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单词 resume
释义
resume1 verbresume2 noun
resumere‧sume1 /rɪˈzjuːm $ rɪˈzuːm/ ●●○ verb formal Word Origin
WORD ORIGINresume
Origin:
1400-1500 Old French resumer, from Latin resumere, from sumere ‘to take’
Verb Table
VERB TABLE
resume
Simple Form
PresentI, you, we, theyresume
he, she, itresumes
PastI, you, he, she, it, we, theyresumed
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave resumed
he, she, ithas resumed
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad resumed
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill resume
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have resumed
Continuous Form
PresentIam resuming
he, she, itis resuming
you, we, theyare resuming
PastI, he, she, itwas resuming
you, we, theywere resuming
Present perfectI, you, we, theyhave been resuming
he, she, ithas been resuming
Past perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theyhad been resuming
FutureI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill be resuming
Future perfectI, you, he, she, it, we, theywill have been resuming
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • "As I was saying," resumed Dahlberg.
  • Collins was so seriously injured that he was unable to resume his career.
  • He said no more, and resumed reading his newspaper.
  • Sherman resumed his walk toward First Avenue.
  • The jurors are anxious to resume their normal lives again.
  • The trial will resume on Wednesday morning.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • Fifteen minutes go by, and the noise resumes, gently, slowly, and in my direction.
  • Normal service has since been resumed.
  • Otherwise, however, the pressure to resume normal service was wide and intense.
  • Pumping operations would resume this morning.
  • Stories, however, have circulated that the Bush administration may be more open than was President Clinton to resuming diplomatic relations.
  • The course of power and enterprise has resumed.
  • Which is handy for large files as it's faster and can resume broken downloads.
Thesaurus
THESAURUSto start doing something
to begin doing something: · I’m starting a new job next week.· It’s time we started.
to start doing something.Begin is more formal than start, and is used especially in written English: · He began to speak.· The orchestra began playing.· Shall we begin?
formal to start doing something: · The company will commence drilling next week.· Work was commenced on the next power station.
to finally start doing something, especially your work: · Come on, Sam – it’s time you got down to some homework.· We’d better get down to business.
to start a journey: · What time do you have to set off in the morning?· I usually set off for work at about 8.30.
to start a long journey: · The ship set out from Portsmouth on July 12th.
especially written to start something, especially something new, difficult, or exciting: · The Law Society has embarked on a major programme of reform.· Jamaica was embarking on a decade of musical creativity.
formal to start doing something again after stopping it or being interrupted: · Normal train services will be resumed on April 5th.· Trade was resumed after the end of the war.
informal to start doing something or going somewhere: · I think we should get cracking straightaway.
Longman Language Activatorto continue doing something after stopping
if you continue doing something, or it continues, it starts again after stopping: · After a while the rain stopped, allowing the game to continue.· He has decided to go back to Cambridge to continue his medical studies.· The tour continued after a rest day in Bordeaux.continue doing something: · Have a rest before you continue driving.· He's not sure whether he'll be able to continue skiing competitively after the operation.
to start again , continuing the same thing that you were doing before you stopped, or continuing to happen in the same way as before: · He stopped exercising after the injury, but recently he's started again.start something again: · I've had a good vacation and I'm not exactly looking forward to starting work again.start doing something again: · After a two-week rest I was ready to start running again.· Billy was afraid to say anything in case she started crying again.start to do something again: · Marian stared through the window. It was starting to snow again.
also carry on British to continue doing something after stopping for a short time: · Occasionally he would stop writing, read through what he had written, and then go on.· It's one o'clock now. Shall we carry on after lunch?go on/carry on doing something: · After a short break for coffee, they went on working until 3 o'clock.· She decided to carry on working after having the baby.go on with: · Let's stop now. We'll go on with this tomorrow.· As soon as Mr Saunders gets back, we'll carry on with the meeting.
to start doing a particular job again after a period when you were doing something else. Return to is more formal than go back to: · Melanie made herself a cup of tea and then went back to her reading.· Some mothers return to full-time work only a few weeks after their baby is born.go back to/return to doing something: · If he can't get work as an actor, he can always go back to being an electrician.
