释义 |
Definition of stow in English: stowverb stəʊstoʊ with object and adverbial Pack or store (an object) carefully and neatly in a particular place. Barney began stowing her luggage into the boot Example sentencesExamples - He unlocked it and the trunk, stowing our stuff in there.
- The design is too restrictive, it is too bulky to be stowed in a pack, it stinks when wet, and it falls to pieces the first time it is washed.
- I accomplished the journey without incident but felt a great relief when I pulled up on the drive to unload the bags and then stow the car safely back in the garage.
- He stows everything in jute sacks on his cycle-cart.
- She was unable to hold his gaze and turned away to stow her toothbrush in the pack.
- The paper was carefully placed back in her binder and she stowed everything back in its proper place for once.
- I'm tired of having to stow my little three-inch-long pocket knife in my checked baggage.
- She took five minutes to stow her stuff, then reported to Pip for something to do.
- They stowed their luggage and inspected their living quarters for the next three months.
- We stow our carry-on stuff, as well as our coats in the overhead, and proceed to the dining car where breakfast is just beginning to be served.
- If I have to stow the umbrella away for a large part of the year in Chennai, it needs to have as few collapsible parts as possible.
- A large area below the lower bunk proved useful for storage, and you can stow empty luggage around the boat.
- Our own hand luggage was stowed firmly beneath our table, out of the danger zone.
- I wave and carefully stow my bike against the fence at the back of the beer garden.
- Extra storage space can be found beneath the boot floor, where valuables can be stowed out of sight.
- When you've made your purchases, they put the bags on a conveyor, and you drive around to the side, where a reasonable young person stows them in your car and thanks you.
- Recovering, she picked up her letter and carefully stowed it in her backpack.
- Security has provided us with keys to a store room - a place to safely stow our equipment while we move through the building.
- We stowed our things at the cheap central apartment that Diana had acquired for us and drove to the beach.
- I can raise and strike a sail, reef it and stow it.
Synonyms pack, load, store place, put, put away, deposit bundle, cram, jam, wedge, stash informal stuff, shove
Phrases informal Used to tell someone to be quiet. Example sentencesExamples - And please, if you have an urge to accuse me of ‘agendas’ and all that trash, just stow it!
- If you have have some sort of constructive criticism, lecture about my self-pity or gloat to offer, do me a favor and just stow it, will ya?
Phrasal Verbs Conceal oneself on a ship, aircraft, or other passenger vehicle in order to travel secretly or without paying the fare. he stowed away on a ship bound for South Africa Example sentencesExamples - Well, no one's to leave the harbor, for fear the man will stow away on one of the ships.
- Three years later he was refused admission to the Paris Conservatoire because he was too young, and in 1872 he stowed away on a ship bound for the Americas.
- She recalled stowing away on a ship bound for Guardian Island.
- Tired of that lifestyle, she stows away on a ship headed toward America.
- Few people stow away on our ship, not if they know who we are.
- A year later he arrived in Western Australia, after stowing away on a container ship.
- By the time he was eleven years old he too wanted to see the world and stowed away on a ship in Port Adelaide bound for England.
- People have also tried hiding under the 186 mph trains, just inches from live rails, clinging to the side of a passenger ferry as it made the 26-mile overnight journey to Dover and stowing away in aeroplane wheel bays.
- He ran away from home aged 15, stowed away on a ship and ended up in South America.
- Pop described how he escaped Mayo poverty, four years before the Easter Rising, by stowing away on a boat to England, where he planned to earn passage to America.
- Instead he stowed away on a cargo ship and ended up back in Ireland.
- One night Michael stows away in his father's car and is witness to the murder of an uncooperative mob associate.
- He stowed away on a ship, and I fled back to my pirate friends.
- The operator of the Channel tunnel rail link has asked a French court to shut the refugee camp which it blames for rising numbers of illegal immigrants stowing away on its trains.
- What's strange is that you're stowing away on a ship in the first place.
- Ms Hopkins believes Jack stows away on lorries and cars and is transported unwittingly far from home.
- One might expect strong, restless, highly motivated people to follow - the kinds of people who stowed away on ships from Europe and Asia to build new lives in America.
- He stows away on a Portugal-bound ship, has qualms about the reception that might await him, and jumps ship at St. Helena.
- Anstey stowed away at the age of 11, jumped ship in Sydney and spent 10 years as a seaman.
- It is believed up to 40 people stowed away on the English, Welsh and Scottish Railways train travelling from Milan to England.
Synonyms hide, conceal oneself, secrete oneself
Origin Late Middle English: shortening of bestow. place from Old English: If you have been to Italy or Spain you have probably visited the piazza or plaza of a town. These words have the same origin as English place and French place ‘(public) square’, namely Latin platea ‘open space’, from Greek plateia hodos ‘broad way’. From the early Middle Ages, when it was adopted from French, place superseded stow (found in place names such as Stow on the Wold and Padstow) and stead, as in Wanstead. The sense ‘a space that can be occupied’ developed in Middle English from this. The orderly person's mantra a place for everything and everything in its place goes back to the 17th century, but the modern formulation first appears in the 1840s in Captain Frederick Marryat's nautical yarn Masterman Ready: ‘In a well-conducted man-of-war…every thing in its place, and there is a place for every thing.’ In 1897 the German Chancellor Prince Bernhard von Bülow, made a speech in the Reichstag in which he declared, ‘we desire to throw no one into the shade [in East Asia], but we also demand our place in the sun’. As a result the expression a place in the sun, ‘a position of favour or advantage’, has been associated with German nationalism. However, it is recorded much earlier, and is traceable back to the writings of the 17th-century French mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal.
