请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 T-bone
释义

Definition of T-bone in English:

T-bone

(also T-bone steak)
noun
  • A large choice piece of loin steak containing a T-shaped bone.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Main courses are next with sautéed mussels, chicken breast, pork steaks, T-bones, sea-bass and veal escallops, with everything cooked in a variety of aromatic Italian herbs and spices, and of course, lots of garlic.
    • Many find it too soft for their tastes, unlike the distinctive T-bone steak which derives flavour from the dividing bone.
    • There are one-plate meals for those who don't want to eat from the varied three course menu, including a T-bone steak at £10.50 and wholesome fare such as scampi, chicken kievs and turkey at around the £5 mark.
    • I once ordered a T-bone steak that completely covered the platter.
    • Most cuisines have examples of this, for instance, the American T-bone steak, the French escalope, the Middle Eastern kebab, and the thin slices cut for stir-frying in Chinese cookery.
    • And safe journey and happy travels go out to Jervey who is probably tucking into a T-bone steak stateside.
    • Bone-in cuts, like T-bone or porterhouse steaks, may pose a very, very slight risk.
    • That's not a serving of pizza - it's a T-bone steak dinner with salad and a baked potato sprinkled with a teaspoon of salt.
    • Even without the filling soup as a first course, the T-bone steak and salad had been an excellent meal.
    • I don't know what we're doing with our beef in Australia but we had the best T-bone steak we'd ever had in Africa.
    • The tender steaks are rib, rib-eye, T-bone, porterhouse, tenderloin, sirloin and strip loin.
    • He actually got a T-bone steak, but Price was touched when he sent word back saying how much he liked the meal.
    • Careful Kitty's Cafe, the coffee shop at the El Cortez, serves a T-bone steak or prime rib dinner for $5.95 from midnight to 7 a.m. every day.
    • I could go to dinner and have a T-bone steak and mashed potatoes and gravy and this and that, and you know, that wasn't that hard for me to eat.
    • You'd be going to your car, talking about your trip that you still have to make, talking about the T-bone steak you had inside the Ponderosa.
    • They call it T-bone because it looks like a T-bone steak, like you're hitting a perpendicular head-on.
    • Top items at B.395 were a mixed grill or a T-bone steak.
    • Had a T-bone steak for dinner as we arrive at Chipley.
    • He was eating a T-bone steak when he saw Randy sitting at the bar drinking a malted soda.
    • To my surprise, the kitchen provided me with a T-bone steak in place of Buxton's preferred filet mignon.
verb
[with object]North American informal
  • Crash head-on into the side of (another vehicle)

    I put the train's emergency brakes on but the engine T-boned the truck
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He failed to stop at the stop street and T-boned a car travelling down Maitland Road.
    • In 1972, en route to the Ebonite Edge Classic in Berkley, Mich., she was a passenger in a car that was T-boned on the passenger side by a young driver.
    • Wylie always told himself that Maddy was invincible out there - he couldn't afford to think about it any other way - but seeing her come so close to getting T-boned rattled him.
    • One of the traffic experts quoted observed that it was much better to be rear-ended at 10 mph than T-boned at 40; true enough, I suppose.
    • Tagliani T-boned him at nearly 200 mph, the hard carbon-fibre bullet nose of his 1,550-pound missile striking Zanardi's car between the left front wheel and the cockpit with such force that it blew away the front of the chassis.
    • Jimmy Ng was killed on the job in September of 2002 when his police cruiser was T-boned by a speeding car.
    • I couldn't swerve to the right because I then would T-bone the truck.
    • One such accident, where a three year old 9-5 that failed to stop at a major road had been T-boned more or less side on by a Toyota Hiace van, was the subject of Saab's safety seminar.
    • Yes I like that one a lot better then getting T-boned by another car, and barely surviving.
    • An upsurge of magnetism in your personal and professional relationships will see an old flame return to your life, T-boning a tanker and showering the stolen SUV with pure gasoline!
    • The charges date back to Sept. 16, 2002 when Ng's squad car was T-boned by a speeding 2003 Honda Civic at the intersection of Williams and No. 3 Road.
    • In 1974, having a good-sized car saved my life when I got T-boned on my driver's side door by a humongous truck.
    • He told the police later that he didn't want to kill old people or the very young, so he ran a red light and T-boned a twenty five year old son of a Fox 2 News reporter, killing him instantly.
    • In the first case, Kitty L. was T-boned on the driver's side of her car, and she suffered neck tenderness with some spasm and back soreness.
    • I was getting 100 km using just a litre of petrol when I T-boned a bus.
    • And yesterday I was very nearly T-boned by someone who had sailed through a red light.
    • Title contender Jeff Gordon, who was running behind those two, had nowhere to go and T-boned Hillenburg's car.
    • At the end block I turned and dallied in some side streets, expecting the Yukon to come blasting through a snowdrift and T-bone me into a body cast.
    • In cars, side-curtain airbags protect the heads of drivers and passengers when getting T-boned by an SUV or pickup truck.
    • I was gonna write this paragraph about how her car had been T-boned, and all this other stuff.
 
