释义 |
canopy
canopya covering of canvas or other material supported on poles; such as a canopy from a doorway to the curb; an ornamental, rooflike projection Not to be confused with:canapé – a cracker or thin piece of toast spread with a savory food such as cheese or caviarcan·o·py C0074000 (kăn′ə-pē)n. pl. can·o·pies 1. a. A covering, usually cloth, suspended over a throne or bed.b. A cloth covering held aloft on poles above a sacred object, an eminent person, or a couple being married during certain wedding ceremonies.c. A cloth covering held aloft on posts, used for shade or decoration.2. Architecture An ornamental rooflike projection over a niche, altar, or tomb.3. A protective rooflike covering, often of canvas, mounted on a frame over a walkway or door.4. A high overarching covering, such as the sky: "I just look up at the stars and let the vastness of that black and twinkling canopy fill my soul" (Margaret Mason).5. The uppermost layer in a forest, formed by the crowns of the trees.6. The transparent covering that encloses the cockpit of certain aircraft.7. The part of a parachute that opens up to catch the air.tr.v. can·o·pied, can·o·py·ing, can·o·pies To cover with or as if with a canopy. [Middle English canape, from Medieval Latin canāpēum, mosquito net, from Latin cōnōpēum, from Greek kōnōpeion, bed with mosquito netting, from kōnōps, kōnōp-, mosquito.]canopy (ˈkænəpɪ) n, pl -pies1. (Furniture) an ornamental awning above a throne or bed or held over a person of importance on ceremonial occasions2. (Architecture) a rooflike covering over an altar, niche, etc3. (Architecture) a roofed structure serving as a sheltered passageway or area4. a large or wide covering, esp one high above: the sky was a grey canopy. 5. (Aeronautics) the nylon or silk hemisphere that forms the supporting surface of a parachute6. (Aeronautics) the transparent cover of an aircraft cockpit7. (Environmental Science) the highest level of branches and foliage in a forest, formed by the crowns of the treesvb, -pies, -pying or -pied (tr) to cover with or as if with a canopy[C14: from Medieval Latin canōpeum mosquito net, from Latin cōnōpeum gauze net, from Greek kōnōpeion bed with protective net, from kōnōps mosquito]can•o•py (ˈkæn ə pi) n., pl. -pies, n. 1. a covering, usu. of fabric, supported on poles or suspended above a bed, throne, exalted personage, or sacred object. 2. a long awning stretching from the doorway of a building to a curb. 3. an ornamental, rooflike projection or covering. 4. the cover formed by the leafy upper branches of the trees in a forest. 5. the part of a parachute that opens up and fills with air. 6. the transparent cover over the cockpit of an airplane. v.t. 7. to cover with or as if with a canopy. [1350–1400; Middle English canope < Medieval Latin canōpēum] Canopy an overhanging shelter or shade; used figuratively.Examples: canopy of clouds, 1855; of heaven, 1869; of plumage, 1843; of trees; of virtue, 1603.canopy Past participle: canopied Gerund: canopying
Present |
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I canopy | you canopy | he/she/it canopies | we canopy | you canopy | they canopy |
Preterite |
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I canopied | you canopied | he/she/it canopied | we canopied | you canopied | they canopied |
Present Continuous |
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I am canopying | you are canopying | he/she/it is canopying | we are canopying | you are canopying | they are canopying |
Present Perfect |
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I have canopied | you have canopied | he/she/it has canopied | we have canopied | you have canopied | they have canopied |
Past Continuous |
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I was canopying | you were canopying | he/she/it was canopying | we were canopying | you were canopying | they were canopying |
Past Perfect |
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I had canopied | you had canopied | he/she/it had canopied | we had canopied | you had canopied | they had canopied |
Future |
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I will canopy | you will canopy | he/she/it will canopy | we will canopy | you will canopy | they will canopy |
Future Perfect |
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I will have canopied | you will have canopied | he/she/it will have canopied | we will have canopied | you will have canopied | they will have canopied |
Future Continuous |
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I will be canopying | you will be canopying | he/she/it will be canopying | we will be canopying | you will be canopying | they will be canopying |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been canopying | you have been canopying | he/she/it has been canopying | we have been canopying | you have been canopying | they have been canopying |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been canopying | you will have been canopying | he/she/it will have been canopying | we will have been canopying | you will have been canopying | they will have been canopying |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been canopying | you had been canopying | he/she/it had been canopying | we had been canopying | you had been canopying | they had been canopying |
Conditional |
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I would canopy | you would canopy | he/she/it would canopy | we would canopy | you would canopy | they would canopy |
Past Conditional |
