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单词 float
释义

float


float

F0189100 (flōt)v. float·ed, float·ing, floats v.intr.1. a. To remain suspended within or on the surface of a fluid without sinking.b. To be suspended in or move through space as if supported by a liquid.2. To move from place to place, especially at random.3. To move easily or lightly: "Miss Golightly ... floated round in their arms light as a scarf" (Truman Capote).4. Economics To rise or fall freely in response to the market: allowed the dollar to float; a loan whose interest rate floats with the prime rate.v.tr.1. To cause to remain suspended without sinking or falling.2. a. To put into the water; launch: float a ship; float a navy.b. To start or establish (a business enterprise, for example).3. To flood (land), as for irrigation.4. Economics To allow (the exchange value of a currency, for example) to rise or fall freely in response to the market: Inflation forced the government to float the currency.5. To offer for consideration; suggest: floated my idea to the committee.6. To release (a security) for sale.7. To arrange for (a loan).8. To make the surface of (plaster, for example) level or smooth.9. Computers To convert (data) from fixed-point notation to floating-point notation.n.1. Something that floats, as:a. A raft.b. A buoy.c. A life preserver.d. A buoyant object, such as a piece of cork or a plastic ball, used to hold a net or part of a fishing line afloat.e. A landing platform attached to a wharf and floating on the water.f. A floating ball attached to a lever to regulate the water level in a tank.2. Biology An air-filled sac or structure that aids in the flotation of an aquatic organism. Also called air bladder, air vesicle.3. A decorated exhibit or scene mounted on a mobile platform and pulled or driven in a parade.4. The number of shares of a security that are publicly owned and traded.5. a. A sum of money representing checks that are outstanding.b. The time between the issuing or depositing of a check and the debiting of the issuer's account.c. The time during which a credit card purchase can be repaid without interest.6. a. A tool for smoothing the surface of wet plaster or concrete.b. A file with sharp ridges used for cutting or smoothing wood.7. A soft drink with ice cream floating in it.8. Excess time allowed for a task in a project schedule.
[Middle English floten, from Old English flotian; see pleu- in Indo-European roots.]
float′a·ble adj.

float

(fləʊt) vb1. (General Physics) to rest or cause to rest on the surface of a fluid or in a fluid or space without sinking; be buoyant or cause to exhibit buoyancy: oil floats on water; to float a ship. 2. to move or cause to move buoyantly, lightly, or freely across a surface or through air, water, etc; drift: fog floated across the road. 3. to move about aimlessly, esp in the mind: thoughts floated before him. 4. to suspend or be suspended without falling; hang: lights floated above them. 5. (Commerce) (tr) a. to launch or establish (a commercial enterprise, etc)b. to offer for sale (stock or bond issues, etc) on the stock market6. (Banking & Finance) (tr) finance to allow (a currency) to fluctuate against other currencies in accordance with market forces7. (Physical Geography) (tr) to flood, inundate, or irrigate (land), either artificially or naturally8. (Building) (tr) to spread, smooth, or level (a surface of plaster, rendering, etc)n9. something that floats10. (Angling) angling an indicator attached to a baited line that sits on the water and moves when a fish bites11. (Building) a small hand tool with a rectangular blade used for floating plaster, etc12. (Nautical Terms) chiefly US any buoyant object, such as a platform or inflated tube, used offshore by swimmers or, when moored alongside a pier, as a dock by vessels13. (Nautical Terms) Also called: paddle a blade of a paddle wheel14. (Swimming, Water Sports & Surfing) Brit a buoyant garment or device to aid a person in staying afloat15. (Aeronautics) a hollow watertight structure fitted to the underside of an aircraft to allow it to land on water16. (Botany) another name for air bladder217. (Zoology) another name for air bladder218. an exhibit carried in a parade, esp a religious parade19. (Automotive Engineering) a motor vehicle used to carry a tableau or exhibit in a parade, esp a civic parade20. (Automotive Engineering) a small delivery vehicle, esp one powered by batteries: a milk float. 21. (Automotive Engineering) Austral and NZ a vehicle for transporting horses22. (Banking & Finance) banking chiefly US the total value of uncollected cheques and other commercial papers23. (Accounting & Book-keeping) chiefly US and Canadian a sum to be applied to minor expenses; petty cash24. (Commerce) a sum of money used by shopkeepers to provide change at the start of the day's business, this sum being subtracted from the total at the end of the day when calculating the day's takings25. (Building) the hollow floating ball of a ballcock26. (General Engineering) engineering a hollow cylindrical structure in a carburettor that actuates the fuel valve27. (Cookery) chiefly US and Canadian a carbonated soft drink with a scoop of ice cream in it28. (Textiles) (in textiles) a single thread brought to or above the surface of a woven fabric, esp to form a pattern29. (Forestry) forestry a measure of timber equal to eighteen loads[Old English flotian; related to Old Norse flota , Old Saxon flotōn; see fleet2] ˈfloatable adj ˌfloataˈbility n

