释义 |
dust
dust D0350300 (dŭst)n.1. Fine, dry particles of matter.2. A cloud of fine, dry particles.3. Particles of matter regarded as the result of disintegration: fabric that had fallen to dust over the centuries.4. a. Earth, especially when regarded as the substance of the grave: "ashes to ashes, dust to dust" (Book of Common Prayer).b. The surface of the ground.5. A debased or despised condition.6. Something of no worth.7. Chiefly British Rubbish readied for disposal.8. Confusion; agitation; commotion: won't go back in until the dust settles.v. dust·ed, dust·ing, dusts v.tr.1. To remove dust from by wiping, brushing, or beating: dust the furniture.2. To sprinkle with a powdery substance: dusted the cookies with sugar; dust crops with fertilizer.3. To apply or strew in fine particles: dusted talcum powder on my feet.4. Baseball To deliver a pitch so close to (the batter) as to make the batter back away.v.intr.1. To clean by removing dust.2. To cover itself with dry soil or other particulate matter. Used of a bird.Phrasal Verb: dust off To restore to use: dusted off last year's winter coat.Idioms: in the dust Far behind, as in a race or competition: a marketing strategy that left our competitors in the dust. make the dust fly To go about a task with great energy and speed. [Middle English, from Old English dūst.]dust (dʌst) n1. dry fine powdery material, such as particles of dirt, earth or pollen2. a cloud of such fine particles3. the powdery particles to which something is thought to be reduced by death, decay, or disintegration4. a. the mortal body of manb. the corpse of a dead person5. the earth; ground6. informal a disturbance; fuss (esp in the phrases kick up a dust, raise a dust)7. something of little or no worth8. (Mining & Quarrying) informal (in mining parlance) silicosis or any similar respiratory disease9. short for gold dust10. ashes or household refuse11. bite the dust a. to fail completely or cease to existb. to fall down dead12. dust and ashes something that is very disappointing13. leave someone or something in the dust to outdo someone or something comprehensively or with ease: leaving their competitors in the dust. 14. shake the dust off one's feet to depart angrily or contemptuously15. throw dust in the eyes of to confuse or misleadvb16. (Cookery) (tr) to sprinkle or cover (something) with (dust or some other powdery substance): to dust a cake with sugar; to dust sugar onto a cake. 17. to remove dust by wiping, sweeping, or brushing18. archaic to make or become dirty with dust[Old English dūst; related to Danish dyst flour dust, Middle Dutch dūst dust, meal dust, Old High German tunst storm] ˈdustless adjdust (dʌst) n. 1. earth or other matter in fine dry particles. 2. a cloud of finely powdered earth or other matter in the air. 3. any finely powdered substance, as sawdust. 4. the ground; the earth's surface. 5. the substance to which something, as the dead human body, is ultimately reduced by disintegration or decay. 6. Brit. ashes, refuse, etc. 7. a low or humble condition. 8. anything worthless. 9. disturbance; turmoil. 10. the mortal body of a human being. 11. a single particle or grain. 12. Archaic. money; cash. v.t. 13. to wipe the dust from. 14. to sprinkle with a powder or dust: to dust crops with insecticide. 15. to strew or sprinkle (a powder, dust, or other fine particles). 16. to soil with dust; make dusty. v.i. 17. to wipe dust from furniture, woodwork, etc. 18. to become dusty. 19. to apply dust or powder to a plant, one's body, etc. 20. dust off, to prepare to use again, esp. after inactivity or storage. Idioms: bite the dust, a. to die. b. to suffer defeat. c. to become ruined or unusable. [before 900; Middle English; Old English dūst] dust′less, adj. dust Past participle: dusted Gerund: dusting
Present |
---|
I dust | you dust | he/she/it dusts | we dust | you dust | they dust |
Preterite |
---|
I dusted | you dusted | he/she/it dusted | we dusted | you dusted | they dusted |
Present Continuous |
---|
I am dusting | you are dusting | he/she/it is dusting | we are dusting | you are dusting | they are dusting |
Present Perfect |
---|
I have dusted | you have dusted | he/she/it has dusted | we have dusted | you have dusted | they have dusted |
Past Continuous |
---|
I was dusting | you were dusting | he/she/it was dusting | we were dusting | you were dusting | they were dusting |
Past Perfect |
---|
I had dusted | you had dusted | he/she/it had dusted | we had dusted | you had dusted | they had dusted |
Future |
---|
I will dust | you will dust | he/she/it will dust | we will dust | you will dust | they will dust |
Future Perfect |
---|
I will have dusted | you will have dusted | he/she/it will have dusted | we will have dusted | you will have dusted | they will have dusted |
Future Continuous |
---|
