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单词 bury
释义
burybur‧y /ˈberi/ ●●● W3 verb (past tense and past participle buried, present participle burying, third person singular buries) [transitive] Entry menu
MENU FOR burybury1 dead person2 object3 fall on something4 hidden5 feeling/memory6 bury your face/head etc (in something)7 bury your face/head in your hands8 bury your head in the sand9 bury the hatchet/bury your differences10 in a surface11 bury yourself in your work/studies etc12 information13 loved one
Word Origin
WORD ORIGINbury
Origin:
Old English byrgan
Verb Table
VERB TABLE
bury
Simple Form
PresentI, you, we, theybury
he, she, itburies
PastI, you, he, she, it, we, theyburied
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave buried
he, she, ithas buried
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad buried
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill bury
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have buried
Continuous Form
PresentIam burying
he, she, itis burying
you, we, theyare burying
PastI, he, she, itwas burying
you, we, theywere burying
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave been burying
he, she, ithas been burying
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad been burying
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill be burying
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have been burying
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • He murdered his wife and buried her body in a field.
  • People may bury painful childhood memories to protect themselves.
  • Snakes usually bury their eggs.
  • Some of the phone lines are buried beneath the streets.
  • Tennessee buried Florida 45-3 in Saturday's game.
  • The dog buried one of my slippers in the backyard.
  • The hardest thing a mother can do is bury one of her children.
  • We hope to bury any speculation that there was a conspiracy.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • Although it had been buried without a coffin, it was found perfectly preserved.
  • Four other abandoned children whose final days had not been as comfortable were buried that same day.
  • Heberle confirms the mains will be buried between 36 inches and 44 inches deep.
  • It is an earthwork which appears to descend into the ground and is partially buried in the soil.
  • The arteries, much more rigid than veins and buried deeper in the body, are unaffected.
  • The refugees, having buried his body, are forced to move on.
  • Whitney, the high country is absolutely buried in the stuff.
  • Your relatives have to bury you in an envelope.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatorto stop arguing
also make it up British especially spoken if two people who know each other well make up or make it up , they stop arguing and start being friendly to each other again: · I'm glad to see you two have made up.make up with: · Have you made it up with your sister yet?
if two people or organizations patch up or settle their differences , they stop arguing and discuss things in a sensible way until they come to an agreement: · Their final attempt to settle their differences ended in disappointment and separation.patch up your differences/settle your differences with: · Gary's first priority on his return home was to patch up his differences with his sister.
to agree to stop arguing and forgive each other, especially a long time after you first had the argument: · It's about time they buried the hatchet after all these years.· Since those two buried the hatchet, life in the office has been much quieter.
to talk calmly and seriously with someone about what you have been arguing about, in order to end the disagreement and feel better: · I think it's about time you called her to clear the air.· In an attempt to clear the air, Mills has planned a meeting with employees to discuss the issue.
behaving in a way that shows that you want to end an argument with someone: · The tone of my letter had been friendly and conciliatory, so I was disappointed by the cold reply I received.conciliatory gesture/message/tone etc: · American intelligence flights over Cuba had been stopped as a conciliatory gesture.
when two people, countries etc agree to stop arguing or fighting after a long period of disagreement, and have a friendly relationship again: · After years of fighting, there was now a spirit of national reconciliation in South Africa.reconciliation with: · Giles is not interested in a reconciliation with his father.reconciliation between: · A large group of demonstrators stayed up all night praying for reconciliation between the two countries.
to hide something especially by putting it in a secret place
to make something difficult to see or find, for example by putting it somewhere secret, or by covering it: · Where can we hide these presents so the kids don't find them?hide something in/under/behind etc something: · They put the money in a small box and hid it under the bed.· Some cameras are so small they can be hidden in a reporter's baseball cap.hide something from somebody: · I used to hide his cigarettes from him so he couldn't smoke.
formal to hide something carefully, especially by covering it: conceal something in/under/behind etc something: · The secret police had concealed microphones in the walls.· Several kilos of drugs had been concealed in the back of the truck.
informal to hide money or something that you should not have: stash something in/under/behind etc something: · Where did you stash the drugs?· The late president supposedly stashed millions of dollars in Swiss bank accounts.
to hide something by putting something else on or over it: · Embarrassed, she reached for a towel to cover her body.cover something with something: · When he walked into the room, she quickly covered the letter with a pillow.cover something up/cover up something (=cover something completely): · You could probably cover up the scratches with a little bit of paint, and no one will ever notice.
