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单词 bale
释义

Bâle1

proper nounbalbäl
  • French name for Basle

bale2

noun beɪlbeɪl
  • 1A large wrapped or bound bundle of paper, hay, or cotton.

    the fire destroyed 500 bales of hay
    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘I'm going to pull a hard right and coast into that hay bale over there,’ Zell explained.
    • Shayne was at the top of the haystack and handed down bale by bale to Blake, who handed it to Patrick, who handed it to me.
    • Dakota nodded and tossed up another bale, thinking.
    • Meanwhile, they burned crops, destroyed railroads and factories and reached Savannah with 25,000 bales of captured cotton.
    • I told her, grasping another bale and heading back to the truck.
    • No matter how good your hay is today, between now and feeding time, every rain, every windstorm, is going to steal nutrients from every exposed bale and stack.
    • With each lurch of the truck another flaming bale toppled off, coming to a flaming halt on the road or igniting the grass at its shoulder.
    • Mr Miller is believed to have gone over to speak to Mr Holt, who was loading 40 bales of compressed cardboard onto a trailer with another worker.
    • This may mean placing each bale 20 feet or more away from the neighboring bales.
    • Firefighters remained at the scene through the night and throughout yesterday tackling small pockets of fire in the bales of paper.
    • The two pals had been walking to the shop for sweets on Saturday when they were crushed against a wall by a trailer and tractor loaded with bales of hay.
    • Some the size of mountains, some the size of hay bale.
    • Grabbing a pitch fork she shoved it into one bale breaking off chucks that she spread out between the three ever grateful recipients.
    • And then, sure enough, he walks right up and throws a big ole bale of straw on my back.
    • With practiced ease, Tundra picked another bale of hay off the pile.
    • The sheepherder went over to his storage hut and brought out one bale of wool.
    • We'd found a crew loading bales of hay onto a trailer, and Jeff got out to shoot them while I went back to get our car.
    • Macra has also put together a whole host of novelty competitions and farm skills displays, from sheaf tossing to round bale rolling.
    • The bales of stamped paper remained unpacked at Castle William; no man being bound to open and distribute them.
    • I'd missed the sheep, though the winning decorated hay bale was disguised as such.
    Synonyms
    bundle, truss, bunch, pack, package, parcel, load
    1. 1.1 The quantity in a bale as a measure, specifically (in the US) 500 lb of cotton.
      world cotton consumption was a record 86 m bales
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's a wee bit more expensive per bale than shavings but it is, according to the bumf, four times more absorbent.
      • However straw and good quality hay are a different story with good hay making up to and over E28 a round bale while square bales of straw are fetching E2.40.
      • Later wool was packed in small bales of 45 kg and the plane was able to carry four or five per flight.
      • As a result, the price of New York hay has dropped because of its inferior quality and the cost of out-of-state hay has risen by about $4 per bale.
      • Contractors also find that the smoother bales make for better wrapping, faster baling and lower costs per bale.
      • He buys in round bales of straw at £8 delivered per bale for all of his bedding.
      • Top cotton yields this year reached three bales - or about 1,500 pounds - per acre, Latham said, with 45,000 acres planted.
      • About 85 million bales of cotton are produced worldwide each year, including 18 to 20 million in the United States.
      • At the Slaton Co-Op, the 500-pound bales continue to roll out.
      • The 11.9-micron bale of wool was bought by the HYX Group at auction in Sydney for $675,000.
      • The cooperative ginned a record supply of cotton, topping 16,000 bales.
      • Calculating a ton as 40 bales weighing 50 pounds each, the price per bale would range from $2.25 to $3.80.
      • The year before boll weevils marched into Georgia in 1915, the state produced 2.8 million bales of cotton.
      • He bragged that the company's general store grossed thirty thousand dollars a year and its ginning operation was able to clean and compress three bales of cotton in an hour.
      • Middendorf says the wrapped bales contain 600 pounds of dry matter and are worth $25 per bale.
      • Others began doing calculations on how many square bales to the acre.
      • A taxi driver and his four passengers escaped being crushed when a straw bale weighing half a ton bounced onto their car.
      • Calcot, Bakersfield, Calif., has annual sales of 1.4 million bales of cotton.
      • Young firebugs twice set fire to a one tonne bale of hay close to homes in Heysham.
verb beɪlbeɪl
[with object]
  • Make up into bales.

