crawl
crawl 英 [krɔ:l] 美 [krɔl]
vi. 爬行;匍匐行进 vt. 爬行;缓慢地行进 n. 爬行;养鱼池;匍匐而行
进行时:crawling 过去式:crawled 过去分词:crawled 第三人称单数:crawls 名词复数:crawls
- To crawl is to move slowly across the floor on your hands and knees. Before they learn to walk, most babies crawl.
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- vi. 爬行;匍匐行进
- vt. 爬行;缓慢地行进
- n. 爬行;养鱼池;匍匐而行
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1. Modern crocodiles crawl on their bellies because their legs sprawl out to the side.
现代鳄鱼则用肚子爬行,因为它们的腿伸展到了身体两侧。
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2. “So they took away my crutches and forced me to crawl on the ground,” Ni says.“I was not allowed to hold onto anything to support myself as I moved around.
“所以他们拿走了我的拐杖,强迫我爬行在地上,” 倪说到,“我不被允许使用任何支撑我的东西,所以我只能爬行。”
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3. An alternative approach is to put the items into a form with checkboxes next to each message so that there is no link to crawl that would invoke that action.
一个变通方法是将这些项放入一个表单(其中每条消息的旁边都有一个复选框)中,这样,便不会搜寻到调用那个操作的链接。
- crawl (n.) 1818, "act of crawling," from crawl (v.). In the swimming sense from 1903; the stroke was developed by Frederick Cavill, well-known English swimmer who emigrated to Australia and modified the standard stroke of the day after observing South Seas islanders. So called because the swimmer's motion in the water resembles crawling. Meaning "slow progress from one drinking place to another" is by 1883.
- crawl (v.) c. 1200, creulen, "to move slowly by drawing the body across the ground," from a Scandinavian source, perhaps Old Norse krafla "to claw (one's way)," or Danish kravle, from the same root as crab (n.1). If there was an Old English *craflian, it has not been recorded.
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