float

(floʊt)

v.i. 1. to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant. 2. to move gently on the surface of a liquid; drift along: The canoe floated downstream. 3. to rest or move in a liquid, the air, etc.: a balloon floating on high. 4. to move lightly and gracefully: She floated down the stairs. 5. to move or hover before the eyes or in the mind. 6. to pass from one person to another. 7. to be free from attachment or involvement. 8. to move or drift about, esp. freely or aimlessly. 9. (of a currency) to be allowed to fluctuate freely in the foreign-exchange market instead of being exchanged at a fixed rate. v.t. 10. to cause to float. 11. to cover with water or other liquid; flood; irrigate. 12. to launch (a company, scheme, etc.); set going. 13. to issue (stocks, bonds, etc.) on the stock market in order to raise money. 14. to let (a currency) fluctuate in the foreign-exchange market. 15. to present for consideration, as an idea. 16. to make smooth with a float, as the surface of plaster. n. 17. something that floats, as a raft. 18. something for buoying up. 19. an inflated bag to sustain a person in water; life preserver. 20. (in a tank, cistern, etc.) a device, as a hollow ball, that through its buoyancy automatically regulates the level, supply, or outlet of a liquid. 21. a floating platform attached to a wharf, bank, etc., and used as a landing. 22. a hollow, boatlike structure under the wing or fuselage of a seaplane or flying boat that keeps it afloat in water. 23. a piece of cork or other material supporting a baited fishing line in the water. 24. an inflated organ that supports an animal in the water. 25. a vehicle bearing a display, usu. an elaborate tableau, in a parade or procession. 26. a drink with ice cream floating in it. 27. uncollected checks and commercial paper in process of transfer from bank to bank. 28. a sum of money added to a salary, pension, etc., as to cover expenses. 29. an act or instance of floating. 30. a flat tool for spreading and smoothing plaster or stucco. [before 1000; Middle English floten, Old English flotian; c. Old Norse flota; akin to Old English flēotan to fleet2] float′a•ble, adj. float`a•bil′i•ty, n. float′y, adj. float•i•er, float•i•est.

float

(flōt)Verb To remain suspended within or on the surface of a fluid without sinking.Noun An air-filled sac in certain aquatic organisms, such as kelp, that helps maintain buoyancy. Also called air bladder, air vesicle.

float

- The boards and paddle of a waterwheel or paddlewheel are the floats.See also related terms for paddle.

Float

 of dancers: a company of female dancers—Lipton, 1970.

