neighbour
- IPA[ˈneɪbə]
英式
- a person living next door to or very near to the speaker or person referred to;a person or place in relation to others next or near to it
- (of a place or object) be situated next to or very near (another)
verb: neighbour, 3rd person present: neighbours, gerund or present participle: neighbouring, past tense: neighboured, past participle: neighboured
noun: neighbour, plural noun: neighbours
- 釋義
- 相關詞
名詞
- 1. a person living next door to or very near to the speaker or person referred to our garden was the envy of the neighbours
- ▪ a person or place in relation to others next or near to it I chatted with my neighbour on the flight to New York matching our investment levels with those of our European neighbours
- ▪ any person in need of one's help or kindness (after biblical use) love thy neighbour as thyself
動詞
- 1. (of a place or object) be situated next to or very near (another) the square neighbours the old quarter of the town
- a person living near or next door to the speaker or person referred to: our garden was the envy of the neighbors
- (of a place or thing) be situated next to or very near (another): the square neighbors the old quarter of the town
Oxford American Dictionary
- a card game for two players in which the object is to acquire one's opponent's cards. ...
- (especially of national policy) self-aggrandizing at the expense of competitors: the economic recession had been intensified by the adoption of beggar-my-neighbour policies
Oxford Dictionary
- a person living next door to the speaker or person referred to: his next-door neighbour spent thousands of pounds on a new roof
Oxford Dictionary
- a card game for two players in which the object is to acquire one's opponent's cards. ...
- (especially of national policy) self-aggrandizing at the expense of competitors: failure would create a growing risk of trade wars as countries retreated into beggar-thy-neighbor policies
Oxford American Dictionary