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单词 day-to-day
释义

Definition of day-to-day in English:

day-to-day

adjective deɪtəˈdeɪˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ
  • 1attributive Happening regularly every day.

    the day-to-day management of the classroom
    he is battling the disease on a day-to-day basis
    Example sentencesExamples
    • His role as a special already involves most aspects of day-to-day policing, including regular supervision of about 30 special constables.
    • When you have laid in your store, you should draw on it regularly for day-to-day use, replacing what you use by new purchases, so that the stock in your cupboard is constantly being changed.
    • One needs to domesticate the stimulus - to make prayer a natural, comfortable event, a day-to-day happening.
    • I could go into detail about the day-to-day happenings of the course.
    • No telly, on account of the fact the schedulers have so perfectly blended Christmas morning into the regular day-to-day line-up that there was nothing even vaguely worth watching.
    • As her abilities decrease, she will need increasing help to do day-to-day tasks.
    • Still, the burdens of government regulation and public education on top of day-to-day forest management are sometimes overwhelming.
    • ‘For us, it's not just about day-to-day regulation, it's about the real impact on business,’ says founder Kevin Bradley.
    • I have the primary role of financial controller and my day-to-day function is to make sure that we've got the adequate finances to meet our goals.
    Synonyms
    regular, routine, habitual, everyday, daily, frequent, normal, standard, usual, familiar, typical
    1. 1.1 Ordinary; everyday.
      our day-to-day domestic life
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Many of the ordinary aspects of day-to-day life are forgotten within hours or days.
      • But politicians who have real experience of grappling with the day-to-day problems and issues ordinary people have to face have a much better chance of understanding them.
      • Its language and style remain miles away from the day-to-day concerns of ordinary black South Africans.
      • Surrendering their most important form of identification will make it impossible to function in ordinary day-to-day life.
      • Episodes 1 through 3 establish the characters and their day-to-day grind.
      • ‘The agencies can select the happenings of the day-to-day life in the ads to make them more realistic,’ he says.
      • But that protest should not be made by disturbing the day-to-day lives of ordinary people.
      • A day-to-day scenario of an average Zambian road is one that is congested with all sorts of vehicles regardless of their mission.
      • The books are about the mundane day-to-day affairs of people.
      • On the face of it, it's just ordinary, day-to-day business.
      • Such statements are common in our day-to-day conversation.
      • In terms of ordinary life and the day-to-day sharing of responsibilities for family life, most men and women have come to share equal partnerships.
      • Compared to other athletes who are always surrounded by so many people, I feel pretty fortunate just to be able to deal with regular day-to-day things.
      • These are different from the reforms of the early 1990s that created cataclysmic changes in the day-to-day life of ordinary Russians.
      • It is the relatively unremarked legislation that can often have the most profound impact on the day-to-day lives of ordinary people.
      • The novel brings to life the day-to-day happenings in a village in the 1930s, delving into the psyche of its inhabitants, both male and female.
      • It's as if the poetry you write is what you don't seem to be able to express in your ordinary day-to-day transactions.
      • Never assume that other people will be interested in the banal day-to-day trivia of your mundane existence!
      • If contemporary art does nothing else, it at least creates a sense of difference from the mundane reality of day-to-day media.
      • Where had her day-to-day routine gone from ordinary to bizarre?
      Synonyms
      ordinary, average, run-of-the-mill, middle-of-the-road, mainstream, conventional, unremarkable, unexceptional, unpretentious, plain, simple, undistinguished, nondescript, characterless, colourless, commonplace, humdrum, mundane, unmemorable, unspectacular, pedestrian, prosaic
    2. 1.2 Short-term; without consideration for the future.
      the struggle for day-to-day survival
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For Australian mothers, the conundrum of achieving work-life balance extends beyond surviving the day-to-day difficulties.
      • In a word, he is content - happy with his place, a soul not in search of a brighter future, but mainly day-to-day enlightenment.
      • I seem to have no purpose beyond day-to-day survival.
      • But men and women do face a range of different choices and obstacles when planning their financial futures and day-to-day management.
      • These rates cannot help but influence the development of adolescents attempting to survive on a day-to-day existence.
      • In this context, often their fear of HIV and AIDS seemed less immediate than the day-to-day survival of their families and themselves.
      • Too much heat is generated by day-to-day issues that focus concern on short-term fixes rather than long-term solutions.
      • Too many of us have become caught up in the day-to-day struggle to survive and in our private lives.
      • Many Aboriginals are lukewarm on autonomy proposals because they are more concerned with day-to-day issues than the future survival of their culture, Kysul Lousu said.
      • Outside the capital, international-aid workers say that the cold and hungry people are too concerned about day-to-day survival to bother with ideology.
      • So, they live a day-to-day existence, unsure of what the future will bring.
      • By focusing on one set of issues at a time, his team deals better with both day-to-day issues and future strategy.
      • But in the short term, when all they can think of is day-to-day survival, it is in their interest to keep the road with its potholes, so they can tax people as they go through it.
      • Whatever romantic notions they have about pioneer life quickly dissolve in the day-to-day imperatives of survival in this wilderness.
      • He wants to work towards the future of the country as opposed to the day-to-day issues.
      • Now, as the economy staggers and falters, day-to-day survival presses more harshly, which makes social commitment still tougher.
      • Poverty means sex workers are more concerned with day-to-day survival than the threat of an infection whose deadly consequences lie many years in the future.
      • He hopes to do bigger projects in the future but must always cope with the day-to-day necessities.
      • Two other special education teachers in the junior high school had a lasting and profound impact on my day-to-day survival as a first-year special education teacher.
      • Although you are still intact, many of your dreams and plans for the future, as well as your day-to-day existence, may suddenly be unrecognizable bits and pieces.
adverb deɪtəˈdeɪˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ
  • On a daily basis.

