释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024en•tail /ɛnˈteɪl/USA pronunciation v. [~ + object]- to cause or involve by necessity or as a consequence: This project will entail a lot of work.
en•tail•ment, n. [uncountable]See -tail-. WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024en•tail (v. en tāl′;n. en tāl′, en′tāl),USA pronunciation v.t. - to cause or involve by necessity or as a consequence:a loss entailing no regret.
- to impose as a burden:Success entails hard work.
- Lawto limit the passage of (a landed estate) to a specified line of heirs, so that it cannot be alienated, devised, or bequeathed.
- Lawto cause (anything) to descend to a fixed series of possessors.
n. - the act of entailing.
- Lawthe state of being entailed.
- any predetermined order of succession, as to an office.
- Lawsomething that is entailed, as an estate.
- Lawthe rule of descent settled for an estate.
- Middle English entailen (verb, verbal), entail (noun, nominal). See en-1, tail2 1350–1400
en•tail′er, n. en•tail′ment, n. |