释义 |
string·er \ˈstriŋə(r)\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English strynger, from streng, string string + -er 1. : one that strings < wire stringers sweated down the road, setting up lines — Newsweek > 2. : a string, rope, or wire often equipped with snaps on which fish are strung by a fisherman 3. a. : a narrow vein or irregular filament of mineral traversing a rock mass of different material b. : a line or linear zone of specified objects or material < narrow tongues of forest will … follow stringers of favorable soil — A.A.Nichol > < stringers of gravel on a tidal flat > < stringers of pumice > 4. a. : a long horizontal timber used to connect uprights in a frame or to support a floor b. : a string in stair building c. : a tie in a truss 5. : a longitudinal member in any of various kinds of construction: as a. : such a member extending from bent to bent of a railroad bridge and carrying the track b. : a longitudinal sleeper borne on the transverse ties of a railroad track c. : a longitudinal girder, plank, or plate used in ship construction as a strengthening member — see ship illustration d. : a longitudinal member used (as in a fuselage or wing) to reinforce the skin in a semimonocoque airplane 6. a. : string correspondent b. : a newspaper reporter who serves another publication or a news agency part time — distinguished from staffer 7. : one that holds a specified competitive rating or is estimated as of specified excellence or efficiency — usually used in combination < pulled out his first-stringers after piling up a wide scoring margin > < sent their second-stringer to review the play > 8. : a sequence in rummy or panguingue |