spot
spot 英 [spɒt] 美 [spɑt]
n. 地点;斑点 vt. 认出;弄脏; adj. 现场的;
进行时:spotting 过去式:spotted 过去分词:spotted 第三人称单数:spots 名词复数:spots
- A spot is a particular place or a small, round mark. You might pick a nice, shady spot in the woods for a picnic. But if you spot a better place by the lake, get moving!
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- n. 地点;斑点
- vt. 认出;弄脏;
- adj. 现场的;
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1. The male bird has a red spot on its beak.
雄鸟喙上有一个红点。
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2. She was wearing a black skirt with white spots.
她穿着一条黑底白点的裙子。
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3. His jacket was covered with spots of mud.
他的上衣满是泥点。
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4. rust spots
锈斑
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5. teenagers worried about their spots
为长粉刺而烦恼的青少年
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6. a quiet spot, a lonely spot
宁静、寂静等的地方
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7. a tourist spot
旅游景点
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8. He's in a spot of trouble.
他遇到一点麻烦。
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9. I felt a few spots of rain.
我感觉飘来几滴雨。
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10. I finally spotted my friend in the crowd.
我终于在人群中看见了我的朋友。
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11. No one spotted that the gun was a fake.
没有人留意到那是一支假枪。
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12. spot prices
现货价格
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13. An ambulance was on the spot within minutes.
几分钟之内,一辆救护车便赶到现场。
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14. He answered the question on the spot.
他当场就回答了那个问题。
- spot (n.) c. 1200, "moral stain," probably from Old English splott "a spot, blot, patch (of land)," and partly from or related to Middle Dutch spotte "spot, speck." Other cognates are East Frisian spot "speck," North Frisian spot "speck, piece of ground," Old Norse spotti "small piece," Norwegian spot "spot, small piece of land." It is likely that some of these are borrowed from others, but the exact evolution now is impossible to trace.
- spot (v.) mid-13c., "to mark or stain with spots;" late 14c. as "to stain, sully, tarnish," from spot (n.). Meaning "to see and recognize," is from 1718, originally colloquial and applied to a criminal or suspected person; the general sense is from 1860. Related: Spotted; spotting. Spotted dick "suet pudding with currants and raisins" is attested from 1849.
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