| 释义 | re·lay I. \ˈrēˌlā\ noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French relais, from relaier
 1.  : a supply arranged beforehand for successive relief: as
 a.  : a supply of hunting horses or dogs kept in readiness at certain places to continue the pursuit of game if it comes that way
 b.  : a supply of horses placed at stations to be ready to relieve others so that a traveler may proceed without delay; also  : the post or station at which the fresh supply is obtained
 c.  : a number of men who relieve others in carrying on some work : a relief gang
 < working in relays around the clock >
 2.
 a.  : relay race
 b.  : one of the legs or divisions of a relay race
 c. relays plural  : a track meet featuring relay races
 3.  : an electromagnetic device for remote or automatic control that is actuated by a variation in conditions of an electric circuit and that operates in turn other devices (as switches, circuit breakers) in the same or a different circuit
 4.  : servomotor
 5.  : the act of passing along (a message, a signal, a ball) by stages; also  : one of such stages
 < the shortstop's relay from center field was too late to catch the runner at the plate >
 6.  : an arrangement by which water is pumped through two or more pumping engines in order to increase the pressure in a fire hose
 7.  : a bundle of relayed mail
 8.  : radio relay
 II. \“, rə̇ˈlā, rēˈ-\ verb
 (-ed/-ing/-s)
 Etymology: Middle English relayen, from Middle French relaier, from Old French, from re- + laier to leave — more at delay
 transitive verb
 1.
 a.  : to place or dispose in relays
 b.  : to provide with relays
 c.  : to divide up (mail) into bundles each of which is to be placed in a storage box along a carrier's route to be picked up by him
 2.  : to pass along by relays
 < news was relayed to distant points >
 < promised to relay my message >
 3.  : to control or operate (as a circuit, a switch) by a relay
 4.  : to pump (water) through two or more pumping engines in order to increase the pressure in a fire hose
 intransitive verb
 1.  : to obtain a fresh relay
 < gained time by relaying at each town >
 2.  : to operate the contacts of a relay
 III. \(ˈ)rē+\ transitive verb
 Etymology: re- + lay (I)
 : to lay again
 < the flagstones will have to be taken up and relaid >
 < relaying several miles of track >
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