    the information to be traded is determined day-to-day
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The couple existed day-to-day until the court case in November, when they had to come face-to-face with the victims' families for the first time.
    • Walker acknowledges that there are challenges in operating the club day-to-day, particularly on the administrative side.
    • People live their lives day-to-day, but I know I might not be around next year.
    • He added: ‘Businesses are finding it extremely difficult to run day-to-day if they can't keep promises on deliveries.’
    • Things would be less secure day-to-day, but we'd be unlikely to have something of this scope, which is the result of all of our safety precautions.
    • But what's interesting is how it affects our culture day-to-day.
    • He had a lot of empathy with our clients, but day-to-day he wasn't in contact with them.
    • How do we deal day-to-day with someone's absence?
    • Fortunato, affectionately known as ‘Toto’, cares for the menu day-to-day.
    • If your dietary habits are relatively the same day-to-day, and your weight has been steady for at least a month, you can skip to Step 3.
    • And what makes ordinary women angry day-to-day?
    • To build a truly great company, we can't play the game day-to-day.
    • They came to Ireland and found a warmth and an ease in communicating day-to-day that is remarkably different to England.
    • James Kennedy, who managed the project day-to-day for Sky, uses that phrase.
    • You can however, see the excitement building day-to-day, creeping into his voice at odd times, and manifesting in increasing difficulty in getting him to sleep at night.
    • If you're not involved day-to-day in the group's existence, it's difficult to make contact with those who are.
    • It's Tuesday now, so I'll do Monday 2nd and Tuesday 3rd today, and then try and keep up day-to-day, thanks to the extensive notes on my Palm.
    • But Mr Waters says inspectors can be out of touch with what it is like to be working day-to-day in a classroom.
    • I think you - you live your life day-to-day, and you take each day as it comes to you.
    • In fact, her aunt Florie Taylor runs the business day-to-day.
noun deɪtəˈdeɪˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ
  • An ordinary, everyday routine.

    they have come to escape the day-to-day
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The film opens with a glimpse into a world that we suppose to be pretty ordinary, where the day-to-day generally goes off without a hitch.
    • I was just struggling to get through the day-to-day of adolescence, which I found very tough.
    • Plenty of real American cities, we found, are taking positive steps to soften the rough edges of our high-octane day-to-day.
    • Too many organizations are stuck in the day-to-day.
    • I simply try to embellish the day-to-day of a happy elite.
    • Micro-management of the day-to-day and lack of commitment to the overall goals are historic descriptions of generations of board members.
    • What might we learn from the creative energies and survival strategies of women who ‘manage’ the day-to-day on the edges of social power?
    • The process of artistic creation is a stepping out from the day-to-day.
    • That's where the work, both the day-to-day and the strategic work of the University, get advanced.
    • That explains why I haven't been very active in covering the day-to-day of the campaigns.
    • And down on the factory floor, under limited supervision, machines run the day-to-day.
    • Time passes and the things which it seems impossible for her character to get used to - death, the loss of loved ones - become absorbed into the day-to-day.
    • Long-distance relationships are also problematic, as you don't have the day-to-day.
    • They will matter a tad more when the debates happen, until then it's all day-to-day.
    • The day-to-day of this kind of film-making is very rewarding…
    • It's about once again wrapping the day-to-day in the mythic.
 
