单词 | sing |
释义 | sing I. intransitive verb 1. a. b. < to sing at one's work > < children that dance and sing > c. < sing extremely well > < sing for charity or in opera > 2. < a kettle singing on the hearth — Elizabeth Goudge > < the high overtone of the saw … singing when it runs free — American Guide Series: Arkansas > < bullets hit the road surface and sung off — Ernest Hemingway > 3. a. < sings of Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table > < poets sang of the natural man — American Guide Series: Minnesota > < gave substance and reality to the beauty of which he sang — H.M.Reynolds > b. < it was in blank verse that she sang — Virginia Woolf > c. < writes a prose remarkable for its live and lyric qualities; she makes the language sing — Charles Lee > < the second means of writing prose that sings is to train yourself to feel the cadence of words — Grace Fletcher > < his lyrics sing and flow, with simple, fresh imagery, with delicacy and often humor — Eleanor Sickels > 4. a. < grasshoppers chirping and birds singing — G.B.Shaw > < frogs and crickets sang — Rex Ingamells > < most mysterious thing about a pack of hounds is the way they sing or … chime — Thurstan Holland-Hibbert > b. < when the violin sang — J.D.Carr > < to hear the heavy tuba sing sweetly — Arthur Berger > 5. obsolete < sad and solemn priests still sing for Richard's soul — Shakespeare > 6. a. < next moment her ears were singing — Audrey Barker > b. < their murmured words of farewell sang in my ears — Eula Long > < voice saying, Remember my party, Remember my party, sang in his ears — Virginia Woolf > 7. < thinks Medea sings as well as any concert work she knows — Time > < any translation would be something of a pity when it sings so well in French — Douglas Watt > 8. < heard the captain of his escort sing out to him in the darkness — Winston Churchill > < “You don't feel weak, or anything?” she sung out at me — Mary R. Rinehart > 9. < is tough enough to have his goons dispatch anyone who dares to sing to a crime commission — A.H.Weiler > < sang to a grand jury in return for a promise of leniency — Time > < don't let him know we sung on him — Priest Collins > transitive verb 1. a. < sing a tune > < sing the tenor part > b. < sing G > 2. a. < singing the beauties of the garden and of simplicity — John Ciardi > < in antique style it sings the loss of friends and fields — H.O.Taylor > < as men have loved their lovers … and sung their wit, their virtue, and their grace — Edna S.V. Millay > b. < stationmaster singing the stops to the west coast > — often used with out < the bell singing out the hour of midnight > 3. < a high mass of requiem … will be sung — New York Times > 4. a. < sings the child to sleep > < his blithe and cheerful verse sang itself into the memory — Brander Matthews > b. < hopes to sing away his troubles > • - sing one's praises - sing the blues II. a. < an all-night gospel sing down South — Furman Bisher > b. < without instruction the Navajo chorus at a sing provides a moving choral performance — Joyce R. Muench > III. 1. 2. 3. |
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