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单词 tick-tock
释义

Definition of tick-tock in English:

tick-tock

noun tɪkˈtɒkˈtɪktɑk
  • 1The sound of a large clock ticking.

    we could hear every tick-tock of the clock
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It speaks of winter days sitting snug and cosy, the lamp lighting my page, toes gently toasting, and the quiet tick-tock of the clock.
    • Each day, he sits on the edge of his bed, head hung in a state of lonely tristesse while the mellifluous tick-tock of a grandfather clock marks time.
    • The search for rhythmic patterns is so ingrained that given the persistent ticking of a clock we organise the beat into a pattern of tick-tock.
    • Ben sat quietly, listening to the tick-tock of the grandfather clock.
    • And as she listened, the tick-tock of the clock on the wall seemed to fill her head and as Alana's lips moved all she could hear was a strange drone that only her ears could decipher.
    • The tick-tock of the clock was amplified and I glanced at it as a reflex.
    • You can feel it throbbing and it's this, like the tick-tock of a clock, that sends you back to sleep.
    • The two neurones alternate in activity, like the steady tick-tock of a clock.
    • She could hear the sounds of an empty, sleeping house; the tick-tock of the grandfather clock in the hallway, the dripping of a tap in the bathroom next to her, the low snuffling snores of her Dad next door.
    Synonyms
    clicking, click, clack, clacking, click-clack, ticking, tick-tock, snick, snicking, plock, plocking, beat, tap, tapping
    1. 1.1US informal A piece of journalism that presents a chronological account of an event or series of events.
      an excellent tick-tock of the unfolding financial crisis
      as modifier a tick-tock account of what went into the planning and execution of the raid
      Example sentencesExamples
      • If you want something of a play-by-play on what happened, he has a pretty good tick-tock on the specifics.
      • The tick-tock of his misdeeds indicates that he shrewdly exploited his bosses' sympathy for his psychological problems.
      • On Friday, we'll give you a tick-tock countdown on what's going to happen from Friday to Monday.
      • They were concerned about having the ability to recreate a chronology, a tick-tock of what had happened.
      • Both of them have done in-depth tick-tocks and post-mortems which are well worth reading.
      • It serves no purpose to go back and do the tick-tock.
      • Just to give you a bit of a tick-tock here, the president is going to make his way through the crowd.
      • The script at each stop was a tick-tock of his accomplishments sprinkled with sharp jabs at Republicans.
      • One of the regular features in the Wall Street Journal was the "tick-tock", an inside-the-boardroom reconstruction of a big deal.
      • A fine piece of reporting lays out in tick-tock form how the program allowed itself to be taken in by the sloppy frauds.
      • Other papers might have left the US business bible standing when news of the purchase broke, but the tick-tock, delivered later, would serve as a devastatingly definitive account.
verb tɪkˈtɒkˈtɪktɑk
[no object]
  • Make a ticking sound.

    the clock on the wall was tick-tocking
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The metronome is a nice reference tool, but if you don't have one to practice with, think of the arm of a grandfather clock tick-tocking back and forth.
    • Not a sound was to be heard anywhere; the place had nearly reached the mystical non-existent state, supposing there was one, was it not for the clock which tirelessly tick-tocked its way through the smooth black silk of silence.
    • Mindful of the time, he watched the clock tick-tock its way towards 7:15.
    Synonyms
    click, clack, tick-tock, snick, plock, beat, tap

Origin

Mid 19th century: imitative; compare with tick1.

 
 

Definition of tick-tock in US English:

tick-tock

nounˈtɪktɑkˈtiktäk
  • 1The sound of a large clock ticking.

    we could hear every tick-tock of the clock
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She could hear the sounds of an empty, sleeping house; the tick-tock of the grandfather clock in the hallway, the dripping of a tap in the bathroom next to her, the low snuffling snores of her Dad next door.
    • Each day, he sits on the edge of his bed, head hung in a state of lonely tristesse while the mellifluous tick-tock of a grandfather clock marks time.
    • The tick-tock of the clock was amplified and I glanced at it as a reflex.
    • The two neurones alternate in activity, like the steady tick-tock of a clock.
    • Ben sat quietly, listening to the tick-tock of the grandfather clock.
    • It speaks of winter days sitting snug and cosy, the lamp lighting my page, toes gently toasting, and the quiet tick-tock of the clock.
    • And as she listened, the tick-tock of the clock on the wall seemed to fill her head and as Alana's lips moved all she could hear was a strange drone that only her ears could decipher.
    • The search for rhythmic patterns is so ingrained that given the persistent ticking of a clock we organise the beat into a pattern of tick-tock.
    • You can feel it throbbing and it's this, like the tick-tock of a clock, that sends you back to sleep.
    Synonyms
    clicking, click, clack, clacking, click-clack, ticking, tick-tock, snick, snicking, plock, plocking, beat, tap, tapping
    1. 1.1US informal A piece of journalism that presents a detailed chronology of events.
      as modifier a tick-tock account of what went into the planning and execution of the raid
      I'm doing a tick-tock on the new economic policy
      Example sentencesExamples
      • They were concerned about having the ability to recreate a chronology, a tick-tock of what had happened.
      • One of the regular features in the Wall Street Journal was the "tick-tock", an inside-the-boardroom reconstruction of a big deal.
      • A fine piece of reporting lays out in tick-tock form how the program allowed itself to be taken in by the sloppy frauds.
      • Both of them have done in-depth tick-tocks and post-mortems which are well worth reading.
      • The script at each stop was a tick-tock of his accomplishments sprinkled with sharp jabs at Republicans.
      • It serves no purpose to go back and do the tick-tock.
      • If you want something of a play-by-play on what happened, he has a pretty good tick-tock on the specifics.
      • Other papers might have left the US business bible standing when news of the purchase broke, but the tick-tock, delivered later, would serve as a devastatingly definitive account.
      • On Friday, we'll give you a tick-tock countdown on what's going to happen from Friday to Monday.
      • Just to give you a bit of a tick-tock here, the president is going to make his way through the crowd.
      • The tick-tock of his misdeeds indicates that he shrewdly exploited his bosses' sympathy for his psychological problems.
verbˈtɪktɑkˈtiktäk
[no object]
  • Make a ticking sound.

    the clock on the wall was tick-tocking
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Not a sound was to be heard anywhere; the place had nearly reached the mystical non-existent state, supposing there was one, was it not for the clock which tirelessly tick-tocked its way through the smooth black silk of silence.
    • Mindful of the time, he watched the clock tick-tock its way towards 7:15.
    • The metronome is a nice reference tool, but if you don't have one to practice with, think of the arm of a grandfather clock tick-tocking back and forth.
    Synonyms
    click, clack, tick-tock, snick, plock, beat, tap

Origin

Mid 19th century: imitative; compare with tick.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/10 18:39:31