    the straw is left on the field to be baled later
    Example sentencesExamples
    • On the other hand, if you want to plow a field, bale hay, pull stumps or exchange implements with neighbors, you'll need a more powerful machine.
    • They have all been scrapped and now make up 1,200 tonnes of square baled metal, the first consignment of which was transported to the Netherlands last Thursday.
    • The local farmers have had an awful task to deal with their silage and baled hay this season with the weather spoiling and causing so much hassle.
    • On a farm with cows, pigs, horses and sheep, Jaime spent her childhood baling hay and practicing gymnastics in a converted barn.
    • Paper is the major waste material, which is baled and packaged here and sold to recycling companies abroad.
    • Now the reason Allen was waiting for the dew was because he wanted his alfalfa to get some moisture on it before he started baling it.
    • Leaving a 12-inch stubble with the combine and baling the cut straw is an efficient practice.
    • The farm grew so many thistles that it looked like a snowstorm when they baled hay.
    • Other activities include a John Deere trike and tractor farm, petting zoo, and hay bale maze.
    • They baled hay here until about 10:30 & then went up to Ludvig's.
    • Sofia Municipality suggested the site last week, and later on the Government approved it as the location where baled refuse could be temporarily kept until another solution is found.
    • Once back at the depot the foil is sorted and baled by volunteer workers from the Edington Centre, a day centre for adults with special educational needs.
    • They feed two to three bales a day, depending on what other feeds are available.
    • Ranch hands can teach your employees a thing or two about herding longhorn cattle, baling hay, and harvesting pecans.
    • We baled the hay at the weekend, and stacks have been pushed over every day since then.
    • If you spend your mornings grooming horses, baling hay and cleaning stalls, you'll burn as many calories as you would walking for the same amount of time.
    • Instead, forage produced on spray fields has frequently been viewed as a liability with infrequent harvests; baled forage is often left on the landscape to decay.
    • I baled hay and pulled weeds from soybean fields.
    • Some are baling soybeans, while a few are grazing corn.
    • Across the way in the tunnel between Doty and Wallace is the room where cans, plastics, and glass are washed and the cans are baled.
    • Because milk jugs are more valuable by themselves instead of mixed with other plastics, they are baled separately.
    • He said that ‘an increase of only 25 kg in Dry Matter per bale will pay for 2 extra layers of film due to the reduced number to be baled & wrapped.’
    • Bottles need to be de-capped before they're baled.
    • After that, I guess you'll be raking the rest of the alfalfa, then baling it with your brothers.
    • In North Carolina, I did my laundry and hung it outside on a clothesline to dry, while a farmer baled hay in a field next door.

Origin

Middle English: probably from Middle Dutch, from Old French; ultimately of Germanic origin and related to ball1.

  • bail from Middle English:

    The spelling bail represents several different words. The one meaning ‘temporary release of an accused person’ came via French from Latin bajulare, ‘to bear a burden’, and is related to bailiff (Middle English), someone who bears the burden of responsibility. The Latin word is also ultimately the source of bail (in Britain also spelled bale) meaning ‘to scoop water out of a boat’. The bailey (Middle English) or outer wall of a castle has a quite different origin, but it is connected with the third bail, a crosspiece on a cricket stump: originally this bail meant the same as bailey. The ultimate origin of both of these appears to be Latin baculum, ‘a rod or stick’ which developed the sense ‘palisade’ in French. Bailing out from an aircraft may be a development of the ‘to scoop water’ sense. It was at first spelled bale out, though, and could come from the idea of letting a bale of straw though a trapdoor in a barn. The first written record dates from 1930. This sort of bale (Middle English) has the basic idea of something bundled and is related to ball.

