hale
hale 英 [heɪl] 美 [hel]
adj. 矍铄的(尤指老人);强壮的 adv. 完全地 vt. 迫使;猛拉
进行时:haling 过去式:haled 过去分词:haled 第三人称单数:hales 名词复数:hales
- If you're hale, you’re strong and in good health. Think "hale and hearty," the well-known phrase to describe someone who can lift a piano or work ten hours in a field without blinking an eye.
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- adj. 矍铄的(尤指老人);强壮的
- adv. 完全地
- vt. 迫使;猛拉
- vi. 不断流出
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1. I mention it here because David hale dragged me into it.
我这里提到它是因为戴维·黑尔把我卷入其中,。
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2. Next, DeWoody and hale would like to determine the effect - if any - the Trichomonas parasite has on lake sturgeon.
接下来,代物第和黑尔要判断一下影响——如果有的话——毛滴虫给湖鲟带来的影响。
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3. The flight test was conducted in the challenging high altitude environment required for refueling of high altitude long endurance (hale) unmanned aircraft systems (UAS).
这次飞行测试是在充满挑战的高空环境下进行的,这也是高空长航(HALE)无人机(UAS)加油所需的环境。
- hale (adj.) "in good health, robust," Old English hal "healthy, sound, safe; entire; uninjured; genuine, straightforward" (see health). The Scottish and northern English form of whole and with a more etymological spelling. It later acquired a literary sense of "free from infirmity" (1734), especially in reference to the aged. Related: Haleness.
- hale (v.) c. 1200, "drag, pull," in Middle English used of arrows, bowstrings, reins, swords, anchors, etc., from Old French haler "to pull, haul, tow, tug" (12c.), from Frankish *halon or Old Dutch halen or some other Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *halon "to call," from PIE root *kele- (2) "to shout." Figurative sense of "to draw (someone) from one condition to another" is late 14c. Related: Haled; haling.
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