搜尋結果
climb
- IPA[klīm]
美式
- go or come up (a slope, incline, or staircase), especially by using the feet and sometimes the hands; ascend;(of an aircraft or the sun) go upward
- an ascent, especially of a mountain or hill, by climbing;a mountain, hill, or slope that is climbed or is to be climbed
verb: climb, 3rd person present: climbs, gerund or present participle: climbing, past tense: climbed, past participle: climbed
- 釋義
- 片語
動詞
- 1. go or come up (a slope, incline, or staircase), especially by using the feet and sometimes the hands; ascend we began to climb the hill the air became colder as they climbed higher 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of an aircraft or the sun) go upward we decided to climb to 6,000 feet 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of a road or track) slope upward or up the track climbed steeply up a narrow, twisting valley 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of a plant) grow up (a wall, tree, or trellis) by clinging with tendrils or by twining when ivy climbs a wall it infiltrates any crack there were roses climbing up the walls
- ▪ grow in scale, value, or power the stock market climbed 24 points he climbed from a job as office messenger to president of the bank 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ move to a higher position in (a chart or table) the song is climbing the adult-contemporary chart 同義詞
- 2. move with effort, especially into or out of a confined space; clamber Howard started to climb out of the front seat I climbed down a narrow ladder 同義詞
- ▪ put on (clothes) he climbed into his suit
名詞
- 1. an ascent, especially of a mountain or hill, by climbing the rigorous climb up the mountain his long climb from poverty
- ▪ a mountain, hill, or slope that is climbed or is to be climbed the mountain is no easy climb
- ▪ a recognized route up a mountain or cliff this may be the hardest rock climb in the world
- ▪ an aircraft's flight upward we leveled out from the climb at 600 feet rate of climb
- ▪ a rise or increase in value, rank, or power an above-average climb in prices