float


Past participle: floated
Gerund: floating
Imperative
float
float
Present
I float
you float
he/she/it floats
we float
you float
they float
Preterite
I floated
you floated
he/she/it floated
we floated
you floated
they floated
Present Continuous
I am floating
you are floating
he/she/it is floating
we are floating
you are floating
they are floating
Present Perfect
I have floated
you have floated
he/she/it has floated
we have floated
you have floated
they have floated
Past Continuous
I was floating
you were floating
he/she/it was floating
we were floating
you were floating
they were floating
Past Perfect
I had floated
you had floated
he/she/it had floated
we had floated
you had floated
they had floated
Future
I will float
you will float
he/she/it will float
we will float
you will float
they will float
Future Perfect
I will have floated
you will have floated
he/she/it will have floated
we will have floated
you will have floated
they will have floated
Future Continuous
I will be floating
you will be floating
he/she/it will be floating
we will be floating
you will be floating
they will be floating
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been floating
you have been floating
he/she/it has been floating
we have been floating
you have been floating
they have been floating
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been floating
you will have been floating
he/she/it will have been floating
we will have been floating
you will have been floating
they will have been floating
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been floating
you had been floating
he/she/it had been floating
we had been floating
you had been floating
they had been floating
Conditional
I would float
you would float
he/she/it would float
we would float
you would float
they would float
Past Conditional
I would have floated
you would have floated
he/she/it would have floated
we would have floated
you would have floated
they would have floated
Thesaurus
Noun1.float - the time interval between the deposit of a check in a bank and its paymentinterval, time interval - a definite length of time marked off by two instants
2.float - the number of shares outstanding and available for trading by the publicstock - the capital raised by a corporation through the issue of shares entitling holders to an ownership interest (equity); "he owns a controlling share of the company's stock"
3.float - a drink with ice cream floating in itfloat - a drink with ice cream floating in itice-cream float, ice-cream sodadrink - a single serving of a beverage; "I asked for a hot drink"; "likes a drink before dinner"root beer float - an ice-cream soda made with ice cream floating in root beer
4.float - an elaborate display mounted on a platform carried by a truck (or pulled by a truck) in a procession or paradedisplay, presentation - a visual representation of something
5.float - a hand tool with a flat face used for smoothing and finishing the surface of plaster or cement or stuccoplasterer's floathand tool - a tool used with workers' hands
6.float - something that floats on the surface of waterartefact, artifact - a man-made object taken as a wholebobber, bobfloat, cork, bob - a small float usually made of cork; attached to a fishing linechip - a triangular wooden float attached to the end of a log lineflotation device, life preserver, preserver - rescue equipment consisting of a buoyant belt or jacket to keep a person from drowningpontoon - a float supporting a seaplaneraft - a flat float (usually made of logs or planks) that can be used for transport or as a platform for swimmers
7.float - an air-filled sac near the spinal column in many fishes that helps maintain buoyancyfloat - an air-filled sac near the spinal column in many fishes that helps maintain buoyancyair bladder, swim bladdersac - a structure resembling a bag in an animal
Verb1.float - be in motion due to some air or water currentfloat - be in motion due to some air or water current; "The leaves were blowing in the wind"; "the boat drifted on the lake"; "The sailboat was adrift on the open sea"; "the shipwrecked boat drifted away from the shore"be adrift, drift, blowgo, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"float - move lightly, as if suspended; "The dancer floated across the stage"waft - be driven or carried along, as by the air; "Sounds wafted into the room"tide - be carried with the tidedrift - cause to be carried by a current; "drift the boats downstream"stream - to extend, wave or float outward, as if in the wind; "their manes streamed like stiff black pennants in the wind"
2.float - be afloat either on or below a liquid surface and not sink to the bottomswimgo, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"float - move lightly, as if suspended; "The dancer floated across the stage"float - set afloat; "He floated the logs down the river"; "The boy floated his toy boat on the pond"buoy - float on the surface of watergo under, go down, sink, settle - go under, "The raft sank and its occupants drowned"
3.float - set afloat; "He floated the logs down the river"; "The boy floated his toy boat on the pond"float - put into the water; "float a ship"tide - cause to float with the tidedrift - cause to be carried by a current; "drift the boats downstream"refloat - set afloat again; "refloat a grounded boat"float, swim - be afloat either on or below a liquid surface and not sink to the bottomtransport - move something or somebody around; usually over long distances
4.float - circulate or discuss tentatively; test the waters with; "The Republicans are floating the idea of a tax reform"test, try out, try, essay, examine, prove - put to the test, as for its quality, or give experimental use to; "This approach has been tried with good results"; "Test this recipe"
5.float - move lightly, as if suspended; "The dancer floated across the stage"go, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"be adrift, drift, float, blow - be in motion due to some air or water current; "The leaves were blowing in the wind"; "the boat drifted on the lake"; "The sailboat was adrift on the open sea"; "the shipwrecked boat drifted away from the shore"float, swim - be afloat either on or below a liquid surface and not sink to the bottomride - be sustained or supported or borne; "His glasses rode high on his nose"; "The child rode on his mother's hips"; "She rode a wave of popularity"; "The brothers rode to an easy victory on their father's political name"
6.float - put into the water; "float a ship"launch - propel with force; "launch the space shuttle"; "Launch a ship"float - set afloat; "He floated the logs down the river"; "The boy floated his toy boat on the pond"
7.float - make the surface of level or smooth; "float the plaster"masonry - the craft of a masonsmooth, smoothen - make smooth or smoother, as if by rubbing; "smooth the surface of the wood"
8.float - allow (currencies) to fluctuate; "The government floated the ruble for a few months"value - fix or determine the value of; assign a value to; "value the jewelry and art work in the estate"
9.float - convert from a fixed point notation to a floating point notation; "float data"convert, change over - change from one system to another or to a new plan or policy; "We converted from 220 to 110 Volt"