Rhymes aglow, ago, alow, although, apropos, art nouveau, Bamako, Bardot, beau, Beaujolais Nouveau, below, bestow, blow, bo, Boileau, bons mots, Bordeaux, Bow, bravo, bro, cachepot, cheerio, Coe, crow, Defoe, de trop, doe, doh, dos-à-dos, do-si-do, dough, dzo, Flo, floe, flow, foe, foreknow, foreshow, forgo, Foucault, froe, glow, go, good-oh, go-slow, grow, gung-ho, Heathrow, heave-ho, heigh-ho, hello, ho, hoe, ho-ho, jo, Joe, kayo, know, lo, low, maillot, malapropos, Marceau, mho, Miró, mo, Mohs, Monroe, mot, mow, Munro, no, Noh, no-show, oh, oho, outgo, outgrow, owe, Perrault, pho, po, Poe, pro, quid pro quo, reshow, righto, roe, Rouault, row, Rowe, sew, shew, show, sloe, slow, snow, so, soh, sow, status quo, Stowe, strow, tally-ho, though, throw, tic-tac-toe, to-and-fro, toe, touch-and-go, tow, trow, undergo, undersow, voe, whacko, whoa, wo, woe, Xuzhou, yo, yo-ho-ho, Zhengzhou, Zhou Definition of stow in US English: stowverbstōstoʊ with object and adverbial Pack or store (an object) carefully and neatly in a particular place. the bathhouse offers baskets in which to stow your clothes she stowed the map away in the glove compartment Example sentencesExamples - We stowed our things at the cheap central apartment that Diana had acquired for us and drove to the beach.
- I wave and carefully stow my bike against the fence at the back of the beer garden.
- The paper was carefully placed back in her binder and she stowed everything back in its proper place for once.
- I can raise and strike a sail, reef it and stow it.
- A large area below the lower bunk proved useful for storage, and you can stow empty luggage around the boat.
- The design is too restrictive, it is too bulky to be stowed in a pack, it stinks when wet, and it falls to pieces the first time it is washed.
- They stowed their luggage and inspected their living quarters for the next three months.
- She took five minutes to stow her stuff, then reported to Pip for something to do.
- Our own hand luggage was stowed firmly beneath our table, out of the danger zone.
- Recovering, she picked up her letter and carefully stowed it in her backpack.
- Extra storage space can be found beneath the boot floor, where valuables can be stowed out of sight.
- She was unable to hold his gaze and turned away to stow her toothbrush in the pack.
- He stows everything in jute sacks on his cycle-cart.
- If I have to stow the umbrella away for a large part of the year in Chennai, it needs to have as few collapsible parts as possible.
- Security has provided us with keys to a store room - a place to safely stow our equipment while we move through the building.
- He unlocked it and the trunk, stowing our stuff in there.
- I accomplished the journey without incident but felt a great relief when I pulled up on the drive to unload the bags and then stow the car safely back in the garage.
- I'm tired of having to stow my little three-inch-long pocket knife in my checked baggage.
- When you've made your purchases, they put the bags on a conveyor, and you drive around to the side, where a reasonable young person stows them in your car and thanks you.
- We stow our carry-on stuff, as well as our coats in the overhead, and proceed to the dining car where breakfast is just beginning to be served.
Phrases informal Used as a way of urging someone to be quiet or to stop doing something. Example sentencesExamples - If you have have some sort of constructive criticism, lecture about my self-pity or gloat to offer, do me a favor and just stow it, will ya?
- And please, if you have an urge to accuse me of ‘agendas’ and all that trash, just stow it!
Phrasal Verbs Conceal oneself on a ship, aircraft, or other passenger vehicle in order to travel secretly or without paying the fare. he stowed away on a ship bound for South Africa Example sentencesExamples - Ms Hopkins believes Jack stows away on lorries and cars and is transported unwittingly far from home.
- Pop described how he escaped Mayo poverty, four years before the Easter Rising, by stowing away on a boat to England, where he planned to earn passage to America.
- Instead he stowed away on a cargo ship and ended up back in Ireland.
- What's strange is that you're stowing away on a ship in the first place.
- Three years later he was refused admission to the Paris Conservatoire because he was too young, and in 1872 he stowed away on a ship bound for the Americas.
- It is believed up to 40 people stowed away on the English, Welsh and Scottish Railways train travelling from Milan to England.
- He stows away on a Portugal-bound ship, has qualms about the reception that might await him, and jumps ship at St. Helena.
- The operator of the Channel tunnel rail link has asked a French court to shut the refugee camp which it blames for rising numbers of illegal immigrants stowing away on its trains.
- People have also tried hiding under the 186 mph trains, just inches from live rails, clinging to the side of a passenger ferry as it made the 26-mile overnight journey to Dover and stowing away in aeroplane wheel bays.
- She recalled stowing away on a ship bound for Guardian Island.
- Tired of that lifestyle, she stows away on a ship headed toward America.
- Well, no one's to leave the harbor, for fear the man will stow away on one of the ships.
- By the time he was eleven years old he too wanted to see the world and stowed away on a ship in Port Adelaide bound for England.
- Few people stow away on our ship, not if they know who we are.
- One night Michael stows away in his father's car and is witness to the murder of an uncooperative mob associate.
- Anstey stowed away at the age of 11, jumped ship in Sydney and spent 10 years as a seaman.
- He stowed away on a ship, and I fled back to my pirate friends.
- He ran away from home aged 15, stowed away on a ship and ended up in South America.
- A year later he arrived in Western Australia, after stowing away on a container ship.
- One might expect strong, restless, highly motivated people to follow - the kinds of people who stowed away on ships from Europe and Asia to build new lives in America.
Synonyms hide, conceal oneself, secrete oneself
Origin Late Middle English: shortening of bestow. |