formal if you resume something or it resumes , it continues after a pause or interruption: · Collins was so seriously injured that he was unable to resume his career.· The jurors are anxious to resume their normal lives again.resume doing something: · He said no more, and resumed reading his newspaper.
to start doing something such as a sport or activity again after a long period of time when you were not doing it: take something up again: · I stopped playing the guitar when I was fifteen, but now I'd like to take it up again.take up something again: · Now that I don't have to work in the evenings, I'd like to take up sketching again.
to start something again at exactly the same point where you stopped: · After a long absence I went back to college, hoping to pick up where I'd left off.· The team has picked up where they left off last spring.· Negotiators will meet again after the holidays and take up where they left off.
if someone reopens a formal discussion, trial etc, or it reopens , it starts again after stopping, especially because new information has been found: · The two sides are prepared to reopen peace talks.· The action is likely to reopen debates about affirmative action.· Police have decided to reopen the investigation in the light of important new evidence.
to start to do something again - use this especially about activities done by governments and military organizations: · The rebels waited until nightfall to renew their attack on the city.· Iceland has no immediate plans to renew commercial whaling.
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
(=start doing your job again)· She hopes to be well enough to resume her duties next week.
(=start them again)· The pressure is on Israel and the Palestinians to resume peace negotiations.
(=begin them again after they were stopped or interrupted)· Kenya and Uganda agreed to restore full diplomatic relations.
formal (=sit down again)· We resumed our seats for the second half of the play.
· Talks resumed in Geneva on April 19 after a month’s break.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSNOUN
· Nature resumes its activities, the patterns of behaviour you disrupted by your arrival.· Four of five people with clinical depression can improve and resume daily activity, usually within weeks.· The plates realigned and subduction resumed, sparking volcanic activity which spewed forth the granite rock covering much of the Sierras.
· Friends believe he may take the post rather than wait for a by-election to resume his career.· Supreme Court overthrew his conviction, and he resumed his boxing career and transcended sports.· It's understandable that she would want to resume her acting career after having children.· Alexander has told friends she intends to follow through on a desire to resume her acting career.· The star, who won an Oscar for Paper Moon at the age of nine, was desperate to resume her career.· Voice over Northampton's Derek Redmond, is to resume his athletics career.· In the 1920s Pearson resumed his acting career but also began publishing short stories, essays, and journalism.
· Pull hard, and it will resume its climb.· Then investors regained their balance, and the market resumed its upward climb.· The funicular had resumed its climb, apparently smoothly enough.· P and Nasdaq resumed their climbs after the July 19 drop -- but money flow into both kept declining.
· We resumed conversation almost as if we had never left off.· After a decent interval, the three of them resumed their conversation, much to my relief.· They resumed their conversation, chatting away late into the evening.· As the weather changes, the boat begins to roll a little, and the tables in the bar resume their metallic conversation.· Then I resumed my conversation with the Mahommedans.
· He will resume duties next week following the apology.· The state has replaced it and the family will not resume these duties even if the state were to withdraw.· Mitterrand, 75, who left a Paris hospital yesterday, will resume his duties soon.· Coetsee was expected to resume his duties after he had recuperated.· Then after a hearty sneeze, Fagg appeared ready to resume his duties as interviewee.· He is expected to resume duties next week.· I spoke to Michael some time ago, he's getting better, and I look forward to him resuming his duties.
· There was a gentle, left-right shuffle, then it resumed yaw-free flight.
· Now able to resume his job as a postman, he owes his life to the paramedics.· Herman brought the same kind of resume to the job that her predecessors did.· Their onerous errand completed, the men resumed their jobs.· Employers could post job openings and browse through the resumes of job seekers.
· As they prepared to leave and resume their homeward journey, Jack decided to take a last look around the parcels office.· He listened completely, and when he resumed his journey, found that one hundred years had passed by.· The passengers and crew had transferred to the Stratocruiser and resumed their journey more than 3 hours behind schedule.· So we left and resumed our journey.· It was snowing on the day we resumed our northward journey.· The gentleman returned to his compartment and resumed his journey, puzzled by his strange experience.