to hide something by putting it in or on the ground and covering it with soil, sand etc: · Snakes usually bury their eggs.bury something in/under etc something: · He murdered his wife and buried her body in a field.· The dog buried one of my slippers in the backyard.
formal to carefully hide small, valuable objects: · No one knew where the old woman had secreted her jewels.secrete something in/behind/among etc something: · He showed me the coin briefly and then secreted it in some dark corner of his house.
to ignore something bad, even though you know it is wrong
to ignore something wrong that someone has done, especially because it is unimportant: · I'll overlook your mistake this time.· Mrs Johnson tends to overlook any small faults the girls may have.· Although this is a first offence it cannot be overlooked.
to decide not to punish or criticize someone for doing something wrong, although you might do so if they do it again: · I think they've broken the rules, but I'll let it pass.· Howard had insulted her, but she thought it better to let it pass this time.
if someone in authority turns a blind eye to illegal activity or bad behaviour, they ignore it and pretend they do not know about it: · If my sister did something wrong my mother always turned a blind eye.· The guards turned a blind eye when the prisoners stole food from the kitchen.turn a blind eye to: · The President could no longer turn a blind eye to the indiscretions of his Chief of Staff.
to ignore something and pretend it does not exist because it is unpleasant or difficult to deal with: · The officials in charge of the Chernobyl power station had shut their eyes to the danger.· Of course, it is tempting to criticize other countries and close your eyes to all the problems of your own society.
to ignore an unpleasant situation and hope it will stop if you try not to think about it: · You'll never solve your problems if you just bury your head in the sand -- you have to face them.
WORD SETS
asphyxia, nounautopsy, nounbarrow, nounbequeath, verbbereaved, adjectivebereavement, nounbier, nounbody bag, nounbody count, nounburial, nounbury, verbcasket, nouncatacomb, nouncatafalque, nouncemetery, nouncenotaph, nouncharnel house, nounchurchyard, nouncoffin, nouncommittal, nouncondolence, nouncoroner, nouncorpse, nouncortege, nouncot death, nouncremate, verbcrematorium, nouncrib death, nouncrucifixion, nouncrucify, verbcrypt, noundeath mask, noundemise, noundeparted, adjectiveD.O.A., adjectivedrown, verbembalm, verbend, nounepitaph, nouneulogy, nounexhume, verbexpire, verbfatality, nounfuneral, nounfunerary, adjectivefunereal, adjectivegrave, noungravedigger, noungravestone, noungraveyard, nounheadstone, nounhearse, nounhospice, nouninter, verbinterment, nounmausoleum, nounmorgue, nounmortality, nounmortician, nounmortuary, nounmortuary, adjectivemourner, nounmourning, nounmummify, verbmummy, nounnecrophilia, nounobsequies, nounpall, nounpallbearer, nounpassing, nounperish, verbplot, nounprobate, nounprobate, verbpyre, nounquietus, nounremains, nounrest, verbrigor mortis, nounRIP, rise, verbsarcophagus, nounsepulchre, nounshroud, nounthrenody, nountoll, nountomb, nountombstone, nountumulus, nounundertaker, nounundertaking, nounurn, nounvault, nounwake, nounwar memorial, nounwill, nounwinding sheet, nounwreath, noun
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY
 Fifty-seven miners were buried alive.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
(=put someone in a grave)· She was buried in a grave next to her older sister.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADVERB
· These often have many icons buried deep inside.· If volatiles are acquired during accretion then most of the volatiles are initially buried deep in the planet.· It was soon ablaze, with the empty tin and rubber gloves buried deep in its midst.· The kitchens were buried deep in the structure, far from any outside wall.· Archaeologists found it in a boat-shaped tomb 29m long, made out of mud bricks and buried deep in the sand.· After 50 years the waste will probably be buried deep underground.· He wanted to drown himself in her, to bury deep into the cells of her skin and to forget himself there.· Then it was done and the old man slumped forward, the knife buried deep in his chest.
· Robert Browne - founder of the Congregational Church - is buried here.· They left Sakhalin with only one hope: to find their relatives and have their bones buried here.· There is a plaque on the wall to recall that all the Brokof family of sculptors are buried here.· This man was buried here in the fourth century.· Sorrow was buried here, at the cost of a shilling and a pint of beer for the gravedigger.
· He died in Bristol 24 September 1939 and is buried there.· According to a different version, Hsu Fu ended his days at Shingu and was buried there.· He came from Sheerness ... buried there ... I'd got him, you know?· He wants to be buried there.· She scraped the earth back and saw something very dark blue - china or glass, buried there.· All my family except Anne are buried there.· Sarah Helen was buried there 76 years ago, but today the locals are afraid she is coming back to terrorise them.· It was also claimed that his body, after his death, was brought from Jerusalem to Santiago and buried there.