float

verb1. glide, sail, drift, move gently, bob, coast, slide, be carried, slip along barges floating quietly by the grassy river banks2. be buoyant, stay afloat, be or lie on the surface, rest on water, hang, hover, poise, displace water Empty things float.
be buoyant settle, sink, go down, founder, dip, drown, submerge
3. waft, coast, drift Sublime music floats on a scented summer breeze.4. suggest, present, propose, recommend, put forward, move He floated the idea of a new alliance.5. launch, offer, sell, set up, promote, get going, push off He floated his firm on the Stock Market.
launch cancel, abolish, dissolve, terminate, annul

float

verb1. To move along with or be carried away by the action of water:drift, wash.2. To pass quickly and lightly through the air:dart, fly, sail, shoot, skim.
Translations
漂流物漂浮运输车飘浮鱼漂

float

(fləut) verb to (make something) stay on the surface of a liquid. A piece of wood was floating in the stream. 漂浮 漂浮 noun1. something that floats on a fishing-line. If the float moves, there is probably a fish on the hook. 浮標 鱼漂2. a vehicle for transporting certain things. a milk-float; a cattle-float. 運輸車 运输车floating population a section of the population not permanently resident in a place. 流動人口 流动人口floating restaurant a restaurant on a boat or other floating structure. 流動餐館 流动餐馆

float

漂流物zhCN, 飘浮zhCN

float


float (one's) boat

To make someone happy. Often used in the phrase "whatever floats (one's) boat." A: "What do you want for dinner?" B: "Whatever floats your boat, I'm not even hungry." I think this new job in the lab will really float Isabel's boat.See also: boat, float

float an idea

To suggest something in order to gauge interest in it or others' perception of it. Can you float the idea of closing the office early on Fridays in the summer, to see how management reacts?See also: float, idea

not float (one's) boat

To not be particularly enjoyable, desirable, or exciting to someone. A: "They're showing Casablanca in the student theater, do you want to go?" B: "No thanks, black and white movies don't really float my boat." Well, the thought of spending my weekend weeding the back yard for a few bucks doesn't exactly float my boat, Dad.See also: boat, float, not

whatever floats (one's) boat

Whatever makes one happy; whatever interests or excites (one). Most often heard as "whatever floats your boat." A: "What do you want for dinner?" B: "Whatever floats your boat, I'm not even hungry." Katelyn does whatever floats her boat without worrying about what other people think of her.See also: boat, float, whatever

sink or swim

1. verb To either be successful right away or succumb to failure. The teacher expects you to have all the background material already learned, so you'll have to sink or swim the moment you start the course.2. noun A situation in which one must either be successful right away or succumb to failure. In such a competitive business, it's always sink or swim for new companies looking to enter the market.See also: sink, swim

float a trial balloon

To propose something in order to get feedback on it. The phrase alludes to the former use of balloons to get information about the weather. When everyone objected to my idea, I reassured them that I was just floating a trial balloon and had not made any sort of decision on the matter.See also: balloon, float, trial

float around

1. To not be in a specific location. I just saw that book yesterday, so it must be floating around here somewhere.2. To float or bob over or through a particular surface. Look at all the ducks just floating around the pond!See also: around, float

float on air

To be extremely happy. I've been floating on air ever since I got engaged!See also: air, float, on

float a loan

1. To receive a loan of money from someone or some institution. I had to float a loan to pay for the medical expenses. Thankfully they were able to float a loan and implement the repairs and upgrades the health inspector had demanded.2. To give, or arrange for someone to give, a loan of money to someone else. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used after "float." I'd be happy to float you a loan to help get your business off the ground. The house needs a lot of work, so they're looking around at creditors who might be willing to float them a loan.See also: float, loan

float an air biscuit

slang To fart. I can't believe you floated an air biscuit in the car. Now we have to smell it all the way home!See also: air, biscuit, float

float into (something)

