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单词 narrow
释义  nar·row1 /ˈnærəʊ $ -roʊ/ ●●● S3 W2 adjective  1  not wide 不宽的NARROW measuring only a small distance from one side to the other, especially in relation to the length 狭窄的 OPP wide → broadnarrow street/road/path etc a long narrow road 狭长的道路 the narrow passage between the cottage and the house 小屋和房子间狭窄的通道 his narrow bed 他的窄床 The stairs were very narrow. 楼梯非常狭窄。 a long, narrow band of cloud 窄长的云带 →4  See picture of 见图 THIN 1 →5 see picture at 见图 thin12  narrow escape ESCAPEa situation in which you only just avoid danger, difficulties, or trouble 死里逃生,险些遇险 A woman had a narrow escape yesterday when her car left the road. 昨天一名女子驾车时冲出公路,险些丢了性命。 He was shaken by his narrow escape from death. 他死里逃生,吓得不轻。3  narrow victory/defeat/majority/margin etc JUST/ALMOST NOTa victory etc that is only just achieved or happens by only a small amount 险胜/惜败/微弱多数/微小的差距等 → slim The president won a narrow victory in the election. 总统在竞选中险胜。 He persuaded a narrow majority of the party to support the government. 他说服了该党派中的微弱多数,让他们支持政府。 Scotland eventually won the match by the narrow margin of 5–4. 苏格兰队最终以5比4的微弱优势获胜。 RegisterThe expression a narrow victory/defeat is used mostly in writing. In everyday British English, people often say that someone only just won/lost or, in everyday American English, barely won/lost.  a narrow victory/defeat的说法主要用于书面。在日常英国英语中,人们经常说某人only just won/lost ,在日常美国英语中,人们经常说 barely won/lost 。4  ideas/attitudes 观点/态度PREJUDICED a narrow attitude or way of looking at a situation is too limited and does not consider enough possibilities 狭隘的,偏狭的 OPP broad You’ve got a very narrow view of life. 你的人生观非常狭隘。 Some teachers have a narrow vision of what art is. 有些教师对于什么是艺术认识狭隘。 → narrow-minded5  narrow sense/definition a meaning of a word that is exact or limited 准确的意思/定义,狭义 OPP broad I use the word ‘neighbour’ in its more precise or narrower sense. 我说的是较准确或较狭义的“邻居”。6  limited 有限的 limited in range or number of things 有限的;范围小的 OPP broad The company offered only a narrow range of financial services. 该公司只提供有限种类的金融服务。 —narrowness noun [uncountable] → narrowly, narrows, → the straight and narrow at straight3(2)Examples from the Corpusnarrow• Nordic skis are longer, narrower and lighter than Alpine skis.• Their interpretation of Christianity is narrow and limiting.• Columns that are too narrow are unattractive and difficult to read.• We have a long narrow area and the motorway has cut it in half.• a narrow black tie• a narrow examination of events• The road was too narrow for me to overtake the car in front.• She climbed through a narrow gap in the fence.• Plants cultivated in half-shade have very narrow leaves and resemble some species of Aponogeton.• He stood now flush against the side of the bluff on a narrow ledge, his hands over his face.• Adjust the starting point so that you avoid a very narrow margin at the perimeter.• The Dow, the most closely followed index, though a much narrower one, started the decade at 2,753.• A steep, narrow path led down through the woods to the beach.• I see narrow roads contoured into the sides of steep slopes.• The landed nobility provided tsarism with a perilously narrow social base.• There was a narrow stone path, Alexei now saw, around the base of the promontory beyond the buttress.• the narrow streets of Italian citiesnarrow street/road/path etc• But at the height of the season, visitors virtually swamp the village, causing major parking problems in the narrow streets.• We stopped on one side of the narrow road.• Street selling has always centered in the downtown historic district, a maze of narrow streets and crumbling colonial buildings.• Canal tours, blue-and-white china, narrow streets - if it were not also a university town it would be merely beautiful.• The narrow streets swarmed with young people.• Soon, as the large Mercedes climbed narrow roads, the magic of the landscape erased all else from Katherine's mind.• They went back to their house through the narrow streets, using a complicated route in case anyone was following them.• And now those precarious narrow roads were hard to find.narrow view• And the problem is compounded because managers Jan find both the books and the consultants to reinforce their narrow view.