scramble
scramble 英 [ˈskræmbl] 美 [ˈskræmbəl]
v. 艰难爬,攀登;争抢;扰乱 n. 爬,攀登;争抢;
进行时:scrambling 过去式:scrambled 过去分词:scrambled 第三人称单数:scrambles 名词复数:scrambles
- To scramble is to move quickly in a disorganized fashion, like people running to get out of the rain. When you scramble a message, it can no longer be read.
- 请先登录
- v. 艰难爬,攀登;争抢;扰乱
- n. 爬,攀登;争抢;
-
1. She managed to scramble over the wall.
她手忙脚乱地翻过墙。
-
2. The audience scrambled for the exits.
观众竞相朝出口拥去。
-
3. Shoppers were scrambling to get the best bargains.
顾客争先恐后地抢购最便宜的特价商品。
-
4. Rooney managed to scramble the ball into the net.
鲁尼勉力把球送进了网窝。
-
5. Alcohol seemed to have scrambled his brain.
酒精似乎扰乱了他的脑子。
-
6. scrambled satellite signals
扰频卫星信号
-
7. scrambled eggs
炒蛋(被扰乱的蛋)
-
8. A helicopter was scrambled to help rescue three young climbers.
直升机接到命令,紧急起飞前去营救三个登山的年轻人。
-
9. There was a mad scramble for the best seats.
人们不顾一切地抢占最好的座位。
- scramble (n.) 1670s, "an eager, rude contest or struggle," from scramble (v.). Meaning "a walk or ramble involving clambering and struggling with obstacles" is from 1755. Meaning "rapid take-off" first recorded 1940, R.A.F. slang.
- scramble (v.) 1580s (intransitive), perhaps a nasalized variant of scrabble (v.), in its sense of "to struggle, to scrape quickly." Transitive sense "to stir or toss together randomly" is from 1822. Broadcasting sense "to make unintelligible" is attested from 1927. Related: Scrambled; scrambling. Scrambled eggs first recorded 1843.
- 请先登录
0 个回复