bucket
n. 桶 [计] 存储桶; 桶
发音
词形变化
教材释义与例句
桶,水桶;铲斗;一桶的量
an open container with a handle, used for carrying and holding things, especially liquids
倾盆而下;颠簸着行进
释义与例句
-
1.
A container made of rigid material, often with a handle, used to carry liquids or small items.
I need a bucket to carry the water from the well.
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2.
The amount held in this container.
水桶
吊桶
The horse drank a whole bucket of water.
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3.
A large amount of liquid.
非正式It rained buckets yesterday.
I was so nervous that I sweated buckets.
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4.
A great deal of anything.
非正式My new suit cost me buckets.
We had buckets of fun.
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5.
A unit of measure equal to four gallons.
英国 古体 -
6.
Part of a piece of machinery that resembles a bucket (container).
-
7.
Someone who habitually uses crack cocaine.
贬义 俚语 -
8.
An old vehicle that is not in good working order.
俚语 -
9.
The basket.
非正式 体育 游戏The forward drove to the bucket.
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10.
A field goal.
非正式 体育 游戏We can't keep giving up easy buckets.
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11.
A mechanism for avoiding the allocation of targets in cases of mismanagement.
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12.
A storage space in a hash table for every item sharing a particular key.
计算机 工程 数学 -
13.
A turbine blade driven by hot gas or steam.
航空 商务 工程 -
14.
A bucket bag.
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15.
The leather socket for holding the whip when driving, or for the carbine or lance when mounted.
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16.
The pitcher in certain orchids.
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17.
A helmet.
幽默 俚语
-
1.
To place inside a bucket.
及物 -
2.
To draw or lift in, or as if in, buckets.
及物to bucket water
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3.
To rain heavily.
非正式 不及物It’s really bucketing down out there.
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4.
To travel very quickly.
非正式 不及物The boat is bucketing along.
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5.
To ride (a horse) hard or mercilessly.
及物 -
6.
To criticize vehemently; to denigrate.
澳大利亚 俚语 及物 -
7.
To categorize (data) by splitting it into buckets, or groups of related items.
及物 计算机 工程 数学 -
8.
To make, or cause to make (the recovery), with a certain hurried or unskillful forward swing of the body.
英国 美国 及物 体育
词汇关系
相关短语
词源
From Middle English buket, boket, partly from Old English bucc ("bucket, pitcher"; mod. dialectal buck), equivalent to bouk + -et; and partly from Anglo-Norman buket, buquet (“tub; pail”) (compare Norman boutchet, Norman bouquet), diminutive of Old French buc (“abdomen; object with a cavity”), from Vulgar Latin *būcus (compare Occitan and Catalan buc, Italian buco, buca (“hole, gap”)), from Frankish *būk (“belly, stomach”). Both the Old English and Frankish terms derive from Proto-Germanic *būkaz (“belly, stomach”). More at bouk.
来源:wiktionary