board
board 英 [bɔ:d] 美 [bɔrd]
n. 董事会;木板; vt. 上(飞机、车、船等);给提供膳宿
进行时:boarding 过去式:boarded 过去分词:boarded 第三人称单数:boards 名词复数:boards
- A board is a plank or surface, sometimes having buttons or controls. You can cut vegetables on a cutting board, post a flyer on a bulletin board, or cause a power outage on a circuit board.
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- n. 董事会;木板;
- vt. 上(飞机、车、船等);给提供膳宿
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1. a noticeboard
布告牌
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2. a bulletin board
布告牌
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3. a diving board
跳水板
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4. members of the board
全体委员
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5. discussions at board level
董事会讨论
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6. I'll write it up on the board.
我会把它写在黑板上。
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7. Passengers are waiting to board.
乘客们正在候机。
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8. His play is on the boards on Broadway.
他的戏剧搬上了百老汇的舞台。
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9. Flight BA193 for Paris is now boarding at Gate 37.
*BA193 次往巴黎航班的乘客现在可以在 37 号登机口登机。
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10. She has a seat on the board of directors.
她是董事会成员。
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11. She always had one or two students boarding with her.
她的家总有一两名寄宿学生。
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12. He pays £90 a week board and lodging.
他每周的膳宿花费为 90 英镑。
- board (n.1) "piece of timber sawn flat and thin, longer than it is wide, wider than it is thick, narrower than a plank;" Old English bord "a plank, flat surface," from Proto-Germanic *burdam (source also of Old Norse borð "plank," Dutch bord "board," Gothic fotu-baurd "foot-stool," German Brett "plank"), perhaps from a PIE verb meaning "to cut." See also board (n.2), with which this is so confused as practically to form one word (if indeed they were not the same word all along).
- board (n.2) "side of ship," Old English bord "border, rim, ship's side," from Proto-Germanic *bordaz (source also of Old Saxon bord, Dutch boord "border, edge, ship's side," German Bord "margin, border," Old High German bart, Old Norse barð "margin, shore, ship-board"), perhaps from the same source as board (n.1), but not all sources accept this. Connected to border; see also starboard.
- board (v.) various senses from board (n.1) and board (n.2): "come alongside" (a ship), mid-15c. (from n.2); "put boards on, frame with boards," late 14c. (from n.1); "close with boards" (1885, typically with up, from n.1). The meaning "get onto" a ship (1590s, from n.2), was transferred mid-19c. to stages, railway cars, and later aircraft, etc.
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