ride
ride 英 [raɪd] 美 [raɪd]
v. 骑马;乘车; n. 骑;乘坐;乘骑;
进行时:riding 过去式:rode 过去分词:ridden 第三人称单数:rides 名词复数:rides
- To ride is to be carried in a car, on a bike, or on an animal. When you ride a horse for the first time, it's often surprising how far off the ground you are.
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- v. 骑马;乘车;
- n. 骑;乘坐;乘骑;
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1. I ride this street every day.
我每天骑自行车走过这条大街。
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2. How often do you go riding?
你多长时间骑一次马?
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3. You can't ride this horse. It scours.
你不能骑这匹马,它在拉肚子。
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4. She had never ridden a horse before.
她以前从没骑过马。
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5. It's a ten-minute bus ride from here to town.
从这里到镇上乘公共汽车(的短途旅程)要花十分钟。
- ride (n.) 1759, "journey on the back of a horse or in a vehicle," from ride (v.); slang meaning "a motor vehicle" is recorded from 1930; sense of "amusement park device" is from 1934. Meaning "act of sexual intercourse" is from 1937. To take (someone) for a ride "tease, mislead, cheat," is first attested 1925, American English, possibly from underworld sense of "take on a car trip with intent to kill" (1927). Phrase go along for the ride in the figurative sense "join in passively" is from 1956. A ride cymbal (1956) is used by jazz drummers for keeping up continuous rhythm, as opposed to a crash cymbal (ride as "rhythm" in jazz slang is recorded from 1936).
- ride (v.) Old English ridan "sit or be carried on" (as on horseback), "move forward; rock; float, sail" (class I strong verb; past tense rad, past participle riden), from Proto-Germanic *ridan (source also of Old Norse riða, Old Saxon ridan, Old Frisian rida "to ride," Middle Dutch riden, Dutch rijden, Old High Germn ritan, German reiten), from PIE *reidh- "to ride" (source also of Old Irish riadaim "I travel," Old Gaulish reda "chariot"). Common to Celtic and Germanic, perhaps a loan word from one to the other.
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