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
- N-COUNT (土地的)一长条,一长片
Aswathe ofland is a long strip of land.- 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。 - 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。
- On May 1st the army took over another swathe of territory...
- 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.- ...swathes of white silk.
几条白丝缎
- ...swathes of white silk.
- VERB (用布料)把…包裹住,把…围住
Toswathesomeone or somethingincloth means to wrap them in it completely.- 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。 - 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。
- She swathed her enormous body in thin black fabrics...
- 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.- The storm cut a swathe through southern England...
风暴重创了英格兰南部。 - 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。
- The storm cut a swathe through southern England...
The noun is also spelled swath.
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。