NOUN
· George decided to bury the girl's body in the gravel.· He buried the bodies in one grave with a single wooden cross as a marker; then notified the Commonwealth.· The refugees, having buried his body, are forced to move on.· She, her husband, and his brother were caught burying the bodies of Christians.· The arteries, much more rigid than veins and buried deeper in the body, are unaffected.· Steve has not been the same man since he whacked Saskia with an ashtray and buried her body in Epping Forest.· He was caught in the end, trying to bury one of the bodies in the cemetery, in a fresh grave.· During the night he buried the body in the small back garden behind the shop.
· All the crew are buried at Stonefall cemetery, alongside many of their fellow countrymen.· Founded in 1979, the young community has only three other people buried in its cemetery.· But why weren't they buried in the cemetery after they were shot?· Another daughter, Elizabeth, died of fever at age two in 1764 and was buried in the Negro cemetery alongside Nina.· He will be buried at City Cemetery.· Nikulin was buried in Novodevichy Cemetery, alongside leading officials and artists.· Many of those who died at Moreton in Marsh are buried in the local cemetery.· The parklike preserve also is the site of a tiny cemetery where members of the Bridges family and several Yahgans are buried.
· Trelawney himself is buried in Pelynt Church and the crozier carried in his funeral procession is also there on view.· It was my job to bury her in the church.· He was buried at the church of St Medard in Soissons.· He died 14 June 1835 and was buried in Dedham parish church, where there is a mural tablet to his memory.· May died 21 February 1684 and was buried in Mid Lavant church.· He died in 1792 and was buried in the church which he had built at Cromford.· To our surprise, she was not buried in the church with the Lintons, nor with the Earnshaws.
· They buried him in the churchyard here.· A few days later, George was buried in a Bergen churchyard.· Did I deserve to die, and be buried in the churchyard like my uncle Reed?· Owen was buried in the churchyard at Newtown, and there is a statue of him in the town's memorial park.· He was buried in Greyfriars Churchyard.· He died 12 March 1898 and was buried at Farnworth churchyard.· She was buried in the local churchyard.
· In recent weeks the two groups had buried their differences to stage joint armed protests across the country.· We must bury our differences and work together.
· Then she struggled up, burying her face in his hand and her own.· In her bedroom she buried her face in the pillow while numerous sobs escaped her, shaking her slim body uncontrollably.· Suddenly he raced across the stage and buried his face behind the curtain.· With a sob, Theda flung her arms about his neck and buried her face in his shoulder.· I turned over and buried my face in the grass.· Sam Somerville screamed once, buried her face in Quinn's back and began to cry.· With a choked sob she brought the bear closer until she had buried her face in it.
· In this case, Madeline Usher has been buried in the family vault below the house, supposedly dead.· Farm families usually bury their dead in family plots on their own land.· He is the first person to be buried in this family plot, which he has bought.· Blanche Arbuthnot was buried in the family plot at Naas.· He was buried in the family vault in St Peter's-in-the-East churchyard, Oxford.· Charles Longuet Higgins died in 1885 and was buried in the family vault at Turvey.· But his father wants them buried in a family plot in Santa Inez.
· Next week she will bury her father in that uniform.
· Village residents stated that at least 100 people had been murdered and buried in mass graves in the area.· They then buried him in a grave that Phocas had prepared for himself during the night.· Those corpses, the ones he had buried in their makeshift grave under the old elm tree who were they?· Her body was found buried in a shallow grave in a grove two days after she was last seen with Thompson.· They were buried in mass graves, the corpses piled one on top of the other under a few inches of soil.· Hundreds of people were killed and buried in shallow graves beside the road.· But sadly, she may never be able to prove what killed the people buried in the mass graves.
· The giant who has been buried under the ground for hundreds of years.· They cart her down to the city burying ground, roll red clay into her eyes.· It can even be buried in the ground to prevent wetting the soil surface and encouraging weeds.· A great shell fell, buried itself in the ground, and exploded near where I stood.· It can be very difficult to be sure of why a hoard of objects was buried in the ground.
· Christmas looks to be a time for burying the hatchet or exhuming it for re-examination.· So much for burying the hatchet, he thinks.· After the race, the two men met and sensibly buried the hatchet.· Holly McPeak and Nancy Reno hope to bury the hatchet long enough to bring home the gold.
