bunch
bunch 英 [bʌntʃ] 美 [bʌntʃ]
n. 群;串;束 v. 变紧,成皱褶
进行时:bunching 过去式:bunched 过去分词:bunched 第三人称单数:bunches 名词复数:bunches
- A group or cluster of something is a bunch. It could be a bunch of people or a bunch of grapes. If you pick a bunch of bananas, you might end up being followed by a bunch of monkeys.
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- n. 群;串;束
- v. 变紧,成皱褶
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1. a bunch of bananas,a bunch of grapes
一把香蕉、葡萄等
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2. I have a whole bunch ofstuff to do this morning.
我今天上午有一大堆活儿。
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3. The people that I work with are a great bunch.
和我一起工作的那些人很不错。
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4. She wore her hair in bunches.
她梳着两条辫子。
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5. His muscles bunched under his shirt.
他衬衫下面的肌肉紧绷绷的。
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6. His forehead was bunched in a frown.
他皱紧眉头。
- bunch (n.) mid-14c., "a bundle;" late 14c., "protuberance on the body, swelling, knob, lump," probably from Old French dialectal bonge "bundle," a nasalized form of Old French bouge (2), 15c., from Flemish bondje diminutive of boud "bundle." The sense of "a cluster, joined collection of things of the same kind" is from mid-15c. The looser meaning "a lot, a group of any kind" is from 1620s.
- bunch (v.) late 14c., "to bulge out," from bunch (n.). Meaning "to gather up in a bunch" (transitive) is from 1828; sense of "to crowd together" (intransitive) is from 1850. Related: Bunched; bunching.
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