· But then they had to come back and resume their lives.· Some patients did emerge from iron lungs and resume their normal lives, fully recovered.· Then, in May 1823, the hoped-for pardon arrived and he was able to resume a normal life at Kinloch.· Within a few months she was able to resume her normal life with new coping skills and a greater sense of self-affirmation.· It might be nice, mightn't it, to get back home and resume her quiet ordinary life?· Power and phone service were being restored; daily life was resuming.· I feel that you need a complete rest before you can resume normal life.· He has vowed to solve the crime almost as often as he has vowed to resume the life he used to live.
· The delegations again failed to agree on when or where the negotiations should resume.· Settlement negotiations may resume Monday, sources say.· A round of hostilities could develop that would diminish the chances of the negotiations resuming.· Clinton said yesterday negotiations would resume no later than next Wednesday.· But the Hebron negotiations resumed within 24 hours.
· The wings then resume their normal position when the adult emerges.· Her body resumes its fetal position and Jakhaila relaxes into sleep.· Her resume lists pilot positions with Los Angeles-based Alpha Airlines.
· His leadership role was taken from him and he resumed his role as physician.
· Otherwise, however, the pressure to resume normal service was wide and intense.· No commercial airlines have yet resumed service.· Finally, permission was given for the ferry to resume its scheduled services from 9am today.· Because of a coal crisis, passenger services ceased over the whole line as from 15 January 1951 and were never resumed.
· He resumed his studies at the Royal College but was unable to concentrate.· She decided to return east and resume her studies at Columbiato pick up her life where she had left off.· She shrugged and resumed her morose study of the green glass which stood in front of her.· The company had wanted him to transfer to London, in order to resume the computer studies he had been taking at school.
· Once it is forgotten again, she resumes her work in the spartan room allocated to her by a local co-op.· B.. Present a formal written resume of your work and employment experience, appropriate for future job searches.· He resumed work at Beaumaris in 1306 but died before May 1309.· Sedgwick and McGean carried with them copies of their resumes, rental and work histories, credit reports and life stories.· Mahathir resumed work on April 3.· Blaming a personality clash within the department for her ultimatum, she said she would resume work when her back was better.· Dixon returned to Durham, resuming his work as a surveyor.· But when he had recovered sufficiently he wanted to resume work as possible on his play.
VERB
· The peace talks were scheduled to resume in Caracas on July 15.· It is scheduled to resume production on Tuesday.· The Senate is scheduled to resume consideration of the bill Wednesday.· S., President Bill Clinton and Republican congressional leaders are scheduled to resume their budget talks later today.· The talks are scheduled to resume on Tuesday in Chicago.· Republican leaders are scheduled to resume budget talks with the Clinton administration Wednesday.· Debate on the measure was interrupted by the tax cut bill but is scheduled to resume after the recess.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM THE ENTRY
  • Will the delegates please resume their seats?
  • By the time Michele returned and resumed his seat she was sipping her wine, her plate almost empty.
  • If your opponent interrupts you, resume your seat while he is speaking.
  • Madame Olenska rose, wound it up and returned to the fire, but without resuming her seat.
  • Mr Scott resumed his place, a look of quiet satisfaction on his face.
  • They resumed their seats and Owen slipped away into a tide of music and colour.
  • Winnie resumed her seat and her knitting.
1[transitive] to start doing something again after stopping or being interrupted:  She hopes to resume work after the baby is born. The rebels have resumed hostilities against government troops.resume doing something He will resume training as soon as the injury is better. see thesaurus at start2[intransitive] if an activity or process resumes, it starts again after a pause:  Peace talks will resume tomorrow.3resume your seat/place/position to go back to the seat, place, or position where you were before:  Will the delegates please resume their seats?
resume1 verbresume2 noun
resumere‧su‧me2, résumé /ˈrezjʊmeɪ, ˈreɪ- $ ˌrezʊˈmeɪ/ ●●○ noun [countable] Word Origin
WORD ORIGINrésumé
Origin:
1800-1900 French past participle of résumer; RESUME
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • He gave a resume of the year's work and wished the Society another successful year.
