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  1. sight

    • IPA[sīt]

    美式

    • n.
      the faculty or power of seeing;the action or fact of seeing someone or something
    • v.
      manage to see or observe (someone or something); catch an initial glimpse of;take aim by looking through the sights of a gun
    • verb: sight, 3rd person present: sights, gerund or present participle: sighting, past tense: sighted, past participle: sighted

    • noun: sight, plural noun: sights

    • 釋義
    • 相關詞
    • 片語

    名詞

    動詞

    • 1. manage to see or observe (someone or something); catch an initial glimpse of tell me when you sight London Bridge the unseasonal sighting of a cuckoo
    • 2. take aim by looking through the sights of a gun she sighted down the barrel
    • take a detailed visual measurement of something with or as with a sight he had to sight along the planks in the proper order to get the line right
    • adjust the sight of (a firearm or optical instrument) even when using binoculars, it is difficult to sight the lens angle in reverse
    • adj.
      (of a person) having the ability to see; not blind: a sighted guide is needed for the sighted, it is hard to imagine a world without vision

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • adj.
      (of a person) having the ability to see; not blind: a sighted guide is needed both the sighted and the visually impaired

    Oxford Dictionary

    • adv.
      without the opportunity to look at the object in question beforehand: they bought their computers sight unseen through the mail

    Oxford Dictionary

    • adv.
      without the opportunity to look at the object in question beforehand: they bought their computers sight unseen through the mail

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • n.
      the sight nearest to the stock on a firearm.

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • n.
      the inability to see things clearly unless they are relatively close to the eyes, owing to the ...

    Oxford Dictionary

    • n.
      the supposed ability to perceive future or distant events; clairvoyance: it was like having second sight, the sense that something terrible was going to happen

    Oxford American Dictionary

    • n.
      the inability to see things clearly, especially if they are relatively close to the eyes, owing ...

    Oxford Dictionary

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    • IPA[sʌɪt]

    英式

    • n.
      the faculty or power of seeing: Joseph lost his sight as a baby a sight test
    • v.
      manage to see or observe (someone or something); catch an initial glimpse of: tell me when you sight London Bridge

    Oxford Dictionary