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单词 flat
释义

flat

noun
 
/flæt/
/flæt/
Idioms
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    rooms

  1. enlarge image
     
    [countable] (British English)
    (also apartment especially in North American English)
    a set of rooms for living in, usually on one floor of a building
    • They're renting a furnished flat on the third floor.
    • to buy/sell a flat
    • in a flat Do you live in a flat or a house?
    • a basement/ground-floor/top-floor flat
    • a two-bedroom flat
    • The park was surrounded by high-rise flats and office blocks.
    • a new block of flats
    • Many large old houses have been converted into flats.
    • Children from the flats (= the block of flats) across the street were playing outside.
    see also council flat, granny flat
    Collocations Moving houseMoving house Renting
    • live in a rented/(especially North American English) rental property
    • rent/​share/​move into a furnished house/(British English) flat/(especially North American English) apartment
    • rent a studio/(British English) a studio flat/(especially North American English) a studio apartment/(British English) a bedsit
    • find/​get a housemate/(British English) a flatmate/(North American English) a roommate
    • sign/​break the lease/​rental agreement/​contract
    • extend/​renew/​terminate the lease/(British English) tenancy
    • afford/​pay the rent/​the bills/(North American English) the utilities
    • (especially British English) fall behind with/ (especially North American English) fall behind on the rent
    • pay/​lose/​return a damage deposit/(North American English) security deposit
    • give/​receive a month’s/​two-weeks’ notice to leave/​vacate the property
    Being a landlord
    • have a flat/​an apartment/​a room (British English) to let/(especially North American English) for rent
    • rent (out)/lease (out)/ (British English) let (out)/sublet a flat/​an apartment/​a house/​a property
    • collect/​increase/​raise the rent
    • evict the existing tenants
    • attract/​find new/​prospective tenants
    • invest in rental property/(British English) property to let/(British English) the buy-to-let market
    Buying
    • buy/​acquire/​purchase a house/(a) property/(especially North American English) (a piece of) prime real estate
    • call/​contact/​use (British English) an estate agent/(North American English) a Realtor™/(North American English) a real estate agent/​broker
    • make/ (British English) put in an offer on a house
    • put down/​save for (British English) a deposit on a house
    • make/​put/​save for (especially North American English) a down payment on a house/​home
    • apply for/​arrange/​take out a mortgage/​home loan
    • (struggle to) pay the mortgage
    • make/​meet/​keep up/​cover the monthly mortgage payments/(British English also) repayments
    • (British English) repossess/ (especially North American English) foreclose on somebody’s home/​house
    Selling
    • put your house/​property on the market/​up for sale/​up for auction
    • increase/​lower your price/​the asking price
    • have/​hold/​hand over the deed/(especially British English) deeds of/​to the house, land, etc.
    Extra Examples
    • Do you think that the council could find me another flat?
    • Even the prices of small bachelor flats are unbelievable.
    • I'll meet you back at your flat.
    • She lives in the top flat.
    • The flat is located in a modern development.
    • The landlady found they had been illegally subletting the flat.
    • The musician rented a flat in a fashionable area of London.
    • They live in the next flat.
    • We got her a flat in the same block as ours.
    Topics Houses and homesa1, Buildingsa1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • big
    • spacious
    • modest
    … of flats
    • block
    verb + flat
    • have
    • own
    • rent
    flat + verb
    • be located
    • face something
    • overlook something
    preposition
    • at a/​the flat
    • in a/​the flat
    phrases
    • convert something into flats
    • divide something into flats
    • make something into flats
    See full entry
  2. level part

  3. [singular] the flat of something the flat level part of something
    • He beat on the door with the flat of his hand.
    • the flat of a sword
  4. land

  5. [countable, usually plural] an area of low flat land, especially near water
    • salt flats
    • These birds live on the coastal flats.
    • mud and sand flats rich in animal life
    see also mudflat
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • coastal
    • tidal
    • mud
    preposition
    • on the flat
    See full entry
  6. horse racing

  7. the flat, the Flat
    [singular] (British English) the season for racing horses on flat ground with no jumps
  8. in music

