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spike
- IPA[spʌɪk]
英式
- a thin, pointed piece of metal, wood, or another rigid material.;a large stout nail, especially one used to fasten a rail to a railway sleeper.
- impale on or pierce with a sharp point;injure (a player) with the spikes on one's shoes.
verb: spike, 3rd person present: spikes, gerund or present participle: spiking, past tense: spiked, past participle: spiked
noun: spike, plural noun: spikes
- 釋義
- 相關詞
- 片語
名詞
- 1. a thin, pointed piece of metal, wood, or another rigid material. 同義詞
- ▪ a large stout nail, especially one used to fasten a rail to a railway sleeper.
- ▪ each of several metal points set into the sole of a running shoe to prevent slipping.
- ▪ a pair of running shoes with metal points set into the sole.
- ▪ British a pointed metal rod standing on a base and used for filing paper items such as bills, or journalistic material considered for publication and rejected.
- ▪ informal a hypodermic needle.
- 2. a sharp increase in the magnitude or concentration of something the oil price spike
- ▪ a pulse of very short duration in which a rapid increase in voltage is followed by a rapid decrease.
- 3. British informal a hostel ward offering temporary accommodation for the homeless he queued at the soup kitchen or the spike
動詞
- 1. impale on or pierce with a sharp point she spiked another oyster 同義詞
- ▪ injure (a player) with the spikes on one's shoes.
- ▪ (of a newspaper editor) reject (a story) by or as if by filing it on a spike the editors deemed the article in bad taste and spiked it
- ▪ stop the progress of (a plan or undertaking); put an end to he doubted they would spike the entire effort over this one negotiation 同義詞
- ▪ historical render (a gun) useless by plugging up the vent with a spike.
- 2. form into or cover with sharp points his hair was matted and spiked with blood
- ▪ take on a sharp, pointed shape lightning spiked across the sky
- ▪ increase and then decrease sharply; reach a peak oil prices would spike and fall again
- 3. informal add alcohol or a drug to contaminate (drink or food) surreptitiously she bought me an orange juice and spiked it with vodka 同義詞
- ▪ add sharp or pungent flavouring to (food or drink) spike the liquid with lime or lemon juice
- ▪ enrich (a nuclear reactor or its fuel) with a particular isotope the plutonium mixture could be spiked with caesium-137
- 4. (in volleyball) hit (the ball) forcefully from a position near the net so that it moves downward into the opposite court.
- ▪ fling (the ball) forcefully to the ground, typically in celebration of a touchdown or victory.
- a high tapering heel on a woman's shoe: she tottered forwards on five-inch spike heels
Oxford Dictionary
- (born 1957), US filmmaker; born Shelton Jackson Lee. His work is noted for its treatment of ...
Oxford American Dictionary
- a high tapering heel on a woman's shoe: she tottered forwards on five-inch spike heels
Oxford American Dictionary
- (in some human and animal viruses) a glycoprotein projecting from the outer membrane that binds ...
Oxford Dictionary
- (1918–2002), Irish comedian and writer, born in India; born Terence Alan Milligan. He came to ...
Oxford Dictionary
- (in some human and animal viruses) a glycoprotein projecting from the outer membrane that binds ...
Oxford American Dictionary
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- IPA[spīk]
美式
- a thin, pointed piece of metal, wood, or another rigid material.
- impale on or pierce with a sharp point: she spiked another oyster
Oxford American Dictionary
- IPA[spīk]
美式
- a flower cluster formed of many flower heads attached directly to a long stem. this handsome plant has striking blue flowers in a spike on the stem sage produces a profusion of purple flower spikes in late spring
Oxford American Dictionary
- IPA[spʌɪk]
英式
- a flower cluster formed of many flower heads attached directly to a long stem. this handsome plant has striking blue flowers in a spike on the stem sage produces a profusion of purple flower spikes in late spring
Oxford Dictionary