释义 |
detour1 noundetour2 verb detourde‧tour1 /ˈdiːtʊə $ -tʊr/ noun [countable] detour1Origin: 1700-1800 French détour - Furthermore, I often took detours to avoid sand which the Land Rover had gone through using its four wheel drive.
- Motorists wend their way through orange traffic cones and detour signs.
- Moving from consultant to implementer is a detour you should be aware of.
- On our walk back to the ferry dock that afternoon we make one last detour to the beach.
- People with baby buggies have to walk in the roadway and residents, I think, have to make a detour.
- She could make just a small detour ... She had a decent map, didn't she?
- This is the how-to, practical guide that will help you avoid opportunistic detours and stay on track.
- To justify such an approach it is necessary to take a theoretical detour.
to keep away from a person or place► avoid to keep away from a person, because you do not want to talk to them, or keep away from a place, because there are problems there: · I'm sure Sarah's been avoiding me recently.· Drivers are advised to avoid Elm Street today due to heavy traffic and long delays.avoid somebody/something like the plague informal (=try very hard to avoid them): · Except when they were filming, the two actors avoided each other like the plague. ► stay away/keep away to not go near a person or place, because they may be dangerous or may cause problems: stay away/keep away from: · That evening he received a note warning him to stay away from the camp.· Keep away from my children, or I'll call the police.stay/keep well away (=completely avoid): · She walked along the path, keeping well away from the edge of the cliff. ► steer clear of also give somebody/something a wide berth informal to make an effort to avoid a person or place, because there could be serious problems if you do not: · We were told to steer clear of the main roads where we might be recognized.· She advised me to steer clear of Matthew - she said he couldn't be trusted.· Passersby gave the old man on the sidewalk a fairly wide berth. ► make a detour to travel around a place instead of through the centre of it, especially to avoid a traffic problem: · We had to make a long detour because of the floods. ► make/take a detour We took a detour to avoid the town centre. ADJECTIVE► long· But to avoid it meant a long detour to get into Barn Street, and she was shivering with wet and cold. VERB► make· Attempting to make a detour, the car got bogged down in a salt lake and was abandoned.· On our walk back to the ferry dock that afternoon we make one last detour to the beach.· We used to make a detour going down Lenin Avenue.· People with baby buggies have to walk in the roadway and residents, I think, have to make a detour.· He made a detour to see it.· On the way to the tomato patch they made a detour to Louis's workshop to collect some baskets.· The traveller was forced to make an enormous detour.· The others, making courteous detours around them, talk, stop talking, kiss. ► take· To justify such an approach it is necessary to take a theoretical detour.· In any case all Euro-roads still lead to Rome, though they now take a detour through Mosae Trajectum.· Furthermore, I often took detours to avoid sand which the Land Rover had gone through using its four wheel drive.· Nor when, a couple of hours later, they travelled back south towards the coast and took a detour into Silves.· Most fail when they take a detour into areas they know nothing about.· Instead of taking a detour, I decided it would be fun to pass through the flood, and drove towards it.· Tom Margittai successfully resisted the temptation to take a major detour from his original dream. 1a way of going from one place to another that is longer than the usual waymake/take a detour We took a detour to avoid the town centre.2American English a different road for traffic when the usual road cannot be used SYN diversion British Englishdetour1 noundetour2 verb detourdetour2 verb [intransitive, transitive] American English VERB TABLEdetour |
Present | I, you, we, they | detour | | he, she, it | detours | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | detoured | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have detoured | | he, she, it | has detoured | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had detoured | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will detour | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have detoured |
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Present | I | am detouring | | he, she, it | is detouring | | you, we, they | are detouring | Past | I, he, she, it | was detouring | | you, we, they | were detouring | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been detouring | | he, she, it | has been detouring | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been detouring | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be detouring | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been detouring |
- Before the opening of this new marina, yachts had to detour to the south to the Canaries.
- But the movie tells the wrong story, getting detoured into a murder investigation whose solution is far too obvious.
- Later in the morning Fakhrti detoured over back roads to his house.
- Mitchell trudged down the hall toward his corner office, detouring into the washroom to assess the damage to his hair.
- Northbound traffic was being detoured from I-5 to Highway 33 northbound to 140 westbound and back to I-5.
- On that same day, Franco ordered Varela to detour to Toledo.
- Pacino detours his motorcade to visit the grieving parents.
- When the actual construction began, I detoured daily on my way to school to check out the progress being made.
to make a detour |