• She mocks the snobbish, hypocritical and materialistic views of many people and their narrow views.• These animals can see objects and judge distances very well, but they have a narrow view.• The narrow view is that of our individual human mind.• In recent years, a few courts have articulated a narrower view of academic freedom.• Unfortunately, Bellesiles takes a narrow view of the subject, asking primarily about the extent of ownership and familiarity with firearms.• However, most mathematicians would see this as a very narrow view of their subject.• In general, the classical perspective contained a peculiarly narrow view of what it actually is that controls human behaviour.narrow2 ●○○ verb [intransitive, transitive]  1  NARROWto make something narrower, or to become narrower (使)变窄 OPP widen He narrowed his eyes and gazed at the horizon. 他眯起眼睛凝望着地平线。 The track divided into two and narrowed. 小道分成两条并且变窄了。2  REDUCEif a range, difference etc narrows, or if something narrows it, it becomes less (使)〔范围、差距等〕缩小 OPP widen The choice of goods available is narrowing. 可供选择的商品越来越少。 The economic gap between the two halves of the country was beginning to narrow. 该国两个区域之间的经济差距开始缩小。3 narrow something ↔ down phrasal verb to reduce the number of things included in a range 缩小…的范围 The police have narrowed down their list of suspects. 警方已缩小了嫌疑人的范围。 to I’ve narrowed it down to one of two people. 我已经把范围缩小到两人之间选一人。→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpusnarrow• Issues which are not in dispute should be eliminated and the scope of the disagreement narrowed.• The gap between the two candidates has narrowed, and they're starting to panic.• William's eyes narrowed as he looked toward the west.• Levin and his editors then narrow down the list to 50 people.• In the past month, the unions have narrowed most of their election-year efforts to 28 House races.• We now need to narrow our focus and concentrate upon the concept of power itself.• Parr's thin, keen face had narrowed, strangely.• Lawyers said courts in recent years have generally narrowed the copyright protections for software, but the rulings are not uniform.• But you can narrow the odds of a nasty accident happening in your home by being more safety-conscious.• Contractors will narrow the road to two lanes.narrowed ... eyes• He stood still a moment and stared at Sir John through narrowed eyes.• Max looked at her through narrowed eyes.• He narrowed his eyes and took off the spectacles, praying breathlessly.• She narrowed her eyes at Guido.• There was a hint of mania at the corners of Defries's narrowed eyes, at the edges of her pursed mouth.• Quiss narrowed his eyes at the pupil which seemed to be looking at him. indeed out of the corner of its eye.From Longman Business Dictionarynarrownar‧row1 /ˈnærəʊ-roʊ/ adjective1small in amountThe polls give Mr. Edwards a narrow lead.Analysts had expected a narrow decline in pretax earnings.The Senate rejected the bid by a narrow margin (=it was almost accepted).2including only a small number of parts or thingsfirms that make a narrow range of goodsthe country’s weak and narrow economic base3in a narrow rangeFINANCE if shares, currencies etc trade in a narrow range, their price does not go up or down very muchThe dollar had been trading in a narrow range against the yen.4FINANCE a narrow market is one in which the buying or selling of shares has a great effect on their price, for example because there are only a small number of them availableCobalt is traded in a narrow market which means speculators can drive prices up or down rapidly.narrownarrow2 verb [intransitive, transitive] (also narrow down) to become less or to make something less in range, difference etcGrowing competition for contracts will narrow profit margins.The gap between the two companies is clearly narrowing.The choice was quickly narrowed down to Luxembourg or Dublin. —narrowing noun [singular]There has been a narrowing of differences between the parties. —narrowing adjectivethe narrowing price gap between domestic and imported vehicles→ See Verb tableOrigin narrow1 Old English nearunar·row1 adjective →REGISTER1narrow2 verbChineseSyllable  small Corpus Business only measuring distance side from one a
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更新时间:2024/12/22 11:41:06