N头条>英语词典>swathed翻译和用法

swathed

英 [sweɪðd]

美 [sweɪðd]

v.  包; 裹; 覆盖
swathe的过去分词和过去式

过去式:swathed 

柯林斯词典

    The noun is also spelled swath.

  • N-COUNT (土地的)一长条,一长片
    Aswathe ofland is a long strip of land.
    1. On May 1st the army took over another swathe of territory...
      军队在5月1号又接管了另一长条领土。
    2. Year by year great swathes of this small nation's countryside disappear.
      年复一年,这个小国家的乡村面积正在一片片地大量消失。
  • N-COUNT 一长条(尤指用来包裹某人或某物的布料)
    Aswathe ofcloth is a long strip of cloth, especially one that is wrapped around someone or something.
    1. ...swathes of white silk.
      几条白丝缎
  • VERB (用布料)把…包裹住,把…围住
    Toswathesomeone or somethingincloth means to wrap them in it completely.
    1. She swathed her enormous body in thin black fabrics...
      她用薄薄的黑色织物裹住了自己硕大的身躯。
    2. His head was swathed in bandages made from a torn sheet.
      他的头上缠满了一层层用床单撕成的绷带。
  • PHRASE 使遭到严重破坏;使发生巨变
    If a person or thingcuts a swathe throughsomething, they pass through it causing great destruction or change.
    1. The storm cut a swathe through southern England...
      风暴重创了英格兰南部。
    2. Keegan's team have been cutting an irresistible swathe through the first division.
      基冈的球队在甲级赛中所向披靡。

双语例句

  • She swathed her child in blankets.
    她用毛毯裹住她的孩子。
  • With his arm swathed in bandages
    手臂上用绷带包扎着
  • The moon was swathed in mist.
    月亮被薄雾罩住了。
  • The supporting columns were swathed in flags;
    柱子上也裹着彩旗;
  • An ancient and incredibly powerful being with a past swathed in betrayal and destruction, Deathwing is poised to bring about the second-largest cataclysm that Azeroth has ever seen.
    作为一个以背叛和毁灭而闻名的古老而惊人的存在,死亡之翼正企图发动一场艾泽拉斯有史以来第二大的大灾变。
  • They were swathed in scarves and sweaters.
    他们围著围巾、穿著毛衣。
  • The skyscrapers were swathed in fog.
    那些摩天大楼笼罩在雾中。
  • The whole stage is swathed in ever? changing light.
    整个舞台都被变幻的灯光所照耀着。
  • Roughly the size of India, it's capped by a thick layer of permafrost and swathed in dense taiga forest.
    粗广的印度覆盖稀薄的冻土和宽带状浓密的原针叶林。
  • The comparative emptiness around the train took her mind back to that morning in1862 when she had come to Atlanta as a young widow, swathed in crepe and wild with boredom.
    车站周围空荡荡的景象使她想起1862年的一个早晨,那时她作为年轻寡妇身穿丧服、满怀厌倦地来到了亚特兰大。