释义 |
onto
ontoto place or position upon: He put his glasses onto the table.; to be aware of: I’m onto your wily ways. Not to be confused with:on to – go forward: moved on to the next phaseon·to O0082900 (ŏn′to͞o′, -tə, ôn′-)prep.1. On top of; to a position on; upon: The dog jumped onto the chair.2. Informal Fully aware of; informed about: The police are onto the robbers' plans.adj. Mathematics Of, relating to, or being a function such that every element of the codomain is the value that corresponds to an element in the domain.onto (ˈɒntʊ; unstressed ˈɒntə) or on toprep1. to a position that is on: step onto the train as it passes. 2. having become aware of (something illicit or secret): the police are onto us. 3. into contact with: get onto the factory. Usage: Onto is now generally accepted as a word in its own right. On to is still used, however, where on is considered to be part of the verb: he moved on to a different town as contrasted with he jumped onto the stageon•to (ˈɒn tu, ˈɔn-; unstressed ˈɒn tə, ˈɔn-) prep. 1. to a place or position on; upon; on. 2. Informal. aware of the true nature, motive, or meaning of: I'm onto your tricks. adj. 3. Math. pertaining to a function or map from one set to another set, the range of which is the entire second set. [1575–85] onto- a combining form meaning “being”: ontogeny. [< New Latin < Greek] ontoYou usually use the preposition onto to say where someone or something falls or is put. He fell down onto the floor.Place the bread onto a large piece of clean white cloth.After many verbs you can use either onto or on with the same meaning. I fell with a crash onto the road.He fell on the floor with a thud.She poured some shampoo onto my hair.Carlo poured ketchup on the beans.However, after verbs meaning climb or lift you should use onto, rather than 'on'. She climbed up onto his knee.The little boy was helped onto the piano stool.If you hold onto something, you put your hand round it or against it in order to avoid falling. After verbs meaning hold, you use onto as a preposition and on as an adverb. She had to hold onto the edge of the table.I couldn't put up my umbrella and hold on at the same time.We were both hanging onto the side of the boat.He had to hang on to avoid being washed overboard.Onto is sometimes written as two words on to. She sank on to a chair.Translationsonto → 到…之上zhCN, 到…里面zhCNonto
*onto someoneseeing through someone's deception. (*Typically: be ~; get ~; catch ~.) By the time we got on to the con artists, they were out of town. The sheriff got onto Jed, and Jed wanted to get out of town fast.*onto something 1. Fig. alerted to or aware of a deceitful plan. (*Typically: be ~; catch ~.) The cops are onto your little game here. Fig. having found something useful or promising; on the verge of discovering something. (*Typically: be ~; get ~.) I think we are really onto something this time. lam onto a new discovery.onto
Onto
Acronym | Definition |
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Onto➣Ontology | Onto➣Overseas Nurses Training Organization (UK) |
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