释义 |
straddle /ˈstrad(ə)l /verb [with object]1Sit or stand with one leg on either side of: he turned the chair round and straddled it...- He turned the chair around and straddled it at the side of the bed, leaning his chin on the back, peering at me like he'd just uncovered a new species of primate.
- But here they are again, six whalers sitting as they used to, straddling chairs built from wooden boxes with binoculars attached to the high backs.
- He cried out and rolled on his side as she straddled him and grabbed the collar of his jacket.
Synonyms sit/stand astride, bestride, bestraddle; mount, get on 1.1Place (one’s legs) wide apart: he shifted his legs, straddling them to keep his balance...- She pulled herself onto the bed and straddled her legs over his waist leaning forward to kiss his neck.
- As the rope passes underneath your feet, lunge your left leg forward and your right foot backward so that your feet are straddled about a stride's length apart.
1.2 [no object] archaic Stand, walk, or sit with one’s legs wide apart: the colonel straddled in front of the fire...- At points the passage was wide enough to make straddling difficult but eventually we were able to climb up to a drier section and yet more challenging climbing.
- He straddled over to the car and gently slid her into the backseat.
1.3Extend across or be situated on both sides of: a mountain range straddling the Franco-Swiss border...- It is located on the Rwandan side of a mountain range that straddles the borders of Rwanda, Congo and Uganda.
- We took off towards the magnificent mountains that straddled the Sligo / Leitrim border.
- The proposed site was spread across five townlands in the Mullaghereirk mountains which straddle the Limerick, Cork and Kerry borders.
Synonyms lie on both sides of, be situated on both sides of, extend across; span 1.4North American Take up or maintain an equivocal position with regard to (a political issue): a man who had straddled the issue of taxes...- He straddles issues with as much vigor as most politicians, but nonetheless manages to retain a reputation as a straight talking guy who says what he means and means what he says.
- But long ago he blew a chance by straddling the war issue - opposing going to war without a multilateral coalition yet empowering Bush to do so.
- The Democrats' leaders in Congress have tried to straddle the issue.
Synonyms be equivocal about, be undecided about, be non-committal about, equivocate about, vacillate about, waver about; British hum and haw informal sit on the fence 1.5Fire at (a target) with shots or bombs so that they fall short of and beyond it: the crew of a plane straddled the submarine with depth charges...- Antiaircraft fire shells straddled his sitting Kingfisher as Oliver pulled Coumbre and Jacobs aboard.
noun1An act of sitting or standing with one’s legs wide apart: a sideways-on stance such as a straddle...- Well the toe-touch is where you jump and your legs go out like a straddle, as if you were sitting on the floor with your legs out in a straddle, and you've got to touch your toes.
- The height of romanticism; there was little else I could do apart from down my drink, suppress a ladylike belch and swing my legs around you in an elegant straddle.
- The hardest part of this trick is getting your hips to start moving upward from the straddle.
2 Stock Market A simultaneous purchase of options to buy and to sell a security or commodity at a fixed price, allowing the purchaser to make a profit whether the price of the security or commodity goes up or down.When they think that the saturation point has been reached, they reverse their position: they replace their existing straddles with the opposite ones....- Calendar spreads, straddles, strangles and butterflies are some of the strategies designed to profit from those types of situations.
Derivativesstraddler noun ...- People who live together and then want a big traditional wedding are very conspicuous fence straddlers.
- They are rallying the faithful and reaching out to the fence straddlers in the final push for your vote.
- At least the Democrats have a candidate smart enough to avoid playing into the public's just-forming impression of him as a straddler and positioner.
OriginMid 16th century: alteration of dialect striddle, back-formation from dialect striddling 'astride', from stride + the adverbial suffix -ling. Rhymesaddle, paddle, saddle, skedaddle, staddle |