1. Literally, to bob, drift, or glide into some thing or place, as on air or water. We floated into the tunnel on our inner tubes.2. By extension, to move forward into some thing or place in a slow, easy manner. The bride floated into the church, her gown's exquisite train trailing behind her.See also: float

float (up)on (something)

To bob, drift, or glide over or on a particular surface. Look at all the ducks just floating on the water! The paper airplane floated upon the air for a few seconds before sinking to the ground.See also: float

float through (something)

1. Literally, to bob, drift, or glide over or through something, such as air or water. Look at all the ducks just floating through the water! The paper airplane floated through the air for a few seconds before sinking to the ground.2. By extension, to move or act with little awareness, attention, or enthusiasm. I was so groggy after that nap that I basically floated through the rest of my day. You need to pick a major soon—you can't just float through college forever.See also: float, through

float a loan

Fig. to get a loan of money; to arrange for a loan of money. I couldn't afford to pay cash for the car, so I floated a loan. They needed money, so they had to float a loan.See also: float, loan

float around

to float from here to there freely. All sorts of paper and trash were floating around on the surface of the pond. Water hyacinths floated around, making a very tropical scene.See also: around, float

float into something

 1. Lit. to move on water or in air into something. The huge cruise ship floated majestically into the harbor. The kite floated into a tree and was ruined. 2. Fig. to move into something gently, as if floating. She floated into the room, looking like Cinderella before midnight. Tom and Gloria floated into the theater like a king and queen. They must have rehearsed it.See also: float

float on air

Fig. [for someone] to feel free and euphoric. I was so happy, I was floating on air. Mary was floating on air after she won first prize.See also: air, float, on

float through something

 1. Lit. to move slowly through water or air, gently. The boats floated through the water slowly and gracefully. As the clouds floated through the sky, they cast blotchy shadows on the ground. 2. Fig. [for someone] to move aimlessly through something. (As if semiconscious.) She has no ambition. She's just floating through life. He floated through his work that day. It is probably done all wrong.See also: float, through

float (up)on something

to drift as if on the surface of something; to drift along through the air. (Upon is formal and less commonly used than on.) The little tufts of dandelion seeds floated upon the breeze. The fluff floated on the breeze.See also: float, on

sink or swim

Fig. to fail or succeed. (Alludes to the choices available to someone who has fallen into the water.) After I've studied and learned all I can, I have to take the test and sink or swim. It's too late to help John now. It's sink or swim for him.See also: sink, swim

Whatever turns you on.

 1. Inf. Whatever pleases or excites you is okay. Mary: Do you mind if I buy some of these flowers? Bill: Whatever turns you on. Mary: I just love to hear a raucous saxophone play some smooth jazz. Bob: Whatever turns you on, baby. 2. . Inf. a comment implying that it is strange to get so excited about something. (Essentially sarcastic.) Bob: I just go wild whenever I see pink gloves on a woman. I don't understand it. Bill: Whatever turns you on. Jane: You see, I never told anybody this, but whenever I see snow falling, I just go sort of mushy inside. Sue: Weird, Jane, weird. But, whatever turns you on.See also: on, turn, whatever

sink or swim

Succumb or succeed, no matter what, as in Now that we've bought the farm, we'll have to make a go of it, sink or swim. This expression alludes to the former barbaric practice of throwing a suspected witch into deep water, often weighted down. In case of sinking, the victim died; in case of swimming, the victim was considered in league with the devil and therefore was executed. A related idiom, float or sink, was used by Chaucer in the late 1300s; Shakespeare had the current form in 1 Henry IV (1:3): "Or sink or swim." See also: sink, swim

float someone's boat

INFORMALIf something floats your boat, you find it exciting, attractive, or interesting. Create a space for yourself: light candles, burn incense, run a bath — whatever floats your boat. I can see the band's appeal. But it doesn't float my boat.See also: boat, float