 

Definition of day-to-day in US English:

day-to-day

adjectiveˌdādəˈdāˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ
  • 1attributive Happening regularly every day.

    the day-to-day management of the classroom
    Example sentencesExamples
    • His role as a special already involves most aspects of day-to-day policing, including regular supervision of about 30 special constables.
    • I have the primary role of financial controller and my day-to-day function is to make sure that we've got the adequate finances to meet our goals.
    • ‘For us, it's not just about day-to-day regulation, it's about the real impact on business,’ says founder Kevin Bradley.
    • Still, the burdens of government regulation and public education on top of day-to-day forest management are sometimes overwhelming.
    • When you have laid in your store, you should draw on it regularly for day-to-day use, replacing what you use by new purchases, so that the stock in your cupboard is constantly being changed.
    • As her abilities decrease, she will need increasing help to do day-to-day tasks.
    • I could go into detail about the day-to-day happenings of the course.
    • One needs to domesticate the stimulus - to make prayer a natural, comfortable event, a day-to-day happening.
    • No telly, on account of the fact the schedulers have so perfectly blended Christmas morning into the regular day-to-day line-up that there was nothing even vaguely worth watching.
    Synonyms
    regular, routine, habitual, everyday, daily, frequent, normal, standard, usual, familiar, typical
    1. 1.1 Ordinary; everyday.
      our day-to-day domestic life
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Many of the ordinary aspects of day-to-day life are forgotten within hours or days.
      • These are different from the reforms of the early 1990s that created cataclysmic changes in the day-to-day life of ordinary Russians.
      • On the face of it, it's just ordinary, day-to-day business.
      • If contemporary art does nothing else, it at least creates a sense of difference from the mundane reality of day-to-day media.
      • Episodes 1 through 3 establish the characters and their day-to-day grind.
      • Never assume that other people will be interested in the banal day-to-day trivia of your mundane existence!
      • It's as if the poetry you write is what you don't seem to be able to express in your ordinary day-to-day transactions.
      • Surrendering their most important form of identification will make it impossible to function in ordinary day-to-day life.
      • Its language and style remain miles away from the day-to-day concerns of ordinary black South Africans.
      • It is the relatively unremarked legislation that can often have the most profound impact on the day-to-day lives of ordinary people.
      • Compared to other athletes who are always surrounded by so many people, I feel pretty fortunate just to be able to deal with regular day-to-day things.
      • Where had her day-to-day routine gone from ordinary to bizarre?
      • The books are about the mundane day-to-day affairs of people.
      • ‘The agencies can select the happenings of the day-to-day life in the ads to make them more realistic,’ he says.
      • The novel brings to life the day-to-day happenings in a village in the 1930s, delving into the psyche of its inhabitants, both male and female.
      • But politicians who have real experience of grappling with the day-to-day problems and issues ordinary people have to face have a much better chance of understanding them.
      • But that protest should not be made by disturbing the day-to-day lives of ordinary people.
      • In terms of ordinary life and the day-to-day sharing of responsibilities for family life, most men and women have come to share equal partnerships.
      • Such statements are common in our day-to-day conversation.
      • A day-to-day scenario of an average Zambian road is one that is congested with all sorts of vehicles regardless of their mission.
      Synonyms
      ordinary, average, run-of-the-mill, middle-of-the-road, mainstream, conventional, unremarkable, unexceptional, unpretentious, plain, simple, undistinguished, nondescript, characterless, colourless, commonplace, humdrum, mundane, unmemorable, unspectacular, pedestrian, prosaic
    2. 1.2 Short-term; without consideration for the future.
      the struggle for day-to-day survival
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Too much heat is generated by day-to-day issues that focus concern on short-term fixes rather than long-term solutions.
      • He hopes to do bigger projects in the future but must always cope with the day-to-day necessities.
      • In a word, he is content - happy with his place, a soul not in search of a brighter future, but mainly day-to-day enlightenment.
      • So, they live a day-to-day existence, unsure of what the future will bring.
      • Poverty means sex workers are more concerned with day-to-day survival than the threat of an infection whose deadly consequences lie many years in the future.
      • By focusing on one set of issues at a time, his team deals better with both day-to-day issues and future strategy.
      • Outside the capital, international-aid workers say that the cold and hungry people are too concerned about day-to-day survival to bother with ideology.
      • Many Aboriginals are lukewarm on autonomy proposals because they are more concerned with day-to-day issues than the future survival of their culture, Kysul Lousu said.
      • I seem to have no purpose beyond day-to-day survival.
      • Although you are still intact, many of your dreams and plans for the future, as well as your day-to-day existence, may suddenly be unrecognizable bits and pieces.
      • Now, as the economy staggers and falters, day-to-day survival presses more harshly, which makes social commitment still tougher.
      • In this context, often their fear of HIV and AIDS seemed less immediate than the day-to-day survival of their families and themselves.
      • But men and women do face a range of different choices and obstacles when planning their financial futures and day-to-day management.
      • For Australian mothers, the conundrum of achieving work-life balance extends beyond surviving the day-to-day difficulties.
      • These rates cannot help but influence the development of adolescents attempting to survive on a day-to-day existence.
      • Whatever romantic notions they have about pioneer life quickly dissolve in the day-to-day imperatives of survival in this wilderness.
      • He wants to work towards the future of the country as opposed to the day-to-day issues.
      • Too many of us have become caught up in the day-to-day struggle to survive and in our private lives.
      • But in the short term, when all they can think of is day-to-day survival, it is in their interest to keep the road with its potholes, so they can tax people as they go through it.
      • Two other special education teachers in the junior high school had a lasting and profound impact on my day-to-day survival as a first-year special education teacher.
    3. 1.3 (of an injured player) not playing owing to a minor injury that is being treated and evaluated on a daily basis.
      their shortstop has an ankle sprain and is listed as day-to-day
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He said the three-time Pro Bowl selection's status is day-to-day.
      • There is little protection in K.C.'s lineup, especially with Mike Sweeney day-to-day.
      • Sam Cassell, who left Monday's game against the Houston Rockets because of a strained left calf, is listed as day-to-day.
      • He is listed as day to day and his status for Tuesday's game against New Jersey is unknown.
      • Speaking of injuries, T-Mac is day-to-day with a sore foot.
adverbˌdādəˈdāˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ
  • On a daily basis.

