mark
mark 英 [mɑ:k] 美 [mɑrk]
n. 标志;标记;分数 v. 作记号,打分数
进行时:marking 过去式:marked 过去分词:marked 第三人称单数:marks 名词复数:marks
- A mark is some kind of dot, line, or figure that emphasizes or distinguishes something. You might make a mark on your calendar to remind you of your best friend's birthday.
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- n. 标志;标记;分数
- v. 作记号,打分数
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1. Prices are marked on the goods.
价格标在商品上。
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2. Why have you marked this wrong?
你为什么批这道题为错?
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3. A large purple scar marked his cheek.
他的面颊上有一块大紫疤。
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4. The route has been marked in red.
路线用红色标明了。
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5. This speech may mark a change ingovernment policy.
这篇演讲表明政府的政策可能会有变化。
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6. I hate marking exam papers.
我讨厌阅卷。
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7. He was marked as an enemy of the poor.
他被列为穷人的敌人。
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8. You mark what I say, John.
约翰,注意听着。
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9. a burn mark,a scratch mark
一块灼伤的╱抓伤的疤痕
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10. The children left dirty marks all over the kitchen floor.
孩子们把厨房的地板弄得污渍斑斑。
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11. to give sb a high mark,to give sb a low mark
给某人高分╱低分
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12. Unemployment has passed the four million mark.
失业人数已突破四百万大关。
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13. to hit the mark,to miss the mark
击中╱错过目标
- Mark masc. proper name, variant of Marcus (q.v.). Among the top 10 names given to boy babies born in the U.S. between 1955 and 1970.
- mark (n.1) "trace, impression," Old English mearc (West Saxon), merc (Mercian) "boundary, sign, limit, mark," from Proto-Germanic *marko (source also of Old Norse merki "boundary, sign," mörk "forest," which often marked a frontier; Old Frisian merke, Gothic marka "boundary, frontier," Dutch merk "mark, brand," German Mark "boundary, boundary land"), from PIE root *merg- "boundary, border."
- mark (n.2) "unit of money or weight," late Old English marc, a unit of weight (chiefly for gold or silver) equal to about eight ounces, probably from Old Norse mörk "unit of weight," cognate with German Mark, probably ultimately a derivative of mark (n.1), perhaps in sense of "imprinted weight or coin." Used from 18c. in reference to various continental coinages, especially. the silver coin of Germany first issued 1875.
- mark (v.) "to put a mark on," Old English mearcian (West Saxon), merciga (Anglian) "to trace out boundaries," from Proto-Germanic *markojan (source also of Old Norse merkja, Old Saxon markon, Old Frisian merkia, Old High German marchon, German merken "to mark, note," Middle Dutch and Dutch merken), from the root of mark (n.1).
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