sink or swim

If someone has to sink or swim, they have to try to succeed on their own, and whether they succeed or fail depends completely on their own efforts and abilities. After three years of teaching and support at music college, musicians are left to sink or swim in the profession. Note: You can use sink-or-swim before a noun. Tomorrow afternoon, it's sink-or-swim time, her first game.See also: sink, swim

float a trial balloon

mainly AMERICANCOMMON If someone floats a trial balloon they suggest an idea or plan in order to see what people think about it. The administration has not officially released any details of the president's economic plan, although numerous trial balloons have been floated. Note: Other verbs can be used instead of float. Weeks ago, the Tories were flying a trial balloon about banning teacher strikes. Note: You can call an idea or suggestion that is made to test public opinion a trial balloon. The idea is nothing more than a trial balloon at this point. Note: Balloons were formerly used to find out about weather conditions. See also: balloon, float, trial

float someone's boat

appeal to or excite someone, especially sexually. informalSee also: boat, float

sink or swim

fail or succeed entirely by your own efforts.See also: sink, swim

float/walk on ˈair

(informal) be very happy about something: When I passed my driving test, I was walking on air for days.See also: air, float, on, walk

float somebody’s ˈboat

(informal) be what somebody likes: You can go swimming, hiking or just lie on the beach, whatever floats your boat.See also: boat, float

ˌsink or ˈswim

(saying) be in a situation where you will either succeed without help from other people, or fail completely: The government refused to give the company any help, and just left it to sink or swim.See also: sink, swim

float around

v.1. To be or move in a nonspecific or unknown location: That pen must be floating around here somewhere. The travelers floated around the countryside, stopping here and there to eat and rest.2. To move around while suspended on the surface of a fluid without sinking; float in no particular direction: Empty bottles and other debris float around in the cove at low tide.See also: around, float

float an air biscuit

tv. to break wind; to fart. (see also cut a muffin.) Who floated the air biscuit? P.U. See also: air, biscuit, float

whatever turns you on

and whatever floats your boat tv. whatever excites you or interests you. (Main entry was said originally about sexual matters.) I can’t stand that kind of music, but whatever turns you on. Ketchup on hot dogs! Yuck! But whatever floats your boat. See also: on, turn, whatever

whatever floats your boat

verbSee whatever turns you onSee also: boat, float, whatever

sink or swim

Informal To fail or succeed without alternative.See also: sink, swim

sink or swim

Succumb or survive; by extension, no matter what. This term alludes to the ancient practice of throwing a convicted witch (sometimes weighted down) into deep water. In case of sinking, the person drowned; in case of swimming, the person was considered in league with the devil and therefore was executed. Hence the outcome was the same. The term, which began life as float or sink, was already used by Chaucer in the fourteenth century. Shakespeare’s Hotspur said, “Or sink or swim” (Henry IV, Part 1, 1.3), and across the Atlantic, John Adams said, “Swim or sink, live or die, survive or perish with my country was my unalterable determination” (in a conversation with Jonathan Sewall, 1774).See also: sink, swim

float


float

1. Angling an indicator attached to a baited line that sits on the water and moves when a fish bites 2. Chiefly US any buoyant object, such as a platform or inflated tube, used offshore by swimmers or, when moored alongside a pier, as a dock by vessels 3. a blade of a paddle wheel 4. Brit a buoyant garment or device to aid a person in staying afloat 5. a hollow watertight structure fitted to the underside of an aircraft to allow it to land on water 6. another name for air bladder7. a motor vehicle used to carry a tableau or exhibit in a parade, esp a civic parade 8. a small delivery vehicle, esp one powered by batteries 9. Austral and NZ a vehicle for transporting horses 10. a sum of money used by shopkeepers to provide change at the start of the day's business, this sum being subtracted from the total at the end of the day when calculating the day's takings 11. Engineering a hollow cylindrical structure in a carburettor that actuates the fuel valve 12. (in textiles) a single thread brought to or above the surface of a woven fabric, esp to form a pattern 13. Forestry a measure of timber equal to eighteen loads

Float

 

a device that has both floatability and buoyancy when immersed.

