释义 |
View usage for: (dɪspleɪs) Word forms: 3rd person singular presenttense displaces, present participle displacing, past tense, past participle displaced1. verbIf one thing displaces another, it forces the other thing out of its place, position, or role, and then occupies that place, position, or role itself. These factories have displaced tourism as the country's largest source of foreignexchange. [VERB noun] Coal is to be displaced by natural gas and nuclear power. [VERB noun] 2. verb [usually passive]If a person or group of people is displaced, they are forced to moved away from the area where they live. In Europe alone thirty million people were displaced. [be VERB-ed] Most of the civilians displaced by the war will be unable to return to their homes. [VERB-ed] ...the task of resettling refugees and displaced persons. [VERB-ed] Synonyms: force out, turn out, expel, throw out More Synonyms of displace More Synonyms of displace displace in British English (dɪsˈpleɪs) verb (transitive)1. to move from the usual or correct location 2. to remove from office or employment 3. to occupy the place of; replace; supplant 4. to force (someone) to leave home or country, as during a war 5. chemistry to replace (an atom or group in a chemical compound) by another atom or group 6. physics to cause a displacement of (a quantity of liquid, usually water of a specified type and density) Derived forms displaceable (disˈplaceable) adjective displacer (disˈplacer) noun displace in American English (dɪsˈpleɪs; ˈdɪspleɪs) verb transitiveWord forms: disˈplaced or disˈplacing1. to move from its usual or proper place 2. to remove from office; discharge 3. to take the place of; supplant or replace (a person or thing that one is the causeof or occasion for removing, pushing aside, etc.) a ship displaces a certain amount of water, factory workers that have been displaced by machines SIMILAR WORDS: reˈplace Word origin OFr desplacer: see di- 1 & place Examples of 'displace' in a sentencedisplace There are currently 65 million displaced people across the world.About 10,000 people have been killed in the fighting and three million have been displaced.More than 40 million people had been displaced during the conflict.It is a poor, rural area and is already housing more than 700,000 people displaced by fighting in other regions.Earlier this month I was in northern Nigeria visiting camps for internally displaced people and villages being attacked by militia.Two million people have been displaced by the conflict.Tens of thousands of people have been killed and more than a million displaced by the fighting. Gas is clearly displacing coal and new nuclear is years away.Maybe he has displaced one but he could hardly walk and had to sit out training.The nine million others displaced by the war are not so lucky.The first hours after a disaster are critical in organising recovery efforts and helping displaced people.More than a million people are displaced.She was just one of half a million displaced people in makeshift camps.Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced but little of military value was accomplished on either side.Both sides have been accused of committing atrocities in a conflict that also displaced almost five million people.This was not a classic case of people displaced by war activities and seeking to return to their country of origin.The result is a beguiling and wistful study of displaced people that conveys the paradoxical loneliness and richness of cosmopolitan life.At least 1.2 million people have been displaced within the country.Heat pumps will displace gas boilers, but that will be a slow process.Caring for the 99 sheep ranked higher with them than reaching the lost or displaced ones.Her detective was also displaced by the war to England.Today no fewer than 12 million have been displaced.That war killed two million, displaced four million and enslaved hundreds of thousands.There are 60 million displaced people across the world and most want work.More than 8,000 civilians have been killed and a million displaced.Nearly a third of the population has been displaced and 65,000 people have nowhere to return to.Hundreds of thousands have been displaced by the war and some 40 per cent of the population is on food aid.The one seeks to displace the impotence of the opposition onto the flaws of her character: we failed because she is wicked and unfair.Britain must continue to provide aid to camps in the Middle East that can serve as a first port of call for those displaced by war. In other languagesdisplace British English: displace VERB If one thing displaces another, it forces the other thing out of its place, position, or role, and then occupies that place, position, or role itself. These factories have displaced tourism as the country's largest source of foreign exchange. - American English: displace
- Brazilian Portuguese: deslocar
- Chinese: 取代
- European Spanish: desplazar
- French: remplacer
- German: ablösen
- Italian: rimpiazzare
- Japanese: 取って代わる
- Korean: 밀어 내다
- European Portuguese: deslocar
- Latin American Spanish: desplazar
Chinese translation of 'displace' vt - (= supplant)
取代 (qǔdài) to be displaced [people] 背井离(離)乡(鄉) (bèi jǐng lí xiāng)
These factories have displaced tourism. Synonyms take over from oust usurp crowd out fill or step into (someone's) boots In Europe alone, 30 million people were displaced. Synonyms force out turn out throw out unsettle kick out (informal) boot out (informal) dispossess turf out (informal) Definition to move (something) from its usual place A strong wind is all it would take to displace the stones. Synonyms misplace disarrange derange Definition to remove (someone) from a post or position of authority They displaced him in a coup. Additional synonymsDefinition to move slightly I pulled and pulled but I couldn't budge it. Synonyms dislodge, move, push, roll, remove, transfer, shift, slide, stir, propelDefinition to dismiss with dishonour from the armed forces Many officers were cashiered on political grounds. Synonyms dismiss, discharge, expel, cast off, drum out, give the boot to (slang) Definition to remove from an office or position of power The president was deposed in a coup. Synonyms oust, dismiss, displace, degrade, downgrade, cashier, demote, dethrone, remove from office |