crew 中文
EN[kɹuː] [-uː]US
名全体船员
- 名词 (Noun)PLcrews
- A group of people (often staff) manning and operating a large facility or piece of equipment such as a factory, ship, boat, or airplane.
- If you need help, please contact a member of the crew.
- The crews of the two ships got into a fight.
- (plural: crew) A member of the crew of a vessel or plant.
- One crew died in the accident.
- (obsolete) Any company of people; an assemblage; a throng.
- (nautical, plural: crew) A member of a ship's company who is not an officer.
- The officers and crew assembled on the deck.
- There are quarters for three officers and five crew.
- (art) The group of workers on a dramatic production who are not part of the cast.
- There are a lot of carpenters in the crew!
- The crews for different movies would all come down to the bar at night.
- (art, plural: crew) A worker on a dramatic production who is not part of the cast.
- There were three actors and six crew on the set.
- A group of people working together on a task.
- The crews competed to cut the most timber.
- (informal, often derogatory) A close group of friends.
- I'd look out for that whole crew down at Jack's.
- (often derogatory) A set of individuals lumped together by the speaker.
- (informal) A group of people, especially friends or associates.
- (Scouting) A group of Rovers.
- (slang, hip-hop) A hip-hop group.
- We decided we needed another rapper in the crew and spent months looking.
- (sports, rowing, uncountable) The sport of competitive rowing.
- Two Andover classmates, Al Wilson and Al Lindley, both went out for crew in our freshman year at Yale.
- (rowing) A rowing team manning a single shell.
- If a crew feather much under water, it is a good plan to seat them in a row on a bench, and give each man a stick to handle as an oar.
- (Britain, dialectal) A pen for livestock such as chickens or pigs.
- Between the shippon and the pig-crew, with the wind blowing over from the vegetable ground.
- The Manx shearwater.
- A group of people (often staff) manning and operating a large facility or piece of equipment such as a factory, ship, boat, or airplane.
- 动词 (Verb)SGcrewsPRcrewingPT, PPcrewed
- (transitive and intransitive) To be a member of a vessel's crew.
- We crewed together on a fishing boat last year.
- The ship was crewed by fifty sailors.
- To be a member of a work or production crew.
- The film was crewed and directed by students.
- To supply workers or sailors for a crew.
- Steele crewed the boat with men from his own regiment and volunteers from John Wood's detachment.
- (nautical) To do the proper work of a sailor.
- The crewing of the vessel before the crash was deficient.
- (nautical) To take on, recruit (new) crew.
- The two ships will be crewing in the latter half of September.
- (Britain, archaic) simple past tense of crow To have made the characteristic sound of a rooster.
- It was still dark when the cock crew.
- (transitive and intransitive) To be a member of a vessel's crew.
- 更多范例
- 用于句中
- After falling out of the boat, the crew pulled him in.
- The stopover is very short, and crews will have about 15 minutes to turn the plane round.
- Though co-star Keanu Reeves considered this new trip unnecessary, the "Speed 2" crew has packed in lots of references from the original.
- 用于句尾
- This section uses a survey of thirteen couples to look at typical shorthanded solutions to watchkeeping and then discusses some standard watch schedules for doublehanded crews.
- The train's walkover seats are turned by the crew.
- He made an example of' the drunken sailor with twenty lashes, to show that he must have a sober crew.
- 用于句中
Definition of crew 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
- 动词形态
- 动词简单过去形态
- 动词简单过去形态
- 不及物动词
- 及物动词
- 动词形态
- 名词
资料来源: 维基词典