Rhymes

ail, ale, assail, avail, bail, bewail, brail, Braille, chain mail, countervail, curtail, dale, downscale, drail, dwale, entail, exhale, fail, faille, flail, frail, Gael, Gail, gale, Grail, grisaille, hail, hale, impale, jail, kale, mail, male, webmail, nonpareil, outsail, pail, pale, quail, rail, sail, sale, sangrail, scale, shale, snail, stale, swale, tail, tale, they'll, trail, upscale, vail, vale, veil, surveil, wail, wale, whale, Yale

bale3

noun beɪlbeɪl
mass nounarchaic
  • 1Evil considered as a destructive force.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In earlier days great Carthage suffered bale.
    • Enough and to spare of bale is in thy speech.
    1. 1.1 Evil suffered; physical or mental torment.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I have known too much of bale by this child-bearing.
      • Let now your bliss be turned into bale.

Origin

Old English balu, bealu, of Germanic origin.

bale4

verb beɪlbeɪl
British
  • variant spelling of bail
 
 

Bâle1

proper nounbäl
  • French name for Basle

bale2

nounbālbeɪl
  • 1A bundle of paper, hay, cotton, etc., tightly wrapped and bound with cords or hoops.

    the fire destroyed 500 bales of hay
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Macra has also put together a whole host of novelty competitions and farm skills displays, from sheaf tossing to round bale rolling.
    • Shayne was at the top of the haystack and handed down bale by bale to Blake, who handed it to Patrick, who handed it to me.
    • With practiced ease, Tundra picked another bale of hay off the pile.
    • We'd found a crew loading bales of hay onto a trailer, and Jeff got out to shoot them while I went back to get our car.
    • I'd missed the sheep, though the winning decorated hay bale was disguised as such.
    • And then, sure enough, he walks right up and throws a big ole bale of straw on my back.
    • This may mean placing each bale 20 feet or more away from the neighboring bales.
    • No matter how good your hay is today, between now and feeding time, every rain, every windstorm, is going to steal nutrients from every exposed bale and stack.
    • With each lurch of the truck another flaming bale toppled off, coming to a flaming halt on the road or igniting the grass at its shoulder.
    • ‘I'm going to pull a hard right and coast into that hay bale over there,’ Zell explained.
    • Mr Miller is believed to have gone over to speak to Mr Holt, who was loading 40 bales of compressed cardboard onto a trailer with another worker.
    • Dakota nodded and tossed up another bale, thinking.
    • Some the size of mountains, some the size of hay bale.
    • Meanwhile, they burned crops, destroyed railroads and factories and reached Savannah with 25,000 bales of captured cotton.
    • The bales of stamped paper remained unpacked at Castle William; no man being bound to open and distribute them.
    • The sheepherder went over to his storage hut and brought out one bale of wool.
    • Grabbing a pitch fork she shoved it into one bale breaking off chucks that she spread out between the three ever grateful recipients.
    • The two pals had been walking to the shop for sweets on Saturday when they were crushed against a wall by a trailer and tractor loaded with bales of hay.
    • I told her, grasping another bale and heading back to the truck.
    • Firefighters remained at the scene through the night and throughout yesterday tackling small pockets of fire in the bales of paper.
    Synonyms
    bundle, truss, bunch, pack, package, parcel, load
    1. 1.1 The quantity in a bale as a measure, especially 500 pounds of cotton.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • At the Slaton Co-Op, the 500-pound bales continue to roll out.
      • As a result, the price of New York hay has dropped because of its inferior quality and the cost of out-of-state hay has risen by about $4 per bale.
      • Later wool was packed in small bales of 45 kg and the plane was able to carry four or five per flight.
      • Others began doing calculations on how many square bales to the acre.
      • Young firebugs twice set fire to a one tonne bale of hay close to homes in Heysham.
      • Calculating a ton as 40 bales weighing 50 pounds each, the price per bale would range from $2.25 to $3.80.
      • About 85 million bales of cotton are produced worldwide each year, including 18 to 20 million in the United States.
      • He buys in round bales of straw at £8 delivered per bale for all of his bedding.
      • Contractors also find that the smoother bales make for better wrapping, faster baling and lower costs per bale.
      • However straw and good quality hay are a different story with good hay making up to and over E28 a round bale while square bales of straw are fetching E2.40.
      • It's a wee bit more expensive per bale than shavings but it is, according to the bumf, four times more absorbent.
      • He bragged that the company's general store grossed thirty thousand dollars a year and its ginning operation was able to clean and compress three bales of cotton in an hour.
      • The 11.9-micron bale of wool was bought by the HYX Group at auction in Sydney for $675,000.
      • Calcot, Bakersfield, Calif., has annual sales of 1.4 million bales of cotton.
      • The cooperative ginned a record supply of cotton, topping 16,000 bales.
      • Top cotton yields this year reached three bales - or about 1,500 pounds - per acre, Latham said, with 45,000 acres planted.
      • Middendorf says the wrapped bales contain 600 pounds of dry matter and are worth $25 per bale.
      • The year before boll weevils marched into Georgia in 1915, the state produced 2.8 million bales of cotton.
      • A taxi driver and his four passengers escaped being crushed when a straw bale weighing half a ton bounced onto their car.
verbbālbeɪl
[with object]
  • Make (something) into bales.

