angle
angle 英 [ˈæŋgl] 美 [ˈæŋɡəl]
vi. 倾斜 n. 角度,方面
进行时:angling 过去式:angled 过去分词:angled 第三人称单数:angles 名词复数:angles
- Remember all those pesky geometry classes in high school? Then you'll remember measuring the angle or space between two intersecting lines in degrees. If you recall that a right angle measures ninety degrees, give yourself a bonus.
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- vi. 倾斜
- n. 角度,方面
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1. a 45° angle
*45° 角
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2. The tower of Pisa leans at an angle.
比萨斜塔塔身倾斜。
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3. His hair was sticking up at all angles.
他的头发都竖了起来,乱蓬蓬的。
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4. The photo was taken from an unusual angle.
这张照片是从不寻常角度拍摄的。
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5. You can look at the issue from many different angles.
你可以从很多不同的角度看这个问题。
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6. We need a new angle for our next advertising campaign.
我们需要从一个新的角度去展开下一次广告活动。
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7. The programme is angled towards younger viewers.
这个节目的对象是较年轻的观众。
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8. He angled his chair so that he could sit and watch her.
他斜移了椅子,以便坐着观察她。
- Angle member of a Teutonic tribe, Old English, from Latin Angli "the Angles," literally "people of Angul" (Old Norse Öngull), a region in what is now Holstein, said to be so-called for its hook-like shape (see angle (n.)). Or the name might refer to fishing (with hooks) as a main activity of the people, and Proto-Germanic *anguz is said also to have meant "narrow," so it might refer to shallow coastal waters.
- angle (n.) "space or difference in direction between intersecting lines," late 14c., from Old French angle "an angle, a corner" (12c.) and directly from Latin angulus "an angle, a corner," a diminutive form from PIE root *ang-/*ank- "to bend" (source also of Greek ankylos "bent, crooked," Latin ang(u)ere "to compress in a bend, fold, strangle;" Old Church Slavonic aglu "corner;" Lithuanian anka "loop;" Sanskrit ankah "hook, bent," angam "limb;" Old English ancleo "ankle;" Old High German ango "hook").
- angle (v.1) "to fish with a hook," mid-15c., from Old English angel (n.) "angle, hook, fish-hook," related to anga "hook," from Proto-Germanic *angul-, from PIE *ankulo-, suffixed form of root *ang-/*ank- "to bend" (see angle (n.)). Compare Old English angul, Old Norse öngull, Old High German angul, German Angel "fishhook." Figurative sense "catch or elicit by artful wiles" is recorded from 1580s. Related: Angled; angling.
- angle (v.2) "to move at an angle, to move diagonally or obliquely," 1741, from angle (n.). Related: Angled; angling.
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