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单词 daily
释义

Definition of daily in English:

daily

adjective ˈdeɪliˈdeɪli
  • 1Done, produced, or occurring every day or every weekday.

    a daily newspaper
    Example sentencesExamples
    • At the moment, 90 % of Scots exceed the safe maximum daily intake of salt.
    • At first sight it can seem very hard and austere, with a daily schedule comprising set periods of silence, prayer, work and recreation.
    • They will offer daily flights from Gatwick after March.
    • Following his daily routine, he sat by the river for a while.
    • Another interesting parade is the once or twice daily routine of "pet dogs" being walked past her place.
    • Building and construction works on the lands are matters of almost daily routine.
    • The impact for local businesses, already hit by a single daily delivery service, has been spelled out by Greater Manchester Chamber.
    • For the next year it ran as a daily programme on weekday mornings.
    • As this newspaper does its daily job, treading between different interest groups, our main concern is to freely report what happens on our patch.
    • And starting tomorrow, the Evening Advertiser will be the first regional newspaper to carry his daily predictions.
    • It is not unusual for a vessel's projected departure dates and times to change on an almost daily basis over a period of days or even weeks.
    • But the company plans to ground five aircraft and reduce its activity by a fifth, including cutting three daily flights to the US and Canada.
    • No other media has the kind of reach that the daily newspaper has - every day.
    • On our daily commute to work and home, we pass people, places and objects.
    • High daily doses of caffeine in pregnant monkeys increase the risk of stillbirth.
    • I don't see where anything has changed in anyone's daily living.
    • If you read the daily newspaper over the past year, you would think that we were involved in a recession, if not outright depression.
    • During Lent, the daily weekday Mass will be at 8am in the parish church.
    • A friend of mine has escaped the daily grind for a jaunt to Paris.
    • Several Hong Kong newspapers run daily supplements offering betting tips as well as pundits' analyses on various matches.
    Synonyms
    occurring/done/produced every day, everyday, day-to-day, quotidian
    rare diurnal, circadian
    1. 1.1 Relating to the period of a single day.
      boats can be hired for a daily rate
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The TV work isn't as glamorous as it sounds, he warns, citing early starts, long days and only a basic daily pay rate of around £70.
      • All it takes is some staff training, the daily currency rate and a calculator.
      • Temps' daily rates are agreed with their agency.
      • Under last year's agreement, the daily wage rate was 98 rupees with an attendance allowance of 14 rupees.
      • Relevant daily pay is the rate of pay that must now be used as the basis for calculating payment for holidays, sick leave etc.
      • Counsel agree that the calculation of the lost fees using the average daily fees for that period is as follows.
      • Autorickshaw drivers demand a substantial part of one's daily earnings for a single long trip.
      • In Grampian two orthodontists have carried out 10 extra clinics while a general surgeon has held two clinics, all at three times their daily rate.
      • Until recently his average daily wage was $65 a day.
      • In several parts of the country, men and women were hired like contract labour on daily wages, the study pointed out.
      • Senior counsel then proved why his daily charge rate was much higher than mine.
      • He was paid a daily rate - irrespective of how many hours he worked - which was presented to him by cheque at irregular intervals.
      • A new method of calculating costs should be devised, with barristers paid on a monthly or yearly basis, or for work done, rather than a daily rate.
      • So if a barrister's daily rate was £2,500 in London, it would be £3,000 in Bermuda.
      • The highest daily suicide rate actually occurs during the summer.
      • The poor lawyers want a little rise in their daily fee.
      • The daily studio rate for models doing commercial work is between £400 and £500.
      • He subsequently outlined the plans for a €2.40 daily rate via display of two discs.
      • One would ask, upfront, what the daily rate for using electricity to plug in a PC is.
      • Currently fish drying is carried out in the unorganised sector by women in rural areas who work for local agents on piece rates or on daily wages.
adverb ˈdeɪliˈdeɪli
  • Every day.

