释义 |
shelled
shell S0333300 (shĕl)n.1. a. The usually hard outer covering that encases certain organisms, such as insects, turtles, and most mollusks.b. A similar outer covering on a nut or seed.c. A similar outer covering on certain eggs, such as those of birds and reptiles; an eggshell.d. The material that constitutes such a covering.2. Something resembling or having the form of a shell, especially:a. An external, usually hard, protective or enclosing case or cover.b. A framework or exterior, as of a building.c. A thin layer of pastry.d. The external part of the ear.3. Nautical a. The hull of a ship.b. A light, long, narrow racing boat propelled by rowers.4. A small glass for beer.5. a. An artillery projectile containing an explosive charge.b. A metal or cardboard case containing the charge and primer for a piece of firearms ammunition, especially one also containing shot and fired from a shotgun.6. An attitude or a manner adopted to mask one's true feelings or to protect one from perceived or real danger: Embarrassed, she withdrew into a shell.7. Physics a. A set of electron orbitals having nearly the same energy and sharing the same first quantum number.b. Any of the stable states of other particles or collections of particles (such as the nucleons in an atomic nucleus) at a given energy or small range of energies.8. a. A usually sleeveless and collarless, typically knit blouse.b. A thin, usually waterproof or windproof outer garment for the upper body.9. Computers A program that works with the operating system as a command processor, used to enter commands and initiate their execution.10. A company or corporation created by a second company or corporation for the purposes of facilitating a particular transaction, especially one that is intended to be concealed.v. shelled, shell·ing, shells v.tr.1. a. To remove the shell of; shuck: shell oysters.b. To remove from a shell: shell peas.2. To separate the kernels of (corn) from the cob.3. To fire shells at; bombard.4. a. To defeat decisively.b. Baseball To hit the pitches of (a pitcher) hard and with regularity: shelled the pitcher for eight runs in the first inning.v.intr.1. To shed or become free of a shell.2. To look for or collect shells, as on a seashore: spent the day shelling on Cape Cod.Phrasal Verb: shell out Informal To hand over; pay: had to shell out $500 in car repairs. [Middle English, from Old English scell; see skel- in Indo-European roots.] shell adj.shell′er n.shelled (ʃɛld) adj (Cookery) having the outer shell removedshelled (ʃɛld) adj. 1. having the shell removed: shelled pecans. 2. removed from the ear or husk: shelled corn. 3. having or enclosed in a shell, often of a specified kind: soft-shelled crabs. [1570–80] ThesaurusAdj. | 1. | shelled - of animals or fruits that have a shellshell-less, unshelled - of animals or fruits that have no shell | TranslationsIdiomsSeeshellshellcode
shellcodeMalware programming code that is injected covertly into the computer. The term originated from code that activates a command shell to exploit the computer (see command processor) but may refer to any machine language embedded in data that is used to compromise either the local machine or a remote machine. "English shellcode" intersperses bits and pieces of command statements within a large segment of normal English text. The pieces are decoded into formal shell commands by a Trojan. See shell script.shelled Related to shelled: shelled outAntonyms for shelledadj of animals or fruits that have a shellAntonyms |