 

Definition of T-bone in US English:

T-bone

(also T-bone steak)
nounˈtiˌboʊnˈtēˌbōn
  • A large choice piece of loin steak containing a T-shaped bone.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Bone-in cuts, like T-bone or porterhouse steaks, may pose a very, very slight risk.
    • Careful Kitty's Cafe, the coffee shop at the El Cortez, serves a T-bone steak or prime rib dinner for $5.95 from midnight to 7 a.m. every day.
    • Had a T-bone steak for dinner as we arrive at Chipley.
    • Many find it too soft for their tastes, unlike the distinctive T-bone steak which derives flavour from the dividing bone.
    • I don't know what we're doing with our beef in Australia but we had the best T-bone steak we'd ever had in Africa.
    • That's not a serving of pizza - it's a T-bone steak dinner with salad and a baked potato sprinkled with a teaspoon of salt.
    • Main courses are next with sautéed mussels, chicken breast, pork steaks, T-bones, sea-bass and veal escallops, with everything cooked in a variety of aromatic Italian herbs and spices, and of course, lots of garlic.
    • I could go to dinner and have a T-bone steak and mashed potatoes and gravy and this and that, and you know, that wasn't that hard for me to eat.
    • Top items at B.395 were a mixed grill or a T-bone steak.
    • There are one-plate meals for those who don't want to eat from the varied three course menu, including a T-bone steak at £10.50 and wholesome fare such as scampi, chicken kievs and turkey at around the £5 mark.
    • And safe journey and happy travels go out to Jervey who is probably tucking into a T-bone steak stateside.
    • Most cuisines have examples of this, for instance, the American T-bone steak, the French escalope, the Middle Eastern kebab, and the thin slices cut for stir-frying in Chinese cookery.
    • He actually got a T-bone steak, but Price was touched when he sent word back saying how much he liked the meal.
    • I once ordered a T-bone steak that completely covered the platter.
    • Even without the filling soup as a first course, the T-bone steak and salad had been an excellent meal.
    • The tender steaks are rib, rib-eye, T-bone, porterhouse, tenderloin, sirloin and strip loin.
    • You'd be going to your car, talking about your trip that you still have to make, talking about the T-bone steak you had inside the Ponderosa.
    • To my surprise, the kitchen provided me with a T-bone steak in place of Buxton's preferred filet mignon.
    • They call it T-bone because it looks like a T-bone steak, like you're hitting a perpendicular head-on.
    • He was eating a T-bone steak when he saw Randy sitting at the bar drinking a malted soda.
verbˈtiˌboʊnˈtēˌbōn
[with object]North American informal
  • Crash head-on into the side of (another vehicle)

    his car rolled over and was T-boned by an oncoming vehicle
    Example sentencesExamples
    • One of the traffic experts quoted observed that it was much better to be rear-ended at 10 mph than T-boned at 40; true enough, I suppose.
    • The charges date back to Sept. 16, 2002 when Ng's squad car was T-boned by a speeding 2003 Honda Civic at the intersection of Williams and No. 3 Road.
    • In 1974, having a good-sized car saved my life when I got T-boned on my driver's side door by a humongous truck.
    • I was gonna write this paragraph about how her car had been T-boned, and all this other stuff.
    • In 1972, en route to the Ebonite Edge Classic in Berkley, Mich., she was a passenger in a car that was T-boned on the passenger side by a young driver.
    • In cars, side-curtain airbags protect the heads of drivers and passengers when getting T-boned by an SUV or pickup truck.
    • Tagliani T-boned him at nearly 200 mph, the hard carbon-fibre bullet nose of his 1,550-pound missile striking Zanardi's car between the left front wheel and the cockpit with such force that it blew away the front of the chassis.
    • An upsurge of magnetism in your personal and professional relationships will see an old flame return to your life, T-boning a tanker and showering the stolen SUV with pure gasoline!
    • Jimmy Ng was killed on the job in September of 2002 when his police cruiser was T-boned by a speeding car.
    • In the first case, Kitty L. was T-boned on the driver's side of her car, and she suffered neck tenderness with some spasm and back soreness.
    • He failed to stop at the stop street and T-boned a car travelling down Maitland Road.
    • At the end block I turned and dallied in some side streets, expecting the Yukon to come blasting through a snowdrift and T-bone me into a body cast.
    • Wylie always told himself that Maddy was invincible out there - he couldn't afford to think about it any other way - but seeing her come so close to getting T-boned rattled him.
    • And yesterday I was very nearly T-boned by someone who had sailed through a red light.
    • Yes I like that one a lot better then getting T-boned by another car, and barely surviving.
    • He told the police later that he didn't want to kill old people or the very young, so he ran a red light and T-boned a twenty five year old son of a Fox 2 News reporter, killing him instantly.
    • Title contender Jeff Gordon, who was running behind those two, had nowhere to go and T-boned Hillenburg's car.
    • I couldn't swerve to the right because I then would T-bone the truck.
    • One such accident, where a three year old 9-5 that failed to stop at a major road had been T-boned more or less side on by a Toyota Hiace van, was the subject of Saab's safety seminar.
    • I was getting 100 km using just a litre of petrol when I T-boned a bus.
 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/12/22 19:04:07