  9. enlarge image
    [countable]
    a note played a semitone lower than the note that is named. The written symbol is (♭).
    • There are no sharps or flats in the key of C major.
    opposite sharp compare natural
  10. tyre

  11. [countable] (especially North American English) a tyre that has lost air, usually because of a hole
    • We got a flat on the way home.
    • We had to stop to fix a flat.
  12. in theatre

  13. [countable] (specialist) a vertical section of scenery used on a theatre stage
  14. shoes

  15. enlarge image
    flats
    (also flatties)
    [plural] (informal) shoes with a very low heel
    • a pair of flats
    Topics Clothes and Fashionc1
  16. Word Originnoun senses 2 to 8 Middle English: from Old Norse flatr. noun sense 1 early 19th cent. (denoting a floor or storey): alteration of obsolete flet ‘floor, dwelling’, of Germanic origin and related to flat ‘level’.
Idioms
on the flat
  1. (British English) on level ground, without hills or jumps (= for example in horse racing)
    • Overtaking the next cyclist on an Alpine climb is a dozen times harder than on the flat.

flat

adjective
 
/flæt/
/flæt/
(comparative flatter, superlative flattest)
Idioms
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    level

  1.  
    having a level surface, not curved or sloping, and without holes or any bits sticking out
    • low buildings with flat roofs
    • I need a flat surface to write on.
    • A large flat screen was mounted on the wall.
    • We found a large flat rock to sit on.
    • People used to think the earth was flat.
    • a large, deep dish with a flat bottom
    • Exercise is the only way to get a flat stomach after having a baby.
    Topics Colours and Shapesa2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • be
    • look
    • become
    adverb
    • extremely
    • fairly
    • very
    See full entry
  2.  
    (of land) without any slopes or hills
    • The road stretched ahead across the flat landscape.
    • The desert was flat, mile after mile.
    • He reached a flatter section of land near the river.
    • the flat plains of northern Germany
    Topics Geographya2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • be
    • look
    • become
    adverb
    • extremely
    • fairly
    • very
    See full entry
  3.  
    (of an area of water) calm and without waves
    • The sails hung limply in the flat calm (= conditions at sea when there is no wind and the water is completely level).
    • The sea was almost completely flat.
    • The water was dead flat, like a mirror.
  4. not high

  5.  
    broad but not very high
    • Chapattis are a kind of flat Indian bread.
    • flat shoes (= with no heels or very low ones)
    • (figurative) The company's organizational structure was kept deliberately flat, with only three levels of hierarchy.
  6. not exciting

  7. not exciting; not feeling or showing interest or enthusiasm
    • He felt very flat after his friends had gone home.
    • It was a curiously flat note on which to end the election campaign.
    Extra Examples
    • Life will seem a bit flat without you.
    • She was feeling very flat after the excitement of the flight.
  8. voice

  9. not showing much emotion; not changing much in tone
    • Her voice was flat and expressionless.
    • He spoke in a flat Midlands accent.
    • He went on in a flat tone.
  10. colours/pictures

  11. very smooth, with no contrast between light and dark, and giving no impression of depth
    • Acrylic paints can be used to create large, flat blocks of colour.
  12. business

  13. not very successful because very little is being sold; not changing or increasing
    • The housing market has been flat for months.
    • Interest rates have remained flat.
    Topics Businessc2
  14. refusal/denial

  15. [only before noun] not allowing discussion or argument; definite
    • Her request was met with a flat refusal.
    • He gave a flat ‘No!’ to one reporter's question.
    • These results are in flat contradiction to the theory of relativity.
    Topics Opinion and argumentc2
  16. in music

  17. used after the name of a note to mean a note a semitone lower
    • That note should be B flat, not B.
    opposite sharp compare naturalTopics Musicc1
  18. below the correct pitch (= how high or low a note sounds)
    • The high notes were slightly flat.
    opposite sharp
  19. drink

  20. no longer having bubbles in it; not fresh
    • The soda was warm and had gone flat.
    Topics Drinksc2
  21. battery

