释义 |
reappearre‧ap‧pear /ˌriːəˈpɪə $ -ˈpɪr/ ●○○ verb [intransitive] VERB TABLEreappear |
Present | I, you, we, they | reappear | | he, she, it | reappears | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | reappeared | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have reappeared | | he, she, it | has reappeared | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had reappeared | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will reappear | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have reappeared |
|
Present | I | am reappearing | | he, she, it | is reappearing | | you, we, they | are reappearing | Past | I, he, she, it | was reappearing | | you, we, they | were reappearing | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been reappearing | | he, she, it | has been reappearing | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been reappearing | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be reappearing | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been reappearing |
- Baines went back inside and reappeared a few moments later carrying an umbrella.
- For example, the natural arrangement of the chemical elements in Mendeleyev's periodic table has groups of traits reappearing cyclically.
- He reappeared as soon as the battlefield situation improved.
- I waited maybe an hour and he didn't reappear.
- Some rumours, he says, have survived for centuries, merely by mutating and reappearing in a different guise.
- Then she ran, reappearing in the next batch of dreams.
- They have not, in the over twenty years since then, reappeared.
- When he reappeared, he was naked, and she quickly noticed that his member hung limply.
any one of the people in a group or in the world► appear to start to be seen or to suddenly be seen: · A face appeared at the window.appear from: · The manager suddenly appeared from his office.appear from behind/under etc: · A spider appeared from under the sofa.· Lois was about to knock when a woman appeared from around the side of the house.appear out of nowhere (=suddenly appear): · The dog appeared out of nowhere and began running alongside me. ► become visible to gradually start to be able to be seen - use this when you just start to see something, especially when it looks very small and difficult to see: · We had been on the boat for several hours when I noticed the coastline slowly becoming visible.· As the fog became thinner, the edges of buildings slowly became visible. ► come into view/come into sight if something comes into view/sight , you can see it as you get closer to it or it gets closer to you - use this about things that are far away: · As the station came into sight, the train began to slow down.· Astronomers say that over the next few weeks the comet will be coming into view. ► come out if the sun, the moon, or a star comes out , it appears in the sky: · The moon came out from behind a cloud.· As the sky grew darker, the stars came out one by one. ► emerge especially written to come out from a room, building or other enclosed space and start to be seen: emerge from: · Baxter emerged from the building and walked across the parking lot to a waiting car.· Brian, emerging from the bathroom, heard his wife speaking to someone at the front door.· At the airport, people stood behind a metal fence waiting for passengers to emerge from customs. ► loom/loom up if a large person or thing looms or looms up , they suddenly appear in a way that makes you feel nervous or frightened, especially in a situation in which you cannot see clearly: · As we rounded the curve, the mountain loomed up in front of us.· They were walking through the alley when a man suddenly loomed out of the shadows. ► reappear to appear again after a short time of not being there or not being able to be seen: · Baines went back inside and reappeared a few moments later carrying an umbrella. ADVERB► just· Blanche reappeared just after four, throwing off her coat and beckoning Dexter into her office in the same gesture.· But the mark will just reappear as a ring on the cloth.. ► then· He comes on stage performing ballet steps, pirouettes off into the wings, makes some weird grunting sounds, then reappears.· I took long breaks away from training and would then reappear like the proverbial bad penny, as if I had never been away. VERB► disappear· A young man disappeared and reappeared with the beach stuff.· The ability to disappear and reappear, to die and to be born again.· Then Alberta disappeared, to reappear some time later, working for a wholesaler selling through catalogues. nounappearance ≠ disappearancereappearanceverbappear ≠ disappearreappear to appear again after not being seen for some time: In March, his cancer reappeared. Many of these ideas reappear in his later books.—reappearance noun [countable, uncountable] |