  • Instead, it attempts to give a brief resume of the current legal position.
word sets
WORD SETS
absenteeism, nounacademic, adjectiveacademy, nounadult education, nounalma mater, nounassessment, nounassessor, nounassignment, nounaudiovisual, adjectiveAV, binder, nounbiology, nounblackboard, nounbursary, nounbusiness studies, nounCAL, nounCALL, nouncareer counselor, nouncareers officer, nouncase study, nounCDT, nouncert., certificate, nouncertificated, adjectivechalkboard, nouncharm school, nounchemistry set, nouncivics, nounclass, nounclassicist, nounclassmate, nouncloze test, nouncoach, nouncoeducation, nouncollege, nouncollegiate, adjectivecommon room, nouncomprehension, nouncomprehensive, adjectivecomputer-literate, adjectivecomputer science, nouncontinuing education, nouncorrespondence course, nouncoursebook, nouncoursework, nouncrash course, nouncredit, nouncrib, verbcross, nouncurriculum, nounD, noundiploma, noundirect method, nounDirector of Studies, noundissect, verbdistance learning, noundistinction, noundo, verbdropout, noundyslexia, nounedify, verbedifying, adjectiveeducate, verbeducational, adjectiveeducationalist, nouneducator, nounEFL, nounELT, nounESL, nounESOL, nounESP, nounessay, nounevening class, nounexam, nounexamination, nounexamine, verbexercise, nounexercise book, nounexternal, adjectiveextracurricular, adjectiveF, fail, nounfellowship, nounfield, nounfield day, nounfield trip, nounfieldwork, nounflashcard, nounflip chart, nounflunk, verbfree period, nounfresher, nounfreshman, nounfurther education, nounglobe, noungoverness, noungrade, verbgraded, adjectivegrade point average, noungrind, nounheuristic, adjectivehistory, nounimmersion, nounineducable, adjectiveinfirmary, nounintake, nounintelligence quotient, nouninterdisciplinary, adjectiveintroductory, adjectiveinvigilate, verbIQ, nounjanitor, nounlearning curve, nounlesson, nounletter, nounletter, verbliberal arts, nounlibrarian, nounlibrary, nounlife science, nounmainstream, adjectivemasterclass, nounmatron, nounmedia studies, nounmnemonic, nounmoderate, verbmoderator, nounmodular, adjectivemodule, nounmultiple choice, adjectivenight school, nounnumerate, adjectiveopen house, nounoral, nounoverqualified, adjectivepapier mâché, nounpass, verbpass, nounpastoral, adjectivepedagogical, adjectivepedagogue, nounpedagogy, nounphonics, nounphrasebook, nounphysical education, nounpicture book, nounplacement, nounplaytime, nounpoli sci, nounpolitical science, nounpolitics, nounprincipal, nounprize day, nounproblem, nounproctor, nounprogrammed learning, nounprotégé, nounquad, nounqualification, nounqualify, verbquick, adjectiverector, nounre-educate, verbrefectory, nounreference, nounreference library, nounrequirement, nounresearch, nounresearch, verbresit, verbresource, nounresult, nounresume, nounretake, verbretake, nounreunion, nounreview, verbrevise, verbrevision, nounrole-play, nounrote, nounscholar, nounscholarship, nounscholastic, adjectiveschool, nounscience, nounscript, nounself-taught, adjectiveset, verbspeciality, nounspelling bee, nounstandard, adjectivestate school, nounstudent body, nounstudent government, nounstudent loan, nounstudent teaching, nounstudent union, nounstudy, verbstudy hall, nounsub, nounsummer holidays, nounsummer vacation, nounsuperintendent, nounteacher, nounteaching, nountechie, nounterm, nounterm paper, nounTESL, nounTESOL, nountext, nountextbook, nountick, nountick, verbtimetable, nountimetable, verbtranscript, nountrimester, nountruancy, nountuition, nountutor, nountutor, verbunderclassman, noununit, noununseen, nounvisual aid, nounvocational, adjectivewhiteboard, nounworkbook, nounworksheet, nounX, nounyearbook, noun
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
(=start doing your job again)· She hopes to be well enough to resume her duties next week.
(=start them again)· The pressure is on Israel and the Palestinians to resume peace negotiations.
(=begin them again after they were stopped or interrupted)· Kenya and Uganda agreed to restore full diplomatic relations.
formal (=sit down again)· We resumed our seats for the second half of the play.
· Talks resumed in Geneva on April 19 after a month’s break.
1a short account of something such as an article or speech which gives the main points but no details SYN  summary:  a brief résumé of the day’s events2American English a short written account of your education and your previous jobs that you send to an employer when you are looking for a new job SYN CV British English
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