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I would have canopied | you would have canopied | he/she/it would have canopied | we would have canopied | you would have canopied | they would have canopied | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | canopy - the transparent covering of an aircraft cockpitcockpit - compartment where the pilot sits while flying the aircraftcovering - an artifact that covers something else (usually to protect or shelter or conceal it) | | 2. | canopy - the umbrellalike part of a parachute that fills with aircloth, fabric, textile, material - artifact made by weaving or felting or knitting or crocheting natural or synthetic fibers; "the fabric in the curtains was light and semitransparent"; "woven cloth originated in Mesopotamia around 5000 BC"; "she measured off enough material for a dress"chute, parachute - rescue equipment consisting of a device that fills with air and retards your fall | | 3. | canopy - a covering (usually of cloth) that serves as a roof to shelter an area from the weatherawning, sunblind, sunshade - a canopy made of canvas to shelter people or things from rain or sunbaldachin - ornamented canopy supported by columns or suspended from a roof or projected from a wall (as over an altar)marquee, marquise - permanent canopy over an entrance of a hotel etc.porte-cochere - canopy extending out from a building entrance to shelter those getting in and out of vehiclesshelter - protective covering that provides protection from the weathertester - a flat canopy (especially one over a four-poster bed)umbrella - a lightweight handheld collapsible canopy | Verb | 1. | canopy - cover with a canopycover - provide with a covering or cause to be covered; "cover her face with a handkerchief"; "cover the child with a blanket"; "cover the grave with flowers" |
canopynoun1. awning, covering, shade, shelter, sunshade The dais is covered with a silk brocade canopy.2. covering, layer, blanket, mantle, overlay The land is thickly covered by a dense canopy of jungle.Translationscanopy (ˈkӕnəpi) – plural ˈcanopies – noun a covering hung over a throne, bed etc or (on poles) as a shelter. (王位或床等上方的)華麗遮篷 (宝座或床等上面的)华盖,遮篷 canopy
canopy1. a rooflike covering over an altar, niche, etc. 2. a roofed structure serving as a sheltered passageway or area 3. the nylon or silk hemisphere that forms the supporting surface of a parachute 4. the transparent cover of an aircraft cockpit 5. the highest level of branches and foliage in a forest, formed by the crowns of the trees CanopyA decorative hood above a niche, pulpit, or stall; a covered area that extends from the wall of a building, protecting an enclosure.    Canopy (protective arch), in mining, a structure that ensures safe stoping and separation of minerals from caved material. Canopies are classified according to design and function as protective shields, flexible canopies of the enclosing and partitioning types, and interlayer canopies. The design of the protective shield and the techniques for mining thick, sharply sloping coal seams using such shields were proposed by the Soviet scientist N. A. Chinakal in 1935 and were used in the Kuznetsk Coal Basin (Kuzbas) in 1938. Sectional protective shields were widely used in the 1940’s and 1950’s. Protective shields make it possible to work the entire thickness of a seam at once. Elastic reinforced-concrete protective shields have the great strength necessary for working seams in excess of 7-10 m thick and can be used many times. The shield is made of reinforced-concrete beams or pipes; for beams longer than 6 m it is made in sections. It moves along the slope behind the advancing face by its own weight and the weight of the caved material when the pillars on which it rests along the periphery are undermined. Flexible metal canopies were first used in the USSR in the late 1940’s for working thick seams in the Kuzbas. They were subsequently used as components in new systems for working coal seams. Beginning in the early 1960’s they were used for working metallic ore deposits. In the early 1970’s, metal canopies were replaced by polymeric types that provide greater strength and malleability, better suitability for erection, and resistance to corrosion. The flexible canopy is set on the installation level along the upper limit of the floor or subfloor to be worked and at the mediate roof. Interlayer canopies are used as a stable support for the roof, and sometimes for a floor, when mineral deposits are mined by sluicing. They are made of a 0.3–0.6-m thick layer of rocks or minerals, and the bridging is made of concrete slabs, wood, or metal grids. V. V. ZHUKOV canopy[′kan·ə·pē] (aerospace engineering) The umbrellalike part of a parachute which acts as its main supporting surface. The overhead, transparent enclosure of an aircraft cockpit. (forestry) The uppermost branching and spreading layer of a forest. canopy1. A decorative hood above a niche, pulpit, choir stall, or the like. 2. A covered area which extends from the wall of a building, protecting an entrance or loading dock. 3. The collective term for the upper blanket of foliage on trees.canopyi. The transparent cover over the cockpit of an airplane—fixed, hinged, or sliding and sometimes jettisonable by power. It also protects the occupants from airstream. In pressurized aircraft, a canopy helps hold and maintain cockpit pressure. ii. The umbrella-like fabric body of a parachute, which provides high air-drag when deployed. It is usually made of nylon and supports the parachutists or load during the descent. It is the main deployable body of a parachute.canopy
canopy Ecology The above-trunk portion portion of a forest or plant community. Occupational medicine An overhead protective structure covering a mining machine workstation. Sports medicine The cloth and suspension lines of a parachute which support the person or payload.canopy the branches and leaves of a woody plant, particularly trees, forming the uppermost light-restricting area some distance above the ground.canopy Related to canopy: Truck CanopySynonyms for canopynoun awningSynonyms- awning
- covering
- shade
- shelter
- sunshade
noun coveringSynonyms- covering
- layer
- blanket
- mantle
- overlay
Words related to canopynoun the transparent covering of an aircraft cockpitRelated Wordsnoun the umbrellalike part of a parachute that fills with airRelated Words- cloth
- fabric
- textile
- material
- chute
- parachute
noun a covering (usually of cloth) that serves as a roof to shelter an area from the weatherRelated Words- awning
- sunblind
- sunshade
- baldachin
- marquee
- marquise
- porte-cochere
- shelter
- tester
- umbrella
verb cover with a canopyRelated Words |