I will be dusting | you will be dusting | he/she/it will be dusting | we will be dusting | you will be dusting | they will be dusting |
Present Perfect Continuous |
---|
I have been dusting | you have been dusting | he/she/it has been dusting | we have been dusting | you have been dusting | they have been dusting |
Future Perfect Continuous |
---|
I will have been dusting | you will have been dusting | he/she/it will have been dusting | we will have been dusting | you will have been dusting | they will have been dusting |
Past Perfect Continuous |
---|
I had been dusting | you had been dusting | he/she/it had been dusting | we had been dusting | you had been dusting | they had been dusting |
Conditional |
---|
I would dust | you would dust | he/she/it would dust | we would dust | you would dust | they would dust |
Past Conditional |
---|
I would have dusted | you would have dusted | he/she/it would have dusted | we would have dusted | you would have dusted | they would have dusted |
dustTo sprinkle lightly with flour or sugar.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | dust - fine powdery material such as dry earth or pollen that can be blown about in the air; "the furniture was covered with dust"particulate, particulate matter - a small discrete mass of solid or liquid matter that remains individually dispersed in gas or liquid emissions (usually considered to be an atmospheric pollutant)chalk dust - dust resulting from writing with a piece of chalk; "chalk dust covered the teacher's hands"fallout, radioactive dust - the radioactive particles that settle to the ground after a nuclear explosion | | 2. | dust - the remains of something that has been destroyed or broken updebris, detritus, junk, rubblerubbish, trash, scrap - worthless material that is to be disposed ofslack - dust consisting of a mixture of small coal fragments and coal dust and dirt that sifts out when coal is passed over a sieve | | 3. | dust - free microscopic particles of solid material; "astronomers say that the empty space between planets actually contains measurable amounts of dust"interplanetary dust - microscopic particles in the interplanetary mediummaterial, stuff - the tangible substance that goes into the makeup of a physical object; "coal is a hard black material"; "wheat is the stuff they use to make bread" | Verb | 1. | dust - remove the dust from; "dust the cabinets"clean, make clean - make clean by removing dirt, filth, or unwanted substances from; "Clean the stove!"; "The dentist cleaned my teeth" | | 2. | dust - rub the dust over a surface so as to blur the outlines of a shape; "The artist dusted the charcoal drawing down to a faint image"smudge, smutch, smear, blur - make a smudge on; soil by smudging | | 3. | dust - cover with a light dusting of a substance; "dust the bread with flour"cover - 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" | | 4. | dust - distribute loosely; "He scattered gun powder under the wagon"disperse, sprinkle, dot, scatterspray - scatter in a mass or jet of droplets; "spray water on someone"; "spray paint on the wall"spray - be discharged in sprays of liquid; "Water sprayed all over the floor"spatter, splatter, plash, swash, splash, splosh - dash a liquid upon or against; "The mother splashed the baby's face with water"splash, sprinkle, splosh - cause (a liquid) to spatter about, especially with force; "She splashed the water around her"discharge - pour forth or release; "discharge liquids"bespangle - dot or sprinkle with sparkling or glittering objectsaerosolize, aerosolise - disperse as an aerosol; "The bacteria suspension was aerosolized" |
dustnoun1. grime, grit, powder, powdery dirt I could see a thick layer of dust on the stairs.2. earth, ground, soil, dirt, clay Your trousers will get dirty if you sit down in the dust.3. particles, soot, smut, fine fragments The air was black with coal dust.verb1. remove dust from, clean, sweep, brush, wipe, mop I dusted and polished the living room.2. sprinkle, cover, powder, spread, spray, scatter, sift, dredge Lightly dust the fish with flour.bite the dust (Informal) fail, flop (informal), fall through, be unsuccessful, go down, founder, fall flat, come to nothing, fizzle out (informal), come unstuck, run aground, come to grief, come a cropper (informal), go up in smoke, go belly-up (slang), come to naught, not make the grade (informal), meet with disaster Her first marriage bit the dust because of irreconcilable differences.Related words fear amathophobiadustverbTo scatter or release in drops or small particles:besprinkle, powder, sprinkle.Translationsdust (dast) noun1. fine grains of earth, sand etc. The furniture was covered in dust. 灰塵 灰尘2. anything in the form of fine powder. gold-dust; sawdust. 粉末 粉末 verb to free (furniture etc) from dust. She dusts (the house) once a week. 除塵 去掉...