  22. (British English) unable to supply any more electricity
  23. tyre

  24. not containing enough air, usually because of a hole
  25. feet

  26. with no natural raised curves under the feet see also flat-footed
    More Like This Consonant-doubling adjectivesConsonant-doubling adjectives
    • big
    • drab
    • fat
    • fit
    • flat
    • hot
    • mad
    • red
    • sad
    • wet
  27. Word Originadjective Middle English: from Old Norse flatr.
Idioms
and that’s flat!
  1. (British English, informal) that is my final decision and I will not change my mind
    • You can't go and that's flat!
as flat as a pancake
  1. (informal) completely flat
    • The country around here is as flat as a pancake.
    More Like This Similes in idiomsSimiles in idioms
    • (as) bald as a coot
    • (as) blind as a bat
    • (as) bright as a button
    • (as) bold as brass
    • as busy as a bee
    • as clean as a whistle
    • (as) dead as a/​the dodo
    • (as) deaf as a post
    • (as) dull as ditchwater
    • (as) fit as a fiddle
    • as flat as a pancake
    • (as) good as gold
    • (as) mad as a hatter/​a March hare
    • (as) miserable/​ugly as sin
    • as old as the hills
    • (as) pleased/​proud as Punch
    • as pretty as a picture
    • (as) regular as clockwork
    • (as) quick as a flash
    • (as) safe as houses
    • (as) sound as a bell
    • (as) steady as a rock
    • (as) thick as two short planks
    • (as) tough as old boots
in a (flat) spin
  1. very confused, worried or excited
    • Her resignation put her colleagues in a spin.
    Topics Feelingsc2
(flat) on your back
  1. (informal) in bed because you are ill
    • She's been flat on her back for over a week now.
    • (figurative) The UK market was flat on its back (= business was very bad).

flat

adverb
/flæt/
/flæt/
(comparative flatter, no superlative)
Idioms
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    level

  1. spread out in a level, straight position, especially against another surface
    • Lie flat and breathe deeply.
    • They pressed themselves flat against the tunnel wall as the train approached.
    • I can't get this material to lie flat.
  2. refusing/denying

  3. (North American English flat out)
    (informal) in a definite and direct way
    • She told me flat she would not speak to me again.
    • I made them a reasonable offer but they turned it down flat.
  4. in music

  5. lower than the correct pitch (= how high or low a note sounds)
    • He sings flat all the time.
    opposite sharp
  6. Word Originadverb Middle English: from Old Norse flatr.
Idioms
fall flat
  1. if a joke, a story, or an event falls flat, it completely fails to make people laugh or to have the effect that was intended
    • Without Jem, the whole evening would have fallen flat.
    Topics Difficulty and failurec2
fall flat on your face
  1. to fall so that you are lying on your front
  2. to fail completely, usually in an embarrassing way
    • His next television venture fell flat on its face.
    Topics Difficulty and failurec2
flat broke
(British English also stony broke)
  1. (informal) completely broke (= without money)
flat out (informal)
  1. as fast or as hard as possible
    • Workers are working flat out to meet the rise in demand for new cars.
  2. (especially North American English) in a definite and direct way; completely
    • I told him flat out ‘No’.
    • It's a 30-year mortgage we just flat out can't handle.
    see also flat-out
in… flat
  1. (informal) used with an expression of time to say that something happened or was done very quickly, in no more than the time stated
    • They changed the wheel in three minutes flat (= in only three minutes).

flat

verb
/flæt/
/flæt/
[intransitive] (Australian English, New Zealand English)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they flat
/flæt/
/flæt/
he / she / it flats
/flæts/
/flæts/
past simple flatted
/ˈflætɪd/
/ˈflætɪd/
past participle flatted
/ˈflætɪd/
/ˈflætɪd/
-ing form flatting
/ˈflætɪŋ/
/ˈflætɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. to live in or share a flat
    • My sister Zoe flats in Auckland.
    Word Originverb sense 1 early 19th cent. (denoting a floor or storey): alteration of obsolete flet ‘floor, dwelling’, of Germanic origin and related to flat ‘level’.
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更新时间:2024/9/22 11:20:13