释义 |
renamere‧name /ˌriːˈneɪm/ verb [transitive]  VERB TABLErename |
Present | I, you, we, they | rename | | he, she, it | renames | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | renamed | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have renamed | | he, she, it | has renamed | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had renamed | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will rename | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have renamed |
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Present | I | am renaming | | he, she, it | is renaming | | you, we, they | are renaming | Past | I, he, she, it | was renaming | | you, we, they | were renaming | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been renaming | | he, she, it | has been renaming | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been renaming | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be renaming | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been renaming |
- In 1930, the bank was renamed Bank of America.
- New Amsterdam was renamed New York in the 17th Century.
- You can rename, delete, or copy files very easily.
- In 1951 it was renamed the DeAnza, and sold again in 1957, when it became the Tucson Holiday Motel.
- In no time senators were renaming themselves with longer and longer titles so that their seconds should be bigger than everyone else's.
- Olivetti is rescued by the Vatican and renamed Holivetti.
- The Start menu demonstrates something else you can do with shortcuts: rename them and still retain the underlying links.
- These are apartments but our visitors have renamed them piggyback bungalows.
- Thus the Khmer Rouge came to power in April 1975 and created yet another political system, renaming the state Kampuchea.
to give a name to someone or something► call: call somebody Paul/Jane etc · My mother wanted to call me Yuri.· Guidebooks call Chicago "The Windy City".· This is what psychologists call "body language". ► name to officially give someone or something a name: · Have they named the baby yet?name somebody Paul/Jane etc: · We named our daughter Sarah.name somebody/something after somebodyalso name somebody/something for somebody American: · Bill was named after his father.· The new building is going to be named for Ronald Reagan. ► christen to give a baby its name at a Christian religious ceremony: christen somebody Paul/Jane etc: · They christened him Patrick John.· She was christened Jessica, but everyone calls her Jess. ► rename to give something a new and different name: · You can rename, delete, or copy files very easily.rename something something: · New Amsterdam was renamed New York in the 17th Century. ADVERB► now· First up will be a central object-oriented repository for AD/Cycle, now renamed the Application Development Platform.· Since those early days, work at the Museum, now renamed Southport Railway Centre has gone on apace.· Now renamed O'Keefe's, the café becomes a restaurant with a delicatessen, but continues to offer its take-away service. NOUN► file· On occasion you may begin to open a file and find that you would prefer to rename the file or delete it.· Wigginton said, but a poll of the Mac team decided that the renamed file would be the one remaining visible.· These allow the user to delete and rename files or make a backup copy.· To load and rename a backup file within Word, you have to give it its full name with the.· If the message Can not rename file appears, you have chosen a filename which is already in use.· Using this statement, you can, for instance, erase and rename files whose names you only know at run-time. ► party· He renamed his party Pyidaungsu, emphasising its attachment to the soil. adjectivenamed ≠ unnamednamelessverbnamerenamenounnameadverbnamely to give something a new namebe renamed something Myddleton Way was renamed Allende Avenue.GRAMMAR Rename is usually passive. |