Floats may be of the support type (pontoons of seaplanes and floating bridges, the floats of fishing nets, and hook floats of fishing rods); the hydrometric type, for measurement of flow velocity or variations in level (such as tide gauges); or the actuating type, which operate shutoff valves and other devices depending on the level of a liquid (as in the float chamber of a carburetor and in water-supply systems and the like).

float

[flōt] (agriculture) A device consisting of one or more blades used to level a seedbed. (biology) An air-filled sac in many pelagic flora and fauna that serves to buoy up the body of the organism. (design engineering) A file which has a single set of parallel teeth. (engineering) A flat, rectangular piece of wood with a handle, used to apply and smooth coats of plaster. A mechanical device to finish the surface of freshly placed concrete paving. A marble-polishing block. Any structure that provides positive buoyancy such as a hollow, watertight unit that floats or rests on the surface of a fluid. plummet (geology) An isolated, displaced rock or ore fragment. (industrial engineering) bank (textiles) A thread used to create patterns in fabric by passing over other threads. A fabric defect caused by passing a thread over other threads where it should be interwoven.

float

A flat tool with a handle on the back; used on cement or plaster surfaces for smoothing or for producing textured surfaces. Also see angle float, bull float, carpet float, rotary float.

render, float, and set

Three-coat plastering executed directly on stone or brick.

float

i. The horizontal distance traveled by an aircraft from the moment of a flare for landing to the actual touchdown.
ii. A buoyant structure or component fitted to an aircraft to enable it to be supported in water or to stabilize it in water. See float gear.
iii. A buoyant needle or capsule in a float-type carburetor that keeps the fuel level a constant distance below the edge of the discharge nozzle. See float-type carburetor.

float

In programming, a declaration of a floating point number.
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Float


Float

Currency: Exchange rate policy that does not limit the range of the market rate.
Equities: Number of shares of a corporation that are outstanding and available for trading by the public, excluding insiders or restricted stock on a when-issued basis. A stock's volatility is inversely correlated to its float.

Float

1. The number of shares of a publicly-traded company available to trade. It is important to note that this may be different from the shares outstanding: some shareholders may buy and hold, reducing the size of the float. The size of a float greatly affects a stock's volatility. If a float is small, any number of activities could affect greatly its price, especially a single large order to buy or sell it. This would greatly alter the number of shares available to trade, creating too little or too much supply and therefore drive the price up or down. A large float tends to have less volatility because large orders do not affect the supply as much. It is also called a floating supply. See also: Technical condition of a market.

2. In foreign exchange, a currency that is not pegged to another currency's value.

float

1. Funds that are on deposit at two institutions at the same time because of inefficiencies in the collection system. This situation permits a person or firm to earn extra income because the two institutions are paying interest on the same funds. As an example, a person writes a check on a money market fund in order to make a deposit in a local financial institution. Until that check gets back to the bank on which it was written (a transit often entailing two or three days), the investor receives interest on his or her funds from both institutions. See also fail float.2. The number of shares in public hands and available for trading. Institutional investors require that a security have a large float before they will take a position in it. The large float guards against a substantial price change in the security while the institution is buying. Also called floating supply.

float

To permit a country's currency to change freely in value against foreign currencies.

Float.

In investment terms, a float is the number of outstanding shares a corporation has available for trading.

If there is a small float, stock prices tend to be volatile, since one large trade could significantly affect the availability and therefore the price of these stocks. If there is a large float, stock prices tend to be more stable.

In banking, the float refers to the time lag between your depositing a check in the bank and the day the funds become available for use. For example, if you deposit a check on Monday, and you can withdraw the cash on Friday, the float is four days and works to the bank's advantage.

Float is also the period that elapses from the time you write a check until it clears your account, which can work to your advantage. However, as checks are increasingly cleared electronically at the point of deposit, this float is disappearing.

In a credit account, float is the amount of time between the date you charge a purchase and the date the payment is due. If you have paid your previous bill in full and on time, you don't owe a finance charge on the amount of the purchase during the float.

float

(1) The amount of movement in a variable-rate mortgage,as in “the loan can float 1 percent per year or a maximum of 5 percent in a lifetime.” (2) The period of time after a check is deposited but before the funds have been collected or credited.If a depositor receives credit immediately,even though it may take several days for the maker's bank to transfer funds to the depositor's bank,then the depositor takes advantage of the float because it has use of the money.If a depositor does not receive credit for several days, but the bank has already received its money from the maker's bank, then the bank takes advantage of the float.

