释义 |
bunker1 nounbunker2 verb bunkerbun‧ker1 /ˈbʌŋkə $ -ər/ noun [countable]  bunkerOrigin: 1800-1900 Scottish English bunker ‘seat with storage space inside’ (18-19 centuries), perhaps from bank ‘long seat’ (13-18 centuries), from Old French banc; ➔ BANK1 (6) - Each bunker guard strained intently at the night shadows before him.
- From the right-hand group of trees, he went into the front left-hand bunker.
- Given better fortune, shots that bounced off hillocks and into bunkers might have bounced on to greens.
- The grass caught his club-head and he hoicked his ball into one of those bunkers.
- The primary edifice, Mandeville Center, is about as inviting as a concrete bunker.
- Then they'd have a use for their bunkers.
- Trying to power it out he only succeeded in finding a fairway bunker.
- Was it a plan to build a last secure bunker in the Lena Valley if Leningrad and Moscow fell to the blitzkrieg?
► Gas/Coal/Oilanthracite, nounblack gold, nounblowout, nounboost, nounbunker, nounbutane, nounCalor gas, nounclinker, nouncoal, nouncoal bunker, nouncoalfield, nouncoal gas, nouncoal hole, nouncoalhouse, nounCoalite, coalman, nouncoal mine, nouncoke, nouncolliery, nouncrude, noundrill, verbdrilling platform, nounflue, nounfossil fuel, noungallery, noungas, noungasholder, noungaslight, noungasman, noungas meter, noungasometer, noungasworks, noungusher, nouninternal combustion engine, nounlead-free, adjectivelignite, nounmethane, nounnatural gas, nounoctane, nounoil, nounoil-bearing, adjectiveoilfield, nounoil-fired, adjectiveoilman, nounoil rig, nounoil slick, nounoil tanker, nounoil well, nounOPEC, nounopencast, adjectiveparaffin, nounpilot light, nounpit pony, nounpremium, nounpropane, nounrig, nounroughneck, nounsolid fuel, nounstrike, nounwell, nounwick, nounwildcat, verb ADJECTIVE► concrete· It's rather like a concrete bunker but hopefully with some work we can make it look quite nice.· The primary edifice, Mandeville Center, is about as inviting as a concrete bunker. NOUN► coal· In the backyards were the brick wash-houses and the coal bunkers. ► fairway· His tee shot lacked the necessary left-to-right spin and finished in one of the two fairway bunkers.· After hitting it in a fairway bunker, he pounded another 9-iron to 25 feet and 2-putted for par.· Trying to power it out he only succeeded in finding a fairway bunker.· What he did was send his drive over both familiar fairway bunkers 313 yards - all uphill. VERB► go· He went into the right-hand bunker, the one place you shouldn't go.· Up to that time coal was chiefly used as a domestic fuel but from 1812 onwards it went to sea as bunker fuel. 1a strongly built shelter for soldiers, usually underground2British English a large hole on a golf course filled with sand SYN sand trap American English3a place where you store coal, especially on a ship or outside a housebunker1 nounbunker2 verb bunkerbunker2 verb [transitive] British English  VERB TABLEbunker |
Present | I, you, we, they | bunker | | he, she, it | bunkers | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | bunkered | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have bunkered | | he, she, it | has bunkered | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had bunkered | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will bunker | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have bunkered |
to hit a golf ball into a bunker |