上的灰尘ˈduster noun a cloth for removing dust. 除塵布 抹布ˈdusty adjectivea dusty floor. 佈滿灰塵的 满是灰尘的ˈdustiness noun 佈滿灰塵 满是灰尘dustbin (ˈdasbin) noun (American ˈgarbage-can or ˈtrash-can) a container for household rubbish. 垃圾桶 垃圾箱dust-jacket (ˈdasdʒӕkit) noun the loose paper cover of a book. 書套 包书纸,书皮 dustman (ˈdasmən) noun a person employed to remove household rubbish. 清潔工 清洁工dustpan (ˈdaspӕn) noun a type of flat container with a handle, used for holding dust swept from the floor. 畚箕 簸箕ˈdust-up noun a quarrel. There was a bit of a dust-up between the two men. 爭吵 争吵dust down to remove the dust from with a brushing action. She picked herself up and dusted herself down. 刷掉灰塵 刷掉灰尘throw dust in someone's eyes to try to deceive someone. 試圖矇騙某人 欺骗某人dust
dust1. in. to leave; to depart. They dusted out of there at about midnight. 2. tv. to defeat someone; to win out over someone. We dusted the other team, eighty-seven to fifty-four. 3. tv. to kill someone. (Underworld.) The gang set out to dust the witnesses but got only one of them. 4. n. fine tobacco for rolling cigarettes. (Prisons.) How about trading a little dust for this candy bar? 5. n. a powdered drug: heroin, phencyclidine (PCP), cocaine; fine cannabis. (Drugs.) It’s the dust that can really do you damage. 6. tv. to add a powdered drug to the end of a (tobacco or cannabis) cigarette. (Drugs.) Pete dusted one, then lit it up. 7. n. worthless matter. John said that Frank was going to be dust if Mr. Gutman ever heard about what happened. See:- (as) dry as dust
- after the dust has settled
- after the dust settles
- after/when the dust settles
- angel dust
- be done and dusted
- be eating (one's) dust
- be eating (someone's) dust
- bite the dust
- bite the dust, to
- budget dust
- catch dust
- Charge it to the dust and let the rain settle it
- collect dust
- corral dust
- cut the dust
- done and dusted
- dry as dust
- dry-as-dust
- dust
- dust (one's) pants
- dust and ashes
- dust bunny
- dust mouse
- dust of angels
- dust off
- dust off the batter
- dust out
- dust pants
- dust someone off
- dust someone’s pants
- dust-up
- eat (someone's) dust
- eat someone's dust
- gather dust
- heaven dust
- hit the sawdust trail
- in the dust
- in the dust, leave someone
- joy dust
- joy flakes
- kiss the dust
- leave (someone or something) in the dust
- leave somebody/something in the dust
- let the dust settle
- like gold dust
- make the dust fly
- not see (one) for dust
- not see somebody for dust
- not see someone for dust
- once the dust has settled
- raise a dust
- shake the dust from (one's) feet
- shake the dust from one's feet
- shake the dust from one's feet, to
- shake the dust of (something or some place) from (one's) feet
- shake the dust of somewhere from your feet
- shake the dust off (one's) feet
- shake the dust off your feet
- the dust settles
- throw dust in (one's) eyes
- throw dust in (one's) face
- throw dust in someone's eyes
- throw dust in someone's eyes, to
- turn to dust
- watch my dust
- when the dust has settled
- when the dust settles
See dust
dust
Dust (pop culture)Similar to his ability to transform himself into animals or a mist, as described in the 1897 novel, Dracula also could transform into a cloud of dust. Dr. Abraham Van Helsing made reference to the coming and going of the three women in Castle Dracula. While Jonathan Harker looked on, they transformed themselves into a dust form while standing in the moonlight. In his second encounter with the women, Harker saw the moonlight quiver as the dust danced around and then slowly took on a recognizable shape, the three phantomlike images. Dracula made his first and only appearance in this form during his attacks upon Lucy Westenra. The wolf Beserker had broken some of the glass from the window in her room. Then suddenly, the room seemed to fill with “a whole myriad of little specks” blowing in the window and forming themselves into a “pillar of dust” inside the room. She passed out and upon regaining consciousness noticed that the air again was full of these dusty specks. While a notable element in the novel Dracula, this vampiric ability has not been of importance to the twentieth-century conception of the vampire. The vampire transforming into dust is, of course, separate from the vampire turning to a pile of dust when killed. This later concept appeared at the end of Dracula and was used, for example, in the Hammer adaptation of the novel, Horror of Dracula, in which Dracula burns in the light of the sun. In its sequel, the dust (or ash) is reanimated by dripping fresh blood on it. That process would be used in several movies as a means of reviving a deceased vampire. In Buffy the Vampire Slayer tevision series, as vampires are killed, they are said to be “dusted,” a reference to their immediate disentegration into a pile of ash/dust after being staked or beheaded.
