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单词 on board
释义

board (Spenser, etc bord, borde, boord or boorde) /bōrd or börd/

noun
  1. A long and wide, comparatively thin, strip of timber
  2. A table
  3. Provision of meals (with or without lodging)
  4. A table around which committee meetings are held
  5. A formal group or committee, esp one that administers a company, etc
  6. A slab, etc prepared for playing a game (such as a chessboard) or other special purpose (such as a noticeboard, blackboard, surfboard)
  7. A printed circuit board
  8. The side of a ship (nautical)
  9. (in pl) the stage
  10. (in pl) the wall around an ice-hockey rink
  11. A sheet of stiff or laminated paper
  12. A flat sheet of composite material, such as chipboard, plasterboard, etc
  13. A rectangular piece forming the side of a book-binding
  14. The distance sailed by a vessel in one tack (nautical)
  15. (in duplicate bridge) a set of hands, or the board or set of pockets into which the set of hands is placed for passing on to the next group of players
  16. Conversation (Spenser)
  17. Coast (Spenser)
transitive verb
  1. To cover with boards (often with up)
  2. To supply with food (and bed) at fixed terms
  3. To place in lodgings
  4. To go on board (a ship) with hostile intent
  5. To enter (a ship or (orig US) a train, bus, etc)
  6. To accost, attack (Shakespeare)
intransitive verb
  1. To receive food (with or without lodging)
  2. To live as a boarder (with)
  3. To border (Spenser)
ORIGIN: OE bord board, the side of a ship; ON borth, connected either with bear1 or with broad

boardˈer noun

  1. A person who receives board
  2. A pupil at a boarding school
  3. A person who boards a ship
  4. A person engaged in skateboarding, snowboarding, etc

boardˈing noun

  1. The act of covering with boards
  2. A structure or collection of boards
  3. The act of boarding a ship, aircraft, etc
  4. The provision of board

boardˈ-foot noun

A unit of boardˈ-measure for timber, a piece one inch thick by 12 inches square

board game noun

A game (eg chess, snakes-and-ladders) which is played with pieces, counters, etc on a specially designed board

boarding card or boarding pass noun

A card allowing one to board an aircraft, ship, etc

boarding house noun

A house where boarders are kept

boarding party noun

A group of people who go on board a ship

boarding pass see boarding card above.

boardˈing-pike noun

A pike used in boarding a ship, or in defending it when attacked

boarding school noun

A school in which board and lodging are provided for pupils

boardˈ-measure see board-foot above.

board meeting noun

A meeting of the board of directors of an organization

board of directors noun

A group of individual directors appointed by a company and collectively responsible for the management of that company

Board of Trade noun (Brit)

  1. A former government ministry concerned with trade and industry
  2. (without caps; N American) a chamber of commerce

Board of Trade unit noun (elec)

A kilowatt-hour (abbrev BTU)

boardˈroom noun

A room for meetings of a board of directors

adjective

Taking place in a boardroom

boardˈsailing noun

Sailboarding

boardˈsailor noun

boardˈ-school noun

Formerly, a school under control of a school board

board shorts plural noun

Loose-fitting knee-length shorts, worn esp by surfers

board-waˈges plural noun

Payment to a servant in lieu of food

boardˈwalk noun (N American)

A footpath made of boards

above board

Openly

board out

  1. To have one's meals elsewhere than where one lives
  2. To place in lodgings

go by the board

  1. To go over the side of a ship
  2. To be discarded or ignored
  3. To meet disaster

on board

  1. Aboard
  2. See also take on board below

sweep the board

  1. To win everything
  2. To take all the cards

take on board

To receive or accept (suggestions, new ideas, additional responsibilities, etc)

on /on/

preposition
  1. In contact with the upper, supporting, outer or presented surface of
  2. To a position in contact with such a surface of
  3. In or to a position or state of being supported by
  4. Having for basis, principle or condition
  5. Subject to
  6. In a condition or process of
  7. Towards or to
  8. Directed towards
  9. In the direction of
  10. Against
  11. Applied to
  12. With action applied to
  13. With inclination towards
  14. Close to, beside
  15. Exactly or very nearly at
  16. At the time, date or occasion of
  17. Very little short of
  18. Just after
  19. Concerning, about
  20. With respect to
  21. By (in oaths and adjurations)
  22. At the risk of
  23. Assigned to
  24. In addition to
  25. At the expense of, or to the disadvantage of (informal)
  26. In (obsolete)
  27. (of gaining or taking) from (Shakespeare and Milton)
  28. Of (obsolete or dialect)
  29. (of marriage) to (Scot)
  30. (of waiting) for (Scot)
adverb
  1. In or into a position on something
  2. Towards something
  3. In advance
  4. On the way to being drunk (slang)
  5. Forward
  6. In continuance
  7. In or into, or allowing connection, supply, activity, operation or validity
  8. In progress
  9. On the stage, the table, the fire, the programme, the menu, etc
  10. Not off
interjection

