| 释义 | pave·ment \ˈpāvmənt, in rapid speech sometimes -ābm-\ noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English, from Old French, from Latin pavimentum, from pavire to strike, stamp + -mentum -ment
 1.
 a.  : a paved surface: as
 (1)  : the artificially covered surface of a public thoroughfare
 < stopped his car just off the pavement >
 (2) chiefly Britain  : sidewalk
 < there were crowds on the pavements and roads everywhere — G.W.Talbot >
 (3)  : a decorative interior floor of tiles or colored bricks
 < the tessellated pavement of the hall — G.B.Shaw >
 (4)  : a factory floor paved with wood blocks, bricks, or concrete
 b.  : the material with which something is paved
 < concrete makes excellent pavement >
 2.  : something that suggests a pavement (as in flatness, hardness, and extent of surface or in the formation and compact arrangement of its units)
 < a pavement-toothed shark >
 < pavement cells >
 — see desert pavement
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