释义 |
dynamody‧na‧mo /ˈdaɪnəməʊ $ -moʊ/ noun (plural dynamos) [countable]  dynamoOrigin: 1800-1900 dynamoelectric machine (1800-1900) - Bicycle lights are usually powered by a dynamo.
- Jasso is the 5 foot 2 inch dynamo who is in charge of the teaching program.
- Oil production is the dynamo that drives Iraq's economy.
- And that gives dynamo theorists a way to solve one aspect of how the molten iron mixes.
- As the Countess of Dartmouth, she was a dynamo in London politics in the 1960s.
- Here was a brand-new kind of eartha rolling, boiling dynamo.
- That physical phenomenon is the muscle behind a dynamo, or standard electric generator.
- The seller offered to meet half the cost of repairing the dynamo.
- They have generators under the floors ... like dynamos on bicycles ... that make electricity from the wheels going round.
► Electricityammeter, nounamp, nounanode, nounblow, verbcathode, nouncircuit, nouncontact, nouncurrent, noundiode, noundirect current, noundischarge, noundynamo, nounelectricity, nounelectro-, prefixelectromagnet, nounelectromagnetic, adjectiveelectromagnetism, nounflat, adjectiveflex, nounimpulse, nounincandescent, adjectiveinduction, nounJ, kilowatt, nounkW, LED, nounlight-emitting diode, nounmagnetic, adjectivemagnetic field, nounmagnetic tape, nounmagnetism, nounmagnetize, verbohm, nounoscillate, verboscillator, nounoverload, verbplasma, nounpolarity, nounpole, nounpositive, adjectivepotential, nounradio wave, nounrepel, verbrepulsion, nounresistance, nounresistor, nounsemiconductor, nounshock, nounsolid-state, adjectivestatic, nounstatic electricity, nounsubatomic, adjectivesubstation, nounsuperconductivity, nounsuperconductor, nountransmission, nountransmit, verbvoltmeter, noun 1a machine that changes some other form of power directly into electricity: bicycle lights powered by a dynamo2someone who is excited about what they do and who puts a lot of energy into it: the team’s midfield dynamo3something that has a strong effect on something else, and that makes things happen: Oil is the dynamo of the country’s economy. |