pulse
pulse 英 [pʌls] 美 [pʌls]
n. 脉冲;脉搏 v. 跳动,脉跳
进行时:pulsing 过去式:pulsed 过去分词:pulsed 第三人称单数:pulses 名词复数:pulses
- The word pulse has many shades of meaning, but most of them involve something characterized by short, rhythmic bursts. If you’re angry, the muscles in your jaw might pulse — meaning they contract quickly in short bursts.
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- n. 脉冲;脉搏
- v. 跳动,脉跳
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1. a strong pulse,a weak pulse
强╱弱脉搏
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2. The doctor took my pulse. The doctor felt my pulse.
医生给我量了脉搏╱把了脉。
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3. pulse waves
脉冲波
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4. sound pulses
声脉冲
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5. A vein pulsed in his temple.
他太阳穴上的静脉在搏动。
- pulse (n.1) "a throb, a beat," early 14c., from Old French pous, pulse (late 12c., Modern French pouls) and directly from Latin pulsus (in pulsus venarum "beating from the blood in the veins"), past participle of pellere "to push, drive," from PIE root *pel- (5) "to thrust, strike, drive." Extended usages from 16c. Figurative use for "life, vitality, essential energy" is from 1530s.
- pulse (n.2) "peas, beans, lentils," late 13c., from Old French pouls, pols and directly from Latin puls "thick gruel, porridge, mush," probably via Etruscan, from Greek poltos "porridge" made from flour, or both the Greek and Latin words are from the same source (see pollen).
- pulse (v.) "to beat, throb," early 15c., from pulse (n.1) or else from Latin pulsare "to beat, throb," and in part from French. Related: Pulsed; pulsing.
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