释义 |
hurl
hurl H0163400 (hûrl)v. hurled, hurl·ing, hurls v.tr.1. To throw with great force; fling. See Synonyms at throw.2. To cause to move with great force or violence: The bus's sudden stop hurled the passengers to the floor.3. To send with great vigor; thrust: hurled the army against the enemy.4. To utter vehemently: hurled insults at the speaker.5. Slang To vomit (the contents of the stomach).v.intr.1. To move with great speed, force, or violence; hurtle.2. To throw something with force.3. Slang To vomit.4. Baseball To pitch the ball. [Middle English hurlen.] hurl n.hurl′er n.hurl (hɜːl) vb1. (tr) to throw or propel with great force2. (tr) to utter with force; yell: to hurl insults. 3. Scot to transport or be transported in a driven vehiclen4. the act or an instance of hurling5. Scot a ride in a driven vehicle[C13: probably of imitative origin] ˈhurler nhurl (hɜrl) v.t. 1. to throw or fling with great force or vigor; cast. 2. to throw or cast down. 3. to utter with vehemence: to hurl insults at the umpire. v.i. 4. to throw a missile. n. 5. a forcible or violent throw; fling. [1175–1225; Middle English; compare Low German hurreln to toss] hurl′er, n. hurl Past participle: hurled Gerund: hurling
Present |
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I hurl | you hurl | he/she/it hurls | we hurl | you hurl | they hurl |
Preterite |
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I hurled | you hurled | he/she/it hurled | we hurled | you hurled | they hurled |
Present Continuous |
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I am hurling | you are hurling | he/she/it is hurling | we are hurling | you are hurling | they are hurling |
Present Perfect |
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I have hurled | you have hurled | he/she/it has hurled | we have hurled | you have hurled | they have hurled |
Past Continuous |
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I was hurling | you were hurling | he/she/it was hurling | we were hurling | you were hurling | they were hurling |
Past Perfect |
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I had hurled | you had hurled | he/she/it had hurled | we had hurled | you had hurled | they had hurled |
Future |
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I will hurl | you will hurl | he/she/it will hurl | we will hurl | you will hurl | they will hurl |
Future Perfect |
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I will have hurled | you will have hurled | he/she/it will have hurled | we will have hurled | you will have hurled | they will have hurled |
Future Continuous |
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I will be hurling | you will be hurling | he/she/it will be hurling | we will be hurling | you will be hurling | they will be hurling |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been hurling | you have been hurling | he/she/it has been hurling | we have been hurling | you have been hurling | they have been hurling |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been hurling | you will have been hurling | he/she/it will have been hurling | we will have been hurling | you will have been hurling | they will have been hurling |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been hurling | you had been hurling | he/she/it had been hurling | we had been hurling | you had been hurling | they had been hurling |
Conditional |
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I would hurl | you would hurl | he/she/it would hurl | we would hurl | you would hurl | they would hurl |
Past Conditional |
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I would have hurled | you would have hurled | he/she/it would have hurled | we would have hurled | you would have hurled | they would have hurled | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | hurl - a violent throw castthrow - the act of throwing (propelling something with a rapid movement of the arm and wrist); "the catcher made a good throw to second base" | Verb | 1. | hurl - throw forcefullyhurtle, castdash, crash - hurl or thrust violently; "He dashed the plate against the wall"; "Waves were dashing against the rock"precipitate - hurl or throw violently; "The bridge broke and precipitated the train into the river below"throw - propel through the air; "throw a frisbee"sling, catapult - hurl as if with a slingbowl - hurl a cricket ball from one end of the pitch towards the batsman at the other end | | 2. | hurl - make a thrusting forward movementlunge, hurtle, thrustmove - move so as to change position, perform a nontranslational motion; "He moved his hand slightly to the right"dart - move with sudden speed; "His forefinger darted in all directions as he spoke"riposte - make a return thrust; "his opponent riposted" | | 3. | hurl - utter with force; utter vehemently; "hurl insults"; "throw accusations at someone"throwgive tongue to, utter, express, verbalise, verbalize - articulate; either verbally or with a cry, shout, or noise; "She expressed her anger"; "He uttered a curse" |
hurlverb1. throw, fling, chuck (informal), send, fire, project, launch, cast, pitch, shy, toss, propel, sling, heave, let fly (with) Groups of angry youths hurled stones at police.2. shout, scream, yell, roar, bellow hurling abuse at one anotherhurlverbTo send through the air with a motion of the hand or arm:cast, dart, dash, fling, heave, hurtle, launch, pitch, shoot, shy, sling, throw, toss.Informal: fire.nounAn act of throwing:cast, fling, heave, launch, pitch, shy, sling, throw, toss.Translationshurl (həːl) verb to throw violently. He hurled himself to the ground; They hurled rocks/insults at their attackers. 用力投擲 猛投,用力掷 hurl