Forward! proceed!

adjective
  1. Relating to the onside of a cricket field
  2. In a condition expressed by the adverb on
  3. Agreed upon
  4. Acceptable (informal)
  5. Practicable, feasible (informal)
  6. Willing to participate in an activity, bet, etc
noun

The onside of a cricket field

intransitive verb
  1. To go on (informal)
  2. (with with) to put on (informal)
ORIGIN: OE on; Du aan; ON ā; Ger an; Gr ana

onward /onˈwərd/ adjective

  1. Going on
  2. Advancing
  3. Advanced
adverb
  1. (also onˈwards) towards a place or time in advance or in front
  2. Forward
  3. In continuation of forward movement

onˈwardly adverb (rare)

on-and-offˈ adjective

Off-and-on, intermittent, occasional

onˈ-boardˈ or onˈboard adjective

On, installed inside or carried aboard a vehicle or craft

oncome /onˈkum or -kəm/ noun (Scot)

  1. A coming on
  2. A sudden fall of rain or snow
  3. The beginning of an attack by an insidious disease

onˈcoming noun

An approach

adjective

  1. Advancing
  2. Approaching

onˈcost noun

  1. Overhead expenses (see also oncosts below)
  2. An oncostman

adjective

  1. Paid by time
  2. Causing oncost or oncosts

onˈcostman noun

A mine worker paid by the day

onˈcosts plural noun

All items of expenditure that cannot be allocated to a specific job

onˈding noun (Scot)

Onset, esp a sudden fall of rain or snow

on drive noun (cricket)

A drive to the onside

onˈ-drive intransitive verb and transitive verb

onˈfall noun

  1. An attack or onslaught, esp (Scot) of illness
  2. A fall of rain or snow (Scot)

onˈflow noun

  1. A flowing on
  2. An onward flow

onˈgoing noun

  1. A going on
  2. A course of conduct
  3. An event
  4. (in pl) proceedings or behaviour, esp misbehaviour

onˈ-going adjective

  1. Currently in progress
  2. Continuing
  3. Which will not stop

onˈ-job adjective

Combined with or in the course of normal work duties and conditions

onˈ-job training or onˈ-the-job training noun

The part of a training course in which a trainee actually works on the job, usu at the workplace and under supervision

onˈ-lend transitive verb

To lend (money which has already been borrowed from another company, etc)

onˈ-licence noun

A licence to sell alcoholic liquors for consumption on the premises

onˈline or onˈ-line adjective and adverb (computing)

  1. Attached to, and under the direct control of, the central processing unit
  2. Obtained from or by means of online equipment or data
  3. Connected to, or available through, the Internet or other computer network
  4. Taking place as part of, or relating to, a continuous (esp production) process

onlīˈner or on-līˈner noun (informal)

A person who uses the Internet

onˈlooker noun

Someone who is watching, a looker on, observer

onˈlooking adjective

on-messˈage adverb and adjective (politics)

Following the approved party line

on-offˈ adjective

  1. (of a switch, etc) which can be set to one of only two positions, either on or off
  2. (of a relationship) not steady

onˈrush noun

A rushing forward

onˈ-screen adjective and adverb

As displayed or portrayed on a TV or computer screen

onˈset noun

  1. A violent attack
  2. An assault
  3. A storming
  4. The beginning or outset

onˈsetter noun (archaic)

An assailant

onˈsetting noun

Incitement

onshore /onˈshōr or -shör/ adjective

On or towards the land or shore

on-shoreˈ adverb

onsideˈ adjective and adverb (football, etc)

Not offside

noun /onˈsīd/ (cricket)

That half of the field on the side on which the batsman stands when waiting to receive the ball, the legside

onˈ-site adjective and adverb

(working, happening, etc) on a site

onˈ-stage adjective and adverb

On a part of the stage visible to the audience

onstead /onˈsted/ noun (Scot)

  1. A farmstead
  2. A farmhouse with its offices
  3. The offices alone

onˈ-stream adjective and adverb

  1. (of an industrial plant, etc) in or going into operation or production
  2. Passing through or along a pipe, system, etc (also figurative)

onˈto preposition

  1. To a place or position on (also on to)
  2. To the whole of (mathematics)

adjective (mathematics)

Describing a mapping of one set to a second set, involving every element of the latter

on-trend' adjective

Fashionable

on and off

Off and on, intermittently, occasionally

on and on (and on)

Used in phrases containing the particle on to emphasize duration, distance, etc

on stream same as on-stream above.

on to

  1. See onto above
  2. Forward to
  3. Aware of, cognizant of (informal)

you're on! (informal)

I agree to your proposal, terms, etc

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更新时间:2024/11/10 23:50:03