    the museum is open daily
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The average adult only needs about 2,000 calories daily to stay healthy.
    • There have been periodic mass demonstrations against the occupying forces, but they are not daily and not widespread.
    • Flossing your teeth daily (or, at a pinch, using a mouthwash) can make you 6.4 years younger.
    • The facility now has a command center with satellite links that will enable it to coordinate thousands of airstrikes daily.
    • Theoretically, that's why newspapers come out daily, so what was missed or messed up the day before can be fixed today.
    • The new route, which includes a brief stopover in Hong Kong, will leave twice daily every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.
    • In December 2003, a new minor injuries unit was opened at Beckenham Hospital and currently treats about 30 patients daily.
    • Tonnes of flowers are sold on a daily basis in this bustling market, each trader selling a minimum of 1,000 kg of flowers daily.
    • Apparently, the chef changes the ice creams daily as well as the set specials.
    • She used to visit the parks daily, sometimes twice a day.
    • The severity of influenza symptoms was recorded twice daily for 21 days on a four-point scale.
    • Since 1936 the palace has been used for an assortment of after-school clubs catering for about 1,400 youngsters daily.
    • Some, who go to school, work for about fours hours daily.
    • Started with one old-fashioned cooker in a barn, the company now produces tens of thousands of snack foods daily.
    • He is free on $3 million bail but must attend the court hearings daily.
    • The site is growing by 20% per month and draws around 6,000 players daily.
    • It will be the duty of the depositors to verify daily whether the bank is opened daily or not.
    • Vicky was tormented daily, every single period, just because Leo Gerdin had showed some interest in her.
    • They practice religiously during the summer - up to two hours daily - and meet twice a week in the winter.
    • They were instructed to take a single tablet once daily for 12 months.
    Synonyms
    every day, seven days a week
    once a day, day after day, day by day, per diem
    rare diurnally
nounPlural dailies ˈdeɪliˈdeɪli
informal
  • 1A newspaper published every day except Sunday.

    the trial was reported in all the popular dailies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Urdu dailies and monthlies are published in America especially in California.
    • The print campaign will appear in key pan-Arabic dailies, weeklies and monthly magazines reaching an estimated three million people.
    • Indian Express Newspapers publishes dailies with a combined readership of more than 5 million, including the highly influential Indian Express and Financial Express.
    • The Independent newspapers own the London daily and Sunday along with the Belfast Telegraph and Sunday Life.
    • In our statement on the president's speech, we noted the comments of the British daily, the Guardian, published on January 30.
    • The 60 Minutes exchange is very familiar to readers of Arab newspapers, college dailies, and liberal journals of opinion.
    • We have, within less than forty miles of the Journal's front door, seventeen weekly competing newspapers and seven dailies.
    • Although Aiko's birth made banner headlines in the country's dailies and magazines, journalists have, by and large, followed a strict code of self-discipline.
    • This information had been included in the story in the local weekly paper but not in the national dailies or the Sunday papers.
    • The French daily Le Figaro says that the second rejection confirms the breadth of the European crisis.
    • Turkey and Christmas pudding took their seasonal toll on newspaper circulation in December, with most dailies and Sunday titles shedding tens of thousands of sales.
    • And we will find that audience taking over the responsibilities now exercised by a handful of critics on local dailies or weeklies or monthlies.
    • The newly combined firm became the third largest newspaper company with 11 dailies - three in the three largest cities.
    • According to the Italian daily La Repubblica, he was there to press the details of the Niger-uranium story.
    • Like newspapers worldwide, French dailies have been hit hard by an advertising downturn.
    • He owns a personal library which receives several Urdu dailies, weeklies and monthlies published in different parts of the country.
    • For no other reason than to sell newspapers, both dailies put Azania on the cover.
    • In the 90s, TOI's second morning daily The Independent went free with the Economic Times for almost a year.
    • The Sinhala daily, Lankadeepa, published a 25 column-inch story based on an interview with Wije Dias.
    • Meanwhile, the right-wing daily Le Figaro concentrates on the security measures implemented in France.
    Synonyms
    periodical, publication, magazine, gazette, digest, professional organ, review, newsletter, news-sheet, bulletin
  • 2British dated A woman who is employed to clean someone else's house each day.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I hired a daily help - a pleasant middle-aged woman who agreed to keep the cottage clean and cook for me.
    • The Blethering Classes pretended their daily help or the woman in the corner shop was worried.
    • Most ‘dailies’ I have known have been disastrous.
    Synonyms
    attendant, retainer
  • 3dailiesThe first prints from cinematographic takes; the rushes.