Dynamite Fan Club see: Vampire Fandom: United States Dust an aerosol and disperse system that consists of small solid particles suspended in a gaseous medium. Separate particles and particle aggregates—from ultra-microscopic particles to those visible with the naked eye—have various shapes and compositions. In most cases, dust is formed as a result of the dispersion of solid bodies. It consists of particles that range in size from 10-7 to 10-4 m and that carry an electrical charge or are electrically neutral. Dust concentration, or dust content, is expressed by the number of particles or their total weight per unit volume of gas (air). Dust is unstable; its particles adhere during Brownian motion or during sedimentation. The air always contains dust particles. The sources of dust include rock erosion, volcanic eruptions, fires, and wind erosion of arable lands. Droplets of seawater are carried into the atmosphere, where they evaporate and form dust. In industry, industrial dust is formed. The air also contains solid particles of cosmic and biological origin, such as plant pollens, spores, and microorganisms. Like other aerosols, dust affects the heat of the atmosphere and intensifies the scattering and absorption of light by the atmosphere. Industry sometimes purposely resorts to atomization, for example, during the burning of pulverized fuel, during the air separation of powders, and during certain chemical engineering processes. The undesirable formation of dust occurs with the crushing and dry-grinding of hard rock, the mining of minerals, the processing and transportation of friable products and materials, and the burning of ashy organic fuel. Constant sources of increased dust concentration are the metallurgical, chemical, and textile industries, construction, many means of transportation, and some branches of agriculture, for example, fieldcrop farming. Industrial dust causes damage to equipment, lowers the quality of products, and causes the deterioration of working conditions. Dust from combustible or readily oxidized substances, such as coal, wood, flour, sugar, and aluminum, may be an explosive or fire hazard. The greater the dispersion and concentration of dust, the greater the probability of fire or explosion. The collection of dust and the control of industrial dust formation pose important technical and health problems. Various types of dust collectors are widely used in industry, as well as complex systems of gas purification. The collection of dust is necessary in order to remove valuable products from the dust and is especially important in protecting the environment from air pollution in and around cities and industrial centers. L. A. SHITS Various characteristics of dust are significant in relation to health, including its chemical composition and concentration and the size, shape, and structure of its particles. The solubility, electrical charge, and radioactivity of dust are also significant. Dust has both a direct and indirect effect on the human body. Its direct effect may be the cause of atrophic, hypertrophic, suppurative, or ulcerous changes in the mucosa, bronchi, lung tissue, or skin. These changes can lead to such diseases as catarrh of the upper respiratory tract, ulceration of the nasal septum, bronchitis, pneumonia, pneumosclerosis, conjunctivitis, and dermatitis. Prolonged inhalation of dust leads to the development of pneumoconioses. Some types of dust, for instance, lead, arsenic, and manganese dust, are poisonous. Organic dust of both natural and artificial origin, for example, grains and flower pollens and the dust from ursolic acid and a number of woods, may cause allergic diseases, including bronchial asthma. Dust may disseminate the causative agents of actinomycosis, anthrax, tuberculosis, diptheria, and ascariasis. Radioactive dust is a cause of radiation sickness. The indirect effect of dust on man is the specific result of the change that the intense dust concentration of the air causes in the spectrum and intensity of solar radiation; examples of changes in solar radiation include the absorption and scattering of ultraviolet rays and a decrease in illumination. Prevention of industrial diseases includes the legislative regulation of healthy dust levels in the air and the administration of medical examinations. The control of dust