· You will notice phrases like crocodile tears, the elephant never forgets, and the ostrich burying its head in the sand.· What is the good of having Rod Hull's Emu in the pulpit if he buries his head in the theological sands.· She righted herself almost immediately, flew into Mrs Saulitis's out-stretched arms and buried her head in her bosom.· In his room he fell on his bed, and buried his head in the pillow.· Flinging himself on the carpet, he buried his head wretchedly in the sofa cushions.· She buried her head in Florence's flank and groaned.· Suddenly all she wanted to do was get home and bury her head under her pillow.
· The sea wall ended, steps going down from the promenade and burying themselves in sand.· Many wrasses bury themselves in the sand at night.· It is possible that the reactors will never be demolished, but will be buried in mounds of sand or gravel.· The seeds of Nuphar must be stored in cold surroundings, either covered with moss or buried in the sand.· Archaeologists found it in a boat-shaped tomb 29m long, made out of mud bricks and buried deep in the sand.· He was buried in the sand.· We just buried ourselves in the sand.· A solitary star plummeted downward to bury itself in the sand beside Alec's foot.
· In fact he was digging for buried treasure.· Still, the movie fails to answer the big pirate question: Why are fictional pirates always burying their treasure?· It could be a Roman or Saxon burial ground and they were buried with their treasures.· But the notion of buried treasure in Arizona is not crazy.· In the Chandni Chowk shopkeepers boarded up their premises, buried their treasure and prepared for a long period of unrest.
VERB
· Did I deserve to die, and be buried in the churchyard like my uncle Reed?· When she died, he buried her.· Philip died and was buried at Lydiard Constantine, near Swindon.· When bulls die, we bury them with one or both horns sticking up out of the ground.· In Bhachau, which was also obliterated, 78 girls died when they were buried inside their school building.· When I die, bury me by the river.
· He was caught in the end, trying to bury one of the bodies in the cemetery, in a fresh grave.· I tried to bury myself in work.· Such testimony, unheard of in El Salvador, is potentially explosive in a state that has tried to bury its past.· West was having a fit trying to bury Prophet Samuel.· For she, too, had her practical streak though now she tried to bury it.· The move comes amid accusations that Oleksy is trying to bury the matter.· Guilt made her try to bury it deep in her subconscious.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM THE ENTRY
  • If you bury your head in the sand now, you may lose your house.
  • You'll never solve your problems if you just bury your head in the sand -- you have to face them.
bury the hatchet/bury your differencesbury yourself in your work/studies etc
  • Jessamy buried her face against her husband's shoulder.
  • She gripped his hands, his shirt, burying her face in his chest, hiding and laughing at her own reaction.
  • She returned to her chair and sank down into it burying her face in her hands.
  • Suddenly he raced across the stage and buried his face behind the curtain.
  • Then with a groan, he buried his face in her neck and began stroking her thighs.
  • You will notice phrases like crocodile tears, the elephant never forgets, and the ostrich burying its head in the sand.
bury your face/head in your hands
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
  • Gregory converted it too and Northampton knew they were dead and buried.
  • The defensive concepts of prewar days were dead and buried.
Word family
WORD FAMILYnounburialadjectiveburiedverbbury
1dead person to put someone who has died in a gravebury somebody in/at etc something He was buried in the churchyard of St Mary’s.2object to put something under the ground, often in order to hide it:  Electric cables are buried beneath the streets.3fall on something [usually passive] to fall on top of someone or something, usually harming or destroying thembe buried under/beneath etc something The skiers were buried under the snow. Fifty-seven miners were buried alive.4hidden to cover something so that it cannot be foundbe buried under/in something His glasses were buried under a pile of papers.GRAMMAR Bury is usually passive in this meaning.5feeling/memory to ignore a feeling or memory and pretend that it does not exist:  a deeply buried memory6bury your face/head etc (in something) to press your face etc into something soft:  Noel buried his face in the pillow.7bury your face/head in your hands to cover your face with your hands because you are very upset8bury your head in the sand to ignore an unpleasant situation and hope it will stop if you do not think about it9bury the hatchet/bury your differences to agree to stop arguing about something and become friends10in a surface to push something, especially something sharp, into something else with a lot of forcebury something in something The dog buried its teeth in my leg. The bullet buried itself in the wall.11bury yourself in your work/studies etc to give all your attention to something:  After the divorce, she buried herself in her work.12information to put information in a document in a place where it is unlikely to be noticed, or to not make it available to people:  The story was buried at the back of the paper.13loved one literary to have someone you love die:  She had buried her husband, two sons, and a daughter. be dead and buried at dead1(14)
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