    as a co-producer he has to view the dailies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Then, she got fired off her next picture, Bad Girls, after the studio saw the dailies.
    • I said, let's just take the dailies to a movie theater and see if we can see anything or not.
    • Looking through dailies, Capra spied a blond, squeaky voiced lady who caught his eye.
    • Roberto and our other producer had basically convinced me not to watch dailies, yet I was heading up the production and giving out the paychecks.
    • He directly influenced the flow of specific scenes in the dailies, but he was not present for the final cutting.

Phrases

  • daily life

    • The activities and experiences that constitute a person's normal existence.

      the routines of my daily life
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The way you experience your daily life will hinder your ability to cope.
      • I think a central space should be designed for daily life, not for special events.
      • There are also few new experiences for you, just the humdrum of daily life and the loneliness of having to get on with it on your own.
      • Gambling is a fundamental part of human nature - we all take risks in daily life.
      • When was the last time you applied what you purport to believe in to your daily life?
      • This summary of body image accords with the common experiences of daily life.
      • It is true that people take their cues from what they see and experience in daily life.
      • It's more a story about problems within us and dealing with daily life in a city like this.
      • Sometimes you step back from your routines of daily life and think about your life as a whole.
      • Sharon grew up in an area where musicianship and song are integral facets of daily life.

Origin

Late Middle English: from day + -ly1, -ly2.

Rhymes

bailey, bailie, capercaillie, Cayley, ceilidh, Daley, Daly, Disraeli, Eilidh, feyly, gaily, Haley, Hayley, Israeli, Rayleigh, scaly, shaly, ukulele
 
 

Definition of daily in US English:

daily

adjectiveˈdeɪliˈdālē
  • 1attributive Done, produced, or occurring every day or every weekday.

