ramp
ramp 英 [ræmp] 美 [ræmp]
n. 斜坡,坡道;敲诈 vi. 蔓延;狂跳乱撞;敲诈 vt. 敲诈;使有斜面
进行时:ramping 过去式:ramped 过去分词:ramped 第三人称单数:ramps 名词复数:ramps
- A ramp is a slope or an incline, a surface that tilts from one level to another. Someone using a wheelchair might need a ramp to get from the doorway of a building down to its parking lot.
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- n. 斜坡,坡道;敲诈
- vi. 蔓延;狂跳乱撞;敲诈
- vt. 敲诈;使有斜面
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1. We led them up the ramp at the back of the plane, and they climbed into the canvas seats.
我们领着他们登上飞机尾部的登机舷梯,然后坐到垫着帆布的座位上。
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2. That, they added, is "why we feel we should redesign the ice/frost ramp before we fly this mission.
他们说,这就是"为什么我们觉得在执行此次飞行任务前应重新设计冰霜斜面的原因。
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3. I stared up the next ramp into black abyss and decided that I should get back, for all I knew this could go on forever.
我抬头看看下一个斜坡,只看见黑洞洞的一片,所以我就打算返回了,因为我知道这将永无止境。
- ramp (n.1) 1778, "slope," from French rampe, back-formation from Old French verb ramper "to climb, scale, mount;" see ramp (v.). Meaning "road on or off a major highway" is from 1952, American English.
- ramp (n.2) "rude, boisterous girl or woman," mid-15c., perhaps from ramp (v.). Compare romp in Johnson's Dictionary (1755): "a rude, awkward, boisterous, untaught girl."
- ramp (v.) c. 1300, "to climb; to stand on the hind legs" (of animals), from Old French ramper "to climb, scale, mount" (12c., in Modern French "to creep, crawl"), perhaps from Frankish *rampon "to contract oneself" (compare Old High German rimpfan "to wrinkle," Old English hrimpan "to fold, wrinkle"), via notion of the bodily contraction involved in climbing [Klein], from Proto-Germanic *hrimp- "to contract oneself." Related: Ramped; ramping.
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