hurl1. slang To vomit. Geez, I thought I was going to hurl out on that boat—I felt so seasick!2. slang Vomit. Ew, there's hurl on the floor. Someone call the janitor!hurl around1. Literally, to fling or throw something in a careless or irresponsible manner. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hurl" and "around." If you keep hurling your tablet around like that, you're going to break it.2. By extension, to use something, typically words, in a careless or irresponsible manner. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hurl" and "around." Wow, I can't believe Becky just came into your office and started hurling around accusations like that.See also: around, hurlhurl (someone or something) at (someone or something)To forcefully throw someone or something at someone or something. He can't believe he hurled the ball at your head like that, sheesh!See also: hurlhurl away (from someone or something)To move something away from someone or something by throwing it, usually forcefully. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hurl" and "away." The rescue workers hurled the debris away from the whining dog.See also: away, hurl, someonehurl downTo throw something down, usually in a forceful or violent manner. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hurl" and "down." The coach hurled down his playbook and proceeded to scream at the referee. Amy hurled her doll down before having a tantrum in the middle of the playground.See also: down, hurlhurl insults (at one)To insult one in rapid succession. That bully is constantly hurling insults at the other kids in class.See also: hurl, insulthurl (someone or something) into (something)To throw someone or something, usually forcefully or violently, into something else. The criminal hurled his hostage into the closet and locked the door. We were running so late that I just hurled my books into my backpack and rushed out to the car.See also: hurlhurl out (of some place or thing)To forcefully eject or otherwise remove someone or something from some place or thing. Can be used figuratively or literally. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hurl" and "out." If you keep heckling the comedian, you're going to get hurled out by one of the bouncers. I can't believe she just hurled me out of her life after one argument!See also: hurl, out, placehurl insults (at someone) and throw insults (at someone)Fig. to direct insults at someone; to say something insulting directly to someone. Anne hurled an insult at Bob that made him very angry. If you two would stop throwing insults, we could have a serious discussion.See also: hurl, insulthurl someone or something at someone or somethingto throw someone or something at someone or something. The huge man actually hurled me at the tree. Larry hurled his shoe at me.See also: hurlhurl someone or something downto throw or push someone or something downward to the ground. Roger hurled the football down and it bounced away wildly. He hurled down the football in anger. The angry player hurled the ball down.See also: down, hurlhurl someone or something into somethingto throw someone or something into something. She hurled the little boys into the storm cellar and went back to the house for the dog. Sharon hurled her belongings into the suitcase and jammed it closed.See also: hurlhurl someone or something out (of some place) and hurl someone or something outto throw someone or something out of some place. The manager hurled them out of the tavern. The manager hurled out the annoying people.See also: hurl, outhurl something aroundto throw something, such as words, around carelessly. Don't just go hurling foul words around like they didn't mean anything. You are just hurling around words!See also: around, hurlhurl something away (from someone or something)to throw or push something away from someone or something. She hurled the bricks away from the partially buried child. Hurl away the bricks as fast as you can.See also: away, hurlhurl1. in. to empty one’s stomach; to vomit. (see also earl.) I think I gotta go hurl. 2. n. vomit. There’s hurl all over the bathroom floor! EncyclopediaSeehurlingMedicalSeeHurlerHURL
Acronym | Definition |
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HURL➣Handy Uniform Resource Locator | HURL➣Humor Research Lab (Colorado) | HURL➣Hawai'i Undersea Research Laboratory | HURL➣Hawaii Undersea Research Lab (oceanography) | HURL➣Halifax Ultimate Recreational League (Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada) | HURL➣Human Relations and Multicultural Education | HURL➣Hypertext Usenet Reader and Linker | HURL➣Hughes Undergraduate Research Laboratory (University of California, Santa Cruz) |
hurl Related to hurl: HurleySynonyms for hurlverb throwSynonyms- throw
- fling
- chuck
- send
- fire
- project
- launch
- cast
- pitch
- shy
- toss
- propel
- sling
- heave
- let fly (with)
verb shoutSynonyms- shout
- scream
- yell
- roar
- bellow
Synonyms for hurlverb to send through the air with a motion of the hand or armSynonyms- cast
- dart
- dash
- fling
- heave
- hurtle
- launch
- pitch
- shoot
- shy
- sling
- throw
- toss
- fire
noun an act of throwingSynonyms- cast
- fling
- heave
- launch
- pitch
- shy
- sling
- throw
- toss
Synonyms for hurlnoun a violent throwSynonymsRelated Wordsverb throw forcefullySynonymsRelated Words- dash
- crash
- precipitate
- throw
- sling
- catapult
- bowl
verb make a thrusting forward movementSynonymsRelated Wordsverb utter with forceSynonymsRelated Words- give tongue to
- utter
- express
- verbalise
- verbalize
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