formation and distribution is carried out by various methods. Organizational and technological measures that are extremely effective include replacing sandblasting of cast material with shotblasting and hydraulic spraying and dry boring and crushing with wet methods. Other measures include spraying with water and hermetically sealing equipment, moistening dust-producing materials, and using pneumatic tube transportation. The most effective means of removing dust from industrial and domestic premises is suction-and-exhaust ventilation and local ventilation with the use of air strainers. When there is a high dust concentration and an absence of ventilation, individual means of protection from the harmful effects of dust are used, such as respirators, pneumatic suits, helmeted suits, protective clothing, and goggles. Biological methods of prevention against diseases caused by dust include ultraviolet irradiation of the body, alkaline inhalations, and a special diet. REFERENCESFett, W. Atmosfernaia pyl’. Moscow, 1961. (Translated from German.) Professional’nye bo/ezni, 3rd ed. Moscow, 1973. Navrotskii, V. N. Gigiena truda, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1974.A. A. KASPAROV dust[dəst] (geology) Dry solid matter of silt and clay size (less than ¹⁄₁₆ millimeter). (physics) A loose term applied to solid particles predominantly larger than colloidal size and capable of temporary gas suspension. dustFinely divided solid matter with particle sizes small enough to be carried aloft by air movement.dust
dust [dust] fine, dry particles of earth or any other substance small enough to be blown by the wind. See also coniosis and pneumoconiosis.blood dust hemoconia.dust (dŭst)n.1. Fine, dry particles of matter.2. A cloud of fine, dry particles.dust Occupational medicine A suspension of solid particles in air. See Coal dust, Inhalant, Nonasbestos dust, Nuclear dust. Patient discussion about dustQ. My friend told me that people who allergic to dust are actually allergic to small insect. Is he fooling with me?A. thanks :) Q. how exactly dust effects on asthmatic people? how can one avoid a dust environment? A. some people try to dust proof there home,they change there matress once a year-----thay do not have rugs in there home---no curtains or draps --and they have someone else dust and clean/no pets.some people keep there pets and take allergie meds. More discussions about dustDUST
Acronym | Definition |
---|
DUST➣Did You See That? | DUST➣Different URLs (Uniform Resource Locator) with Similar Text | DUST➣Dual Use Science and Technology (program) | DUST➣Differential Unitary Space-Time | DUST➣Demand, Utility, Scarcity and Transferability (elements of value) | DUST➣Drive Up Simulated Testbed (Patriot) | DUST➣Diction, Usage, Structure, Tense |
dust Related to dust: dust bowl, angel dust, Dust mitesSynonyms for dustnoun grimeSynonyms- grime
- grit
- powder
- powdery dirt
noun earthSynonymsnoun particlesSynonyms- particles
- soot
- smut
- fine fragments
verb remove dust fromSynonyms- remove dust from
- clean
- sweep
- brush
- wipe
- mop
verb sprinkleSynonyms- sprinkle
- cover
- powder
- spread
- spray
- scatter
- sift
- dredge
phrase bite the dustSynonyms- fail
- flop
- fall through
- be unsuccessful
- go down
- founder
- fall flat
- come to nothing
- fizzle out
- come unstuck
- run aground
- come to grief
- come a cropper
- go up in smoke
- go belly-up
- come to naught
- not make the grade
- meet with disaster
Synonyms for dustverb to scatter or release in drops or small particlesSynonymsSynonyms for dustnoun fine powdery material such as dry earth or pollen that can be blown about in the airRelated Words- particulate
- particulate matter
- chalk dust
- fallout
- radioactive dust
noun the remains of something that has been destroyed or broken upSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun free microscopic particles of solid materialRelated Words- interplanetary dust
- material
- stuff
verb remove the dust fromRelated Wordsverb rub the dust over a surface so as to blur the outlines of a shapeRelated Wordsverb cover with a light dusting of a substanceRelated Wordsverb distribute looselySynonyms- disperse
- sprinkle
- dot
- scatter
Related Words- spray
- spatter
- splatter
- plash
- swash
- splash
- splosh
- sprinkle
- discharge
- bespangle
- aerosolize
- aerosolise
|