    the information to be traded is determined day-to-day
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He had a lot of empathy with our clients, but day-to-day he wasn't in contact with them.
    • They came to Ireland and found a warmth and an ease in communicating day-to-day that is remarkably different to England.
    • People live their lives day-to-day, but I know I might not be around next year.
    • Walker acknowledges that there are challenges in operating the club day-to-day, particularly on the administrative side.
    • James Kennedy, who managed the project day-to-day for Sky, uses that phrase.
    • In fact, her aunt Florie Taylor runs the business day-to-day.
    • But Mr Waters says inspectors can be out of touch with what it is like to be working day-to-day in a classroom.
    • To build a truly great company, we can't play the game day-to-day.
    • I think you - you live your life day-to-day, and you take each day as it comes to you.
    • How do we deal day-to-day with someone's absence?
    • And what makes ordinary women angry day-to-day?
    • Things would be less secure day-to-day, but we'd be unlikely to have something of this scope, which is the result of all of our safety precautions.
    • If you're not involved day-to-day in the group's existence, it's difficult to make contact with those who are.
    • He added: ‘Businesses are finding it extremely difficult to run day-to-day if they can't keep promises on deliveries.’
    • You can however, see the excitement building day-to-day, creeping into his voice at odd times, and manifesting in increasing difficulty in getting him to sleep at night.
    • Fortunato, affectionately known as ‘Toto’, cares for the menu day-to-day.
    • The couple existed day-to-day until the court case in November, when they had to come face-to-face with the victims' families for the first time.
    • It's Tuesday now, so I'll do Monday 2nd and Tuesday 3rd today, and then try and keep up day-to-day, thanks to the extensive notes on my Palm.
    • If your dietary habits are relatively the same day-to-day, and your weight has been steady for at least a month, you can skip to Step 3.
    • But what's interesting is how it affects our culture day-to-day.
nounˌdādəˈdāˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ
  • An ordinary, everyday routine.

    they have come to escape the day-to-day
    Example sentencesExamples
    • That's where the work, both the day-to-day and the strategic work of the University, get advanced.
    • I was just struggling to get through the day-to-day of adolescence, which I found very tough.
    • That explains why I haven't been very active in covering the day-to-day of the campaigns.
    • I simply try to embellish the day-to-day of a happy elite.
    • Time passes and the things which it seems impossible for her character to get used to - death, the loss of loved ones - become absorbed into the day-to-day.
    • They will matter a tad more when the debates happen, until then it's all day-to-day.
    • It's about once again wrapping the day-to-day in the mythic.
    • Micro-management of the day-to-day and lack of commitment to the overall goals are historic descriptions of generations of board members.
    • The film opens with a glimpse into a world that we suppose to be pretty ordinary, where the day-to-day generally goes off without a hitch.
    • And down on the factory floor, under limited supervision, machines run the day-to-day.
    • Too many organizations are stuck in the day-to-day.
    • Plenty of real American cities, we found, are taking positive steps to soften the rough edges of our high-octane day-to-day.
    • The process of artistic creation is a stepping out from the day-to-day.
    • The day-to-day of this kind of film-making is very rewarding…
    • What might we learn from the creative energies and survival strategies of women who ‘manage’ the day-to-day on the edges of social power?
    • Long-distance relationships are also problematic, as you don't have the day-to-day.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 1:32:51