swing
swing 英 [swɪŋ] 美 [swɪŋ]
n. 秋千; v. 摇摆;摆动
进行时:swinging 过去式:swung 过去分词:swung 第三人称单数:swings 名词复数:swings
- To swing is to sway back and forth, or to move in a sweeping, curving motion. Wind chimes swing in the breeze, and a softball player swings her bat, aiming for the ball.
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- n. 秋千;
- v. 摇摆;摆动
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1. There they can swing and slide for hours.
他们可以荡秋千、滑滑梯、玩上好几个小时。
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2. His arms swung as he walked.
他边走边摆着双臂。
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3. He sat on the stool, swinging his legs.
他坐在凳子上晃动着两条腿。
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4. He took a wild swing at the ball.
他对准球猛地挥拍一击。
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5. The kids were playing on the swings.
孩子们在荡秋千。
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6. The bus swung sharply to the left.
公共汽车猛地拐向左边。
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7. He swung another punch in my direction.
他朝着我这边又挥了一拳。
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8. His emotions swung between fear and curiosity.
他时而害怕,时而好奇。
- swing (n.) Old English swinge "stroke, blow; chastisement," from swing (v.). Meaning "suspended seat on ropes" is from 1680s. Meaning "shift of public opinion" is from 1899. The meaning "variety of big dance-band music with a swinging rhythm" is first recorded 1933, though the sense has been traced back to 1888; its heyday was from mid-30s to mid-40s. Phrase in full swing "in total effect or operation" (1560s) perhaps is from bell-ringing. The backyard or playground swing-set is from 1951.
- swing (v.) Old English swingan "beat, strike; scourge, flog; to rush, fling oneself" (strong verb, past tense swang, past participle swungen), from Proto-Germanic *swingan (source also of Old Saxon, Old High German swingan, Old Frisian swinga, German schwingen "to swing, swingle, oscillate"), from PIE *sweng(w)- "to swing, turn, toss" (perhaps Germanic only).
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