heavy
a. 重的, 巨大的, 沉重的, 笨重的, 过度的 adv. 沉重地 n. 重物, 严肃角色
发音
词形变化
别名
教材释义与例句
重物;严肃角色
大量地;笨重地
释义与例句
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1.
A prominent figure; a "major player".
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2.
A newspaper of the quality press.
俚语 媒体 -
3.
A serious theatrical role.
古体 俚语 艺术 -
4.
A relatively large multi-engined aircraft.
航空 商务 工程 -
5.
A member of the heavy cavalry.
历史 政治 军事 -
6.
A villain or bad guy; the one responsible for evil or aggressive acts.
俚语With his wrinkled, uneven face, the actor always seemed to play the heavy in films.
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7.
A doorman, bouncer or bodyguard.
俚语A fight started outside the bar but the heavies came out and stopped it.
-
1.
To sadden.
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2.
To use power or wealth to exert influence on, e.g., governments or corporations; to pressure.
澳大利亚 新西兰 非正式The union was well known for the methods it used to heavy many businesses.
2001, Finola Moorhead, Darkness More Visible, Spinifex Press, Australia, page 557, But he is on the wrong horse, heavying me. My phone′s tapped. Well, he won′t find anything.
2005, David Clune, Ken Turner (editors), The Premiers of New South Wales, 1856-2005, Volume 3: 1901-2005, page 421, But the next two days of the Conference also produced some very visible lobbying for the succession and apparent heavying of contenders like Brereton, Anderson and Mulock - much of it caught on television.
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3.
To make heavier.
They piled their goods on the donkey's back, heavying up an already backbreaking load.
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1.
Having great weight.
重
沉重
Can you help me carry this? It's really heavy.
Use the scales to measure how heavy it is.
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2.
Having great weight.
Heavyset: overweight.
When he was a child he was rather heavy, but today he is impressively fit.
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3.
Serious, somber.
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4.
Not easy to bear; burdensome; oppressive.
heavy yokes, expenses, undertakings, trials, news, etc.
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5.
Profound.
美国 过时The Moody Blues are, like, heavy.
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6.
High, great.
1998, Stanley George Clayton, ""Menstruation" in Encyclopedia Britannica The ovarian response to gonadotropic hormones may be erratic at first, so that irregular or heavy bleeding sometimes occurs
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7.
Loud, distorted, or intense.
Metal is heavier than rock.
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8.
Hot and humid.
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9.
With eyelids difficult to keep open due to tiredness.
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10.
High in fat or protein; difficult to digest.
Cheese-stuffed sausage is too heavy to eat before exercising.
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11.
Slow; sluggish; inactive; or lifeless, dull, inanimate, stupid.
a heavy gait, looks, manners, style, etc.
a heavy writer or book
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12.
Impeding motion; cloggy; clayey.
a heavy road; a heavy soil
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13.
Not raised or leavened.
heavy bread
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14.
Of great force, power, or intensity; deep or intense.
it was a heavy storm; a heavy slumber in bed; a heavy punch
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15.
With child; pregnant.
废旧 -
16.
Laden with that which is weighty; encumbered; burdened; bowed down, either with an actual burden, or with grief, pain, disappointment, etc.
his eyes were heavy with sleep; she was heavy with child
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17.
Of petroleum, having high viscosity.
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18.
Having much body or strength.
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19.
Containing one or more isotopes that are heavier than the normal one.
物理 -
20.
Of a market: in which the price of shares is declining.
商务 金融 -
21.
Having a relatively high takeoff weight and payload.
Having a maximum takeoff weight exceeding 300,000 tons, as almost all widebodies do, generating high wake turbulence.
航空 商务 工程 -
22.
Heavily-armed.
政治 军事 航海 交通 -
23.
Good.
过时 俚语This film is heavy.
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24.
Armed.
俚语Come heavy, or not at all.
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25.
Doing the specified activity more intensely than most other people.
This car is too heavy on gas.
He was a heavy sleeper, a heavy eater and a heavy smoker – certainly not an ideal husband.
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26.
Having a relatively high takeoff weight and payload.
航空 商务 工程 -
1.
Having the heaves.
a heavy horse
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1.
In a heavy manner; weightily; heavily; gravely.
Heavy-laden with their sins, time hung heavy
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2.
To a great degree; greatly.
非正式 -
3.
very
印度 非正式
词汇关系
相关短语
词源
From Middle English hevy, heviȝ, from Old English hefiġ, hefeġ, hæfiġ (“heavy; important, grave, severe, serious; oppressive, grievous; slow, dull”), from Proto-West Germanic *habīg (“heavy, hefty, weighty”), from Proto-Germanic *habīgaz (“heavy, hefty, weighty”), from Proto-Indo-European *kap- (“to take, grasp, hold”). Related to have. Cognate with Scots hevy, havy, heavy (“heavy”), Saterland Frisian heeuwich, häwich (“violent, angry”), West Frisian hevich (“violent”), Dutch hevig (“violent, severe, intense, acute”), German Low German hevig (“violent, fierce, intense, angry”), German hebig (compare heftig (“fierce, severe, intense, violent, heavy”)), Icelandic höfugur (“heavy, weighty, important”), Latin capāx (“large, wide, roomy, spacious, capacious, capable, apt”). Compare typologically Russian объёмный (obʺjómnyj), ёмкий (jómkij) (akin to име́ть (imétʹ), взять (vzjatʹ)).
来源:wiktionary