释义 |
anywayan‧y‧way /ˈeniweɪ/ ●●● S1 W2 (also anyhow) adverb [sentence adverb] - Anyway, after three months she made a full recovery.
- Anyway, how about getting some lunch?
- Anyway, I guess I'd better go now.
- Anyway, what was I saying?
- Hardly anyone's going to read it anyway.
- He said he didn't know much about computers, but that he'd try and help us anyway.
- I think she's around my age, but anyway, she's pregnant.
- It's just a cold, but you should see the doctor anyway.
- Sam didn't get the job, but he's not worried because it didn't pay well anyway.
- So anyway, what were you doing in the park at two in the morning?
- Thanks for offering, anyway.
- What is that thing for, anyway?
- And anyway, I never said.
- And so he had received the call-which anyway had been destined for the wrong man.
- By preaching the merits of downsizing, they have provided bosses with arguments for measures that tough economic times have required anyway.
- I've known the bloody thing was wrong for ages anyway.
- It was wrong but he had to do it anyway.
- What is inside and what is outside the organizational boundary, anyway?
VERB► happen· Here and there, this is happening anyway.· He said the doctors all told him the injury was going to happen anyway.· I pointed out to her it was the only scene of its kind in the play and that nothing happened anyway.· Leaders who do not pace initiatives find that pacing happens anyway.· Well, that might have happened anyway.· Radical rhetoric can disguise essential continuities in policy or simply provide a posthoc gloss to changes which were happening anyway.· Many layoffs, such as Tenneco Automotive's cutbacks in marketing, would have happened anyway as corporate restructuring ploughs on.· The distribution part of the solution will happen anyway. 1in spite of the fact that you have just mentioned: Catherine wasn’t sure the book was the right one, but she bought it anyway. This idea probably won’t work, but let’s try it anyway.2used when adding a remark which shows that the fact just mentioned is not important: They didn’t have any trainers in my size, and anyway I’d already decided I’d rather save the money. ‘I hope you haven’t told anyone.’ ‘No. Who would believe me anyway?’3used when adding something that corrects or slightly changes what you have just said: Let’s think about it for a while, for a few days anyway. There seems to have been a technical problem – anyway, that’s what they told me.4spoken used when you are ignoring details so that you can talk immediately about the most important thing: He got lost and spent hours looking for the station, and anyway it was past midnight by the time he got home. Anyway, why didn’t you call the police?5 spoken used when you are changing the subject of a conversation or returning to a previous subject: Anyway, let’s leave that for the moment and look at this month’s profit figures. Anyway, how are you?6 spoken used when you want to end a conversation or leave a place: Anyway, I must be going now. |