Float

Allowing the interest rate and points to vary with changes in market conditions,as opposed to “locking” them.

Floating may be mandatory until the lender's lock requirements have been met. After that, the borrower may elect to lock the rate and points at any time but must do so a few days before the closing.

Allowing the rate to float exposes the borrower to market risk and also to the risk of being taken advantage of by the loan provider. See Locking the Loan/Choosing When to Lock.

FLOAT


AcronymDefinition
FLOATFamily Latino Outreach & Addictions Treatment (Portland, OR)
FLOATFibre-Linked Optical Array Telescope

float


  • all
  • verb
  • noun

Synonyms for float

verb glide

Synonyms

  • glide
  • sail
  • drift
  • move gently
  • bob
  • coast
  • slide
  • be carried
  • slip along

verb be buoyant

Synonyms

  • be buoyant
  • stay afloat
  • be or lie on the surface
  • rest on water
  • hang
  • hover
  • poise
  • displace water

Antonyms

  • settle
  • sink
  • go down
  • founder
  • dip
  • drown
  • submerge

verb waft

Synonyms

  • waft
  • coast
  • drift

verb suggest

Synonyms

  • suggest
  • present
  • propose
  • recommend
  • put forward
  • move

verb launch

Synonyms

  • launch
  • offer
  • sell
  • set up
  • promote
  • get going
  • push off

Antonyms

  • cancel
  • abolish
  • dissolve
  • terminate
  • annul

Synonyms for float

verb to move along with or be carried away by the action of water

Synonyms

  • drift
  • wash

verb to pass quickly and lightly through the air

Synonyms

  • dart
  • fly
  • sail
  • shoot
  • skim

Synonyms for float

noun the time interval between the deposit of a check in a bank and its payment

Related Words

  • interval
  • time interval

noun the number of shares outstanding and available for trading by the public

Related Words

  • stock

noun a drink with ice cream floating in it

Synonyms

  • ice-cream float
  • ice-cream soda

Related Words

  • drink
  • root beer float

noun an elaborate display mounted on a platform carried by a truck (or pulled by a truck) in a procession or parade

Related Words

  • display
  • presentation

noun a hand tool with a flat face used for smoothing and finishing the surface of plaster or cement or stucco

Synonyms

  • plasterer's float

Related Words

  • hand tool

noun something that floats on the surface of water

Related Words

  • artefact
  • artifact
  • bobber
  • bobfloat
  • cork
  • bob
  • chip
  • flotation device
  • life preserver
  • preserver
  • pontoon
  • raft

noun an air-filled sac near the spinal column in many fishes that helps maintain buoyancy

Synonyms

  • air bladder
  • swim bladder

Related Words

  • sac

verb be in motion due to some air or water current

Synonyms

  • be adrift
  • drift
  • blow

Related Words

  • go
  • locomote
  • move
  • travel
  • float
  • waft
  • tide
  • drift
  • stream

verb be afloat either on or below a liquid surface and not sink to the bottom

Synonyms

  • swim

Related Words

  • go
  • locomote
  • move
  • travel
  • float
  • buoy

Antonyms

  • go under
  • go down
  • sink
  • settle

verb set afloat

Related Words

  • float
  • tide
  • drift
  • refloat
  • swim
  • transport

verb circulate or discuss tentatively

Related Words

  • test
  • try out
  • try
  • essay
  • examine
  • prove

verb move lightly, as if suspended

Related Words

  • go
  • locomote
  • move
  • travel
  • be adrift
  • drift
  • float
  • blow
  • swim
  • ride

verb put into the water

Related Words

  • launch
  • float

verb make the surface of level or smooth

Related Words

  • masonry
  • smooth
  • smoothen

verb allow (currencies) to fluctuate

Related Words

  • value

verb convert from a fixed point notation to a floating point notation

Related Words

  • convert
  • change over
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更新时间:2025/2/12 4:21:42