tackle
tackle 英 [ˈtækl] 美 [ˈtækəl]
n. 滑车;装备;用具;扭倒 vt. 处理;抓住;固定;与…交涉 vi. 扭倒;拦截抢球
进行时:tackling 过去式:tackled 过去分词:tackled 第三人称单数:tackles 名词复数:tackles
- To tackle a challenge means taking it on, so if you set out to tackle the classics of English literature, you should be prepared spend a lot of time in the library.
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- n. 滑车;装备;用具;扭倒
- vt. 处理;抓住;固定;与…交涉
- vi. 扭倒;拦截抢球
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1. She will tackle him over the divorce.
她将和他就离婚问题进行交涉。
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2. That depends on how you tackle the problem.
那取决于你如何处理这个问题。
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3. If you have things to do or a brilliant idea on your mind to tackle later, make a note and, if need be, a plan.
如果你有必须要完成的事,或者是你的心有很多的想法要处理,如果需要写成一个计划的话就做笔记吧。
- tackle (n.) mid-13c., "apparatus, gear," especially the rigging of a ship, from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German takel "the rigging of a ship," perhaps related to Middle Dutch taken "grasp, seize" (see take (v.)), or perhaps from root of tack (n.1), which, if not the origin, has influenced the sense. Meaning "apparatus for fishing" is recorded from late 14c. Meaning "device for grasping and shifting or moving" is from 1530s. Meaning "act of tackling" in the sporting sense is recorded from 1876 (see tackle (v.)); as the name of a position in North American football, it is recorded from 1884. Welsh tacl is fro English.
- tackle (v.) mid-14c., "entangle, involve," from tackle (n.). Sense of "to furnish (a ship) with tackles" is from c. 1400; meaning "to harness a horse" is recorded from 1714. The meaning "lay hold of, come to grips with, attack" is attested from 1828, described by Webster that year as "a common popular use of the word in New England, though not elegant;" figurative sense of "try to deal with" (a task or problem) is from 1840. The verb in the sporting sense first recorded 1867, "to seize and stop." Related: Tackled; tackling.
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