    a daily newspaper
    daily flights to Prague
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is not unusual for a vessel's projected departure dates and times to change on an almost daily basis over a period of days or even weeks.
    • For the next year it ran as a daily programme on weekday mornings.
    • The impact for local businesses, already hit by a single daily delivery service, has been spelled out by Greater Manchester Chamber.
    • Building and construction works on the lands are matters of almost daily routine.
    • At first sight it can seem very hard and austere, with a daily schedule comprising set periods of silence, prayer, work and recreation.
    • Several Hong Kong newspapers run daily supplements offering betting tips as well as pundits' analyses on various matches.
    • During Lent, the daily weekday Mass will be at 8am in the parish church.
    • Another interesting parade is the once or twice daily routine of "pet dogs" being walked past her place.
    • On our daily commute to work and home, we pass people, places and objects.
    • And starting tomorrow, the Evening Advertiser will be the first regional newspaper to carry his daily predictions.
    • A friend of mine has escaped the daily grind for a jaunt to Paris.
    • I don't see where anything has changed in anyone's daily living.
    • At the moment, 90 % of Scots exceed the safe maximum daily intake of salt.
    • But the company plans to ground five aircraft and reduce its activity by a fifth, including cutting three daily flights to the US and Canada.
    • Following his daily routine, he sat by the river for a while.
    • As this newspaper does its daily job, treading between different interest groups, our main concern is to freely report what happens on our patch.
    • No other media has the kind of reach that the daily newspaper has - every day.
    • They will offer daily flights from Gatwick after March.
    • High daily doses of caffeine in pregnant monkeys increase the risk of stillbirth.
    • If you read the daily newspaper over the past year, you would think that we were involved in a recession, if not outright depression.
    Synonyms
    done every day, occurring every day, produced every day, everyday, day-to-day, quotidian
    1. 1.1 Relating to the period of a single day.
      boats can be rented for a daily rate
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Senior counsel then proved why his daily charge rate was much higher than mine.
      • Counsel agree that the calculation of the lost fees using the average daily fees for that period is as follows.
      • The TV work isn't as glamorous as it sounds, he warns, citing early starts, long days and only a basic daily pay rate of around £70.
      • In Grampian two orthodontists have carried out 10 extra clinics while a general surgeon has held two clinics, all at three times their daily rate.
      • Temps' daily rates are agreed with their agency.
      • He subsequently outlined the plans for a €2.40 daily rate via display of two discs.
      • He was paid a daily rate - irrespective of how many hours he worked - which was presented to him by cheque at irregular intervals.
      • Relevant daily pay is the rate of pay that must now be used as the basis for calculating payment for holidays, sick leave etc.
      • Autorickshaw drivers demand a substantial part of one's daily earnings for a single long trip.
      • Currently fish drying is carried out in the unorganised sector by women in rural areas who work for local agents on piece rates or on daily wages.
      • All it takes is some staff training, the daily currency rate and a calculator.
      • In several parts of the country, men and women were hired like contract labour on daily wages, the study pointed out.
      • A new method of calculating costs should be devised, with barristers paid on a monthly or yearly basis, or for work done, rather than a daily rate.
      • The daily studio rate for models doing commercial work is between £400 and £500.
      • Until recently his average daily wage was $65 a day.
      • The highest daily suicide rate actually occurs during the summer.
      • One would ask, upfront, what the daily rate for using electricity to plug in a PC is.
      • The poor lawyers want a little rise in their daily fee.
      • So if a barrister's daily rate was £2,500 in London, it would be £3,000 in Bermuda.
      • Under last year's agreement, the daily wage rate was 98 rupees with an attendance allowance of 14 rupees.
adverbˈdeɪliˈdālē
  • Every day.

