alarm 中文
EN[əˈlɑːm] [əˈlɑɹm] [-ɑː(r)m]US
名惊恐, 忧虑, 警报
- 名词 (Noun)PLalarms
- A summons to arms, as on the approach of an enemy.
- Arming to answer in a night alarm. --Shakespeare.
- Any sound or information intended to give notice of approaching danger; a warning sound to arouse attention; a warning of danger.
- Sound an alarm in my holy mountain. --Joel ii. 1.
- A sudden attack; disturbance.
- Sudden surprise with fear or terror excited by apprehension of danger; in the military use, commonly, sudden apprehension of being attacked by surprise.
- Alarm and resentment spread throughout the camp. --Thomas Babington Macaulay.
- A mechanical device for awaking people, or rousing their attention.
- The clockradio is a friendlier version of the cold alarm by the bedside
- An instance of an alarum ringing or clanging, to give a noise signal at a certain time.
- You should set the alarm on your watch to go off at seven o'clock.
- A summons to arms, as on the approach of an enemy.
- 动词 (Verb)SGalarmsPRalarmingPT, PPalarmed
- (transitive) To call to arms for defense.
- (transitive) To give (someone) notice of approaching danger.
- (transitive) To rouse to vigilance and action; to put on the alert.
- (transitive) To surprise with apprehension of danger; to fill with anxiety in regard to threatening evil; to excite with sudden fear.
- (transitive) To keep in excitement; to disturb.
- (transitive) To call to arms for defense.
- 更多范例
- 用于句中
- And the clanging call of the general alarm rasped you to battle stations, night and day, from sleep and from meals, always with the same emptyhandedness of failure in the end.
- It seems that these S-E-A-Values are all about what ethnologists call the Umwelt — the area of alarm around members of the brute creation, such as human beings.
- I use an alarm clock to ensure that I get up on time.
- 用于句中
Definition of alarm in English Dictionary
- 词类阶层 (Part-of-Speech Hierarchy)
- 名词
- 可数名词
- 单数形态
- 不可数名词
- 不可数名词
- 可数名词
- 动词
- 及物动词
- 及物动词
- 名词
资料来源: 维基词典