shore
- IPA[SHôr]
美式
- the land along the edge of a sea, lake, or other large body of water;the land between ordinary high- and low-water marks.
noun: shore, plural noun: shores
- 釋義
- 相關詞
名詞
- 1. the land along the edge of a sea, lake, or other large body of water I took the tiller and made for the shore he and his friends stood on the shores of the bay
- ▪ the land between ordinary high- and low-water marks.
- ▪ a country or other geographic area bounded by a coast the shores of the New World
- ashore; on land
Oxford Dictionary
- on the water near land or nearer to land
Oxford Dictionary
- a shore lying on the leeward side of a ship (and on to which a ship could be blown in foul weather).
Oxford American Dictionary
- leisure time spent ashore by a sailor: the hall was full of sailors on shore leave
Oxford American Dictionary
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 下一頁
- 更多解釋
- IPA[SHôr]
美式
- a prop or beam set obliquely against something weak or unstable as a support.
- support or hold up something with props or beams: rescue workers had to shore up the building, which was in danger of collapse
Oxford American Dictionary
- IPA[ʃɔː]
英式
- the land along the edge of a sea, lake, or other large body of water: I took the tiller and made for the shore he and his friends stood on the shores of the bay
Oxford Dictionary
- IPA[ʃɔː]
英式
- a prop or beam set obliquely against something weak or unstable as a support.
- support or hold up something with props or beams: rescue workers had to shore up the building, which was in danger of collapse
Oxford Dictionary
- IPA[ʃɔː]
英式
- archaic past of shear
Oxford Dictionary
- IPA[SHôr]
美式
- archaic past of shear
Oxford American Dictionary