sides
- ▪ either of the two surfaces of something flat and thin, such as paper comments should not exceed one side of A4 paper the flysheet is silicone protected on both sides 同義詞
- ▪ the amount of writing needed to fill one side of a sheet of paper do not write more than three sides
- ▪ either of the two faces of a record or of the two separate tracks on a length of recording tape the other side of the original 78 is free of any distortion put the tape on and listen to a whole side
- 3. a part or region near the edge and away from the middle of something a minibus was parked at the side of the road cottages on the south side of the green 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ each of the lines forming the boundary of a plane rectilinear figure the farm buildings formed three sides of a square
- 4. a person or group opposing another or others in a dispute, contest, or debate the two sides agreed to resume border trade whose side are you on? 同義詞
- ▪ British a sports team there was a mixture of old and young players in their side 同義詞
- ▪ the position, interests, or attitude of one person or group, especially when regarded as being in opposition to another or others Mrs Burt hasn't kept her side of the bargain I would have loved to have heard his side of the argument 同義詞
- 5. a particular aspect of a situation or a person's character her ability to put up with his disagreeable side
- ▪ a person's kinship or line of descent as traced through either their father or mother Richard was of French descent on his mother's side
- 6. British informal a television channel considered as one of two or more that are available what's on the other side?
- 7. subsidiary to or less important than something a side dish of fresh vegetables 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ North American a dish served as subsidiary to the main one sides of German potato salad and red cabbage
- 8. horizontal spinning motion given to a ball.
- ▪ British spin given to the cue ball in snooker and billiards by hitting it on one side.
- 9. British informal boastful or pretentious manner or attitude there was absolutely no side to him 同義詞
- 10. West Indian either of a pair of things a pair of shoes, one side winged by a bullet
動詞
- 1. support or oppose in a conflict, dispute, or debate he felt that Max had betrayed him by siding with Beatrice
- 2. provide with a side or sides; form the side of the hills that side a long valley
- having sides of a specified number or type: narrow, steep-sided canyons
Oxford American Dictionary
- having sides of a specified number or type: narrow, steep-sided canyons
Oxford Dictionary
- a sideways skid or slip.
- skid or slip sideways: the weight counteracts the tyre's tendency to side-slip
Oxford Dictionary
- a direction in which a person has a poor view of approaching traffic or danger: a punch delivered on the referee's blind side
- hit or attack (someone) on their blind side: Graber blindsided Kelly, knocking him to the pavement
Oxford Dictionary
- a direction in which a person has a poor view, typically of approaching danger: a minivan nearly clipped him on his blind side
- hit or attack (someone) on the blind side: Jenkins blindsided Adams, knocking him to the sidewalk
Oxford American Dictionary
- with the side of someone or something towards something else: the ship was wallowing side-on to the swell
- directed from or towards a side: a shot of the crowd from the side-on camera
Oxford Dictionary
- with the side of someone or something toward something else: the ship was wallowing side-on to the swell
- directed from or toward a side: a shot of the crowd from the side-on camera
Oxford American Dictionary
- the furthest side of something: we hired bikes to explore the far side of the island
Oxford Dictionary
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- IPA[sīd]
美式
- a position to the left or right of an object, place, or central point: a town on the other side of the river on either side of the entrance was a garden
- support or oppose in a conflict, dispute, or debate: he felt that Max had betrayed him by siding with Beatrice
Oxford American Dictionary