    the museum is open daily
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The average adult only needs about 2,000 calories daily to stay healthy.
    • Apparently, the chef changes the ice creams daily as well as the set specials.
    • In December 2003, a new minor injuries unit was opened at Beckenham Hospital and currently treats about 30 patients daily.
    • They were instructed to take a single tablet once daily for 12 months.
    • The new route, which includes a brief stopover in Hong Kong, will leave twice daily every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.
    • The site is growing by 20% per month and draws around 6,000 players daily.
    • Some, who go to school, work for about fours hours daily.
    • Flossing your teeth daily (or, at a pinch, using a mouthwash) can make you 6.4 years younger.
    • The severity of influenza symptoms was recorded twice daily for 21 days on a four-point scale.
    • It will be the duty of the depositors to verify daily whether the bank is opened daily or not.
    • The facility now has a command center with satellite links that will enable it to coordinate thousands of airstrikes daily.
    • Vicky was tormented daily, every single period, just because Leo Gerdin had showed some interest in her.
    • Tonnes of flowers are sold on a daily basis in this bustling market, each trader selling a minimum of 1,000 kg of flowers daily.
    • They practice religiously during the summer - up to two hours daily - and meet twice a week in the winter.
    • Started with one old-fashioned cooker in a barn, the company now produces tens of thousands of snack foods daily.
    • Since 1936 the palace has been used for an assortment of after-school clubs catering for about 1,400 youngsters daily.
    • He is free on $3 million bail but must attend the court hearings daily.
    • Theoretically, that's why newspapers come out daily, so what was missed or messed up the day before can be fixed today.
    • She used to visit the parks daily, sometimes twice a day.
    • There have been periodic mass demonstrations against the occupying forces, but they are not daily and not widespread.
    Synonyms
    every day, seven days a week
nounˈdeɪliˈdālē
informal
  • 1A newspaper published every day except Sunday.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For no other reason than to sell newspapers, both dailies put Azania on the cover.
    • We have, within less than forty miles of the Journal's front door, seventeen weekly competing newspapers and seven dailies.
    • In the 90s, TOI's second morning daily The Independent went free with the Economic Times for almost a year.
    • Although Aiko's birth made banner headlines in the country's dailies and magazines, journalists have, by and large, followed a strict code of self-discipline.
    • Indian Express Newspapers publishes dailies with a combined readership of more than 5 million, including the highly influential Indian Express and Financial Express.
    • Meanwhile, the right-wing daily Le Figaro concentrates on the security measures implemented in France.
    • Urdu dailies and monthlies are published in America especially in California.
    • Turkey and Christmas pudding took their seasonal toll on newspaper circulation in December, with most dailies and Sunday titles shedding tens of thousands of sales.
    • According to the Italian daily La Repubblica, he was there to press the details of the Niger-uranium story.
    • The newly combined firm became the third largest newspaper company with 11 dailies - three in the three largest cities.
    • In our statement on the president's speech, we noted the comments of the British daily, the Guardian, published on January 30.
    • He owns a personal library which receives several Urdu dailies, weeklies and monthlies published in different parts of the country.
    • This information had been included in the story in the local weekly paper but not in the national dailies or the Sunday papers.
    • The 60 Minutes exchange is very familiar to readers of Arab newspapers, college dailies, and liberal journals of opinion.
    • The French daily Le Figaro says that the second rejection confirms the breadth of the European crisis.
    • And we will find that audience taking over the responsibilities now exercised by a handful of critics on local dailies or weeklies or monthlies.
    • The Sinhala daily, Lankadeepa, published a 25 column-inch story based on an interview with Wije Dias.
    • The Independent newspapers own the London daily and Sunday along with the Belfast Telegraph and Sunday Life.
    • The print campaign will appear in key pan-Arabic dailies, weeklies and monthly magazines reaching an estimated three million people.
    • Like newspapers worldwide, French dailies have been hit hard by an advertising downturn.
    Synonyms
    periodical, publication, magazine, gazette, digest, professional organ, review, newsletter, news-sheet, bulletin
  • 2British dated A woman who is employed to clean someone's house each day.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most ‘dailies’ I have known have been disastrous.
    • I hired a daily help - a pleasant middle-aged woman who agreed to keep the cottage clean and cook for me.
    • The Blethering Classes pretended their daily help or the woman in the corner shop was worried.
    Synonyms
    attendant, retainer
  • 3dailiesThe first prints from cinematographic takes, made rapidly for movie producers or editors; the rushes.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Then, she got fired off her next picture, Bad Girls, after the studio saw the dailies.
    • Roberto and our other producer had basically convinced me not to watch dailies, yet I was heading up the production and giving out the paychecks.
    • I said, let's just take the dailies to a movie theater and see if we can see anything or not.
    • Looking through dailies, Capra spied a blond, squeaky voiced lady who caught his eye.
    • He directly influenced the flow of specific scenes in the dailies, but he was not present for the final cutting.

Phrases

  • daily life

    • The activities and experiences that constitute a person's normal existence.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is true that people take their cues from what they see and experience in daily life.
      • Sharon grew up in an area where musicianship and song are integral facets of daily life.
      • Sometimes you step back from your routines of daily life and think about your life as a whole.
      • Gambling is a fundamental part of human nature - we all take risks in daily life.
      • It's more a story about problems within us and dealing with daily life in a city like this.
      • When was the last time you applied what you purport to believe in to your daily life?
      • This summary of body image accords with the common experiences of daily life.
      • The way you experience your daily life will hinder your ability to cope.
      • There are also few new experiences for you, just the humdrum of daily life and the loneliness of having to get on with it on your own.
      • I think a central space should be designed for daily life, not for special events.

Origin

Late Middle English: from day + -ly, -ly.

 
 
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