    they baled a lot of good hay
    most baling and field work have been finished
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Other activities include a John Deere trike and tractor farm, petting zoo, and hay bale maze.
    • We baled the hay at the weekend, and stacks have been pushed over every day since then.
    • Ranch hands can teach your employees a thing or two about herding longhorn cattle, baling hay, and harvesting pecans.
    • Across the way in the tunnel between Doty and Wallace is the room where cans, plastics, and glass are washed and the cans are baled.
    • Sofia Municipality suggested the site last week, and later on the Government approved it as the location where baled refuse could be temporarily kept until another solution is found.
    • Because milk jugs are more valuable by themselves instead of mixed with other plastics, they are baled separately.
    • They feed two to three bales a day, depending on what other feeds are available.
    • They have all been scrapped and now make up 1,200 tonnes of square baled metal, the first consignment of which was transported to the Netherlands last Thursday.
    • Paper is the major waste material, which is baled and packaged here and sold to recycling companies abroad.
    • I baled hay and pulled weeds from soybean fields.
    • They baled hay here until about 10:30 & then went up to Ludvig's.
    • Once back at the depot the foil is sorted and baled by volunteer workers from the Edington Centre, a day centre for adults with special educational needs.
    • The local farmers have had an awful task to deal with their silage and baled hay this season with the weather spoiling and causing so much hassle.
    • The farm grew so many thistles that it looked like a snowstorm when they baled hay.
    • Some are baling soybeans, while a few are grazing corn.
    • In North Carolina, I did my laundry and hung it outside on a clothesline to dry, while a farmer baled hay in a field next door.
    • After that, I guess you'll be raking the rest of the alfalfa, then baling it with your brothers.
    • On the other hand, if you want to plow a field, bale hay, pull stumps or exchange implements with neighbors, you'll need a more powerful machine.
    • If you spend your mornings grooming horses, baling hay and cleaning stalls, you'll burn as many calories as you would walking for the same amount of time.
    • He said that ‘an increase of only 25 kg in Dry Matter per bale will pay for 2 extra layers of film due to the reduced number to be baled & wrapped.’
    • Now the reason Allen was waiting for the dew was because he wanted his alfalfa to get some moisture on it before he started baling it.
    • On a farm with cows, pigs, horses and sheep, Jaime spent her childhood baling hay and practicing gymnastics in a converted barn.
    • Leaving a 12-inch stubble with the combine and baling the cut straw is an efficient practice.
    • Instead, forage produced on spray fields has frequently been viewed as a liability with infrequent harvests; baled forage is often left on the landscape to decay.
    • Bottles need to be de-capped before they're baled.

Origin

Middle English: probably from Middle Dutch, from Old French; ultimately of Germanic origin and related to ball.

bale3

nounbālbeɪl
archaic
  • 1Evil considered as a destructive force.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Enough and to spare of bale is in thy speech.
    • In earlier days great Carthage suffered bale.
    1. 1.1 Evil suffered; physical torment or mental suffering.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Let now your bliss be turned into bale.
      • I have known too much of bale by this child-bearing.

Origin

Old English balu, bealu, of Germanic origin.

bale4

verbbeɪlbāl
British
  • variant spelling of bail
 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/11 11:54:09