intake
- IPA[ˈɪnteɪk]
英式
- an amount of food, air, or another substance taken into the body;an act of taking something into the body
noun: intake, plural noun: intakes
- 釋義
- 相關詞
名詞
- 1. an amount of food, air, or another substance taken into the body your daily intake of calories his alcohol intake
- ▪ an act of taking something into the body she heard his sharp intake of breath a protective factor is the intake of cereal fibre
- 2. the people taken into an organization at a particular time the new intake of MPs
- ▪ an act of taking people into an organization the first intake of women was in 1915
- 3. a place or structure through which something is taken in, e.g. water into a channel or pipe from a river, fuel or air into an engine, etc. cut rectangular holes for the air intake
- ▪ the action of taking something in facilities for the intake of grain by road
- 4. Northern English land reclaimed from a moor or common.
- a valve that controls the passage of fluid or air into a pipe, channel, or duct: officials closed intake valves into the city's water system
Oxford American Dictionary
- a valve that controls the passage of fluid or air into a pipe, channel, or duct: officials closed intake valves into the city's water system
Oxford Dictionary
- 更多解釋
- IPA[ˈinˌtāk]
美式
- an amount of food, air, or another substance taken into the body: your daily intake of calories his alcohol intake
Oxford American Dictionary