单词 | reside | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 | residere‧side /rɪˈzaɪd/ ●○○ AWL verb [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] Word Origin WORD ORIGINreside Verb TableOrigin: 1400-1500 French résider, from Latin residere ‘to sit back, remain, stay’, from sedere ‘to sit’VERB TABLE reside
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
THESAURUS► live Collocations to have your home somewhere: · He lives with his parents.· Where do you live?· Do you like living in Tokyo?· Jo lives next to a busy road.· Judy lives in that nice house on the corner.· How do you like living in the city again after so many years away from it?· In 1905 Russell was living at 4 Ralston Street. ► be from/come from use this when talking about the country, city, or area where you usually live: · My name’s Sharon and I’m from Harlow.· The man is believed to be from somewhere in the north of England.· ‘Where are you from?’ ‘I’m from Japan.’· The winner came from Australia. ► inhabit if a group of people or animals inhabit an area, they live there – used especially in written descriptions: · The island is mainly inhabited by sheep.· Some tribes still inhabit the more remote mountains and jungles of the country. ► reside formal to live in a particular country, city etc: · She now resides in the US.· Miss Badu grew up in Dallas but now resides in Brooklyn.· At that time there were many American writers residing in Paris.· Miss Tonelli, how exactly did you come to reside at your current address?· The government bureau has prepared a booklet for US citizens residing abroad. ► grow up to live somewhere when you are a child or teenager: · This is the neighborhood where my father grew up.· I grew up on a farm in South Africa. Longman Language Activatorto live in a place► live to have your home in a particular place: · Where do you live?live in: · Do you like living in Tokyo?· Judy lives in that nice house on the corner.· How do you like living in the city again after so many years away from it?live at: · In 1905 Russell was living at 4 Ralston Street.live at home (=to live in your parents' house): · Donald is 30 years old, but he still lives at home.live abroad (=live in a foreign country): · They lived abroad for several years but moved back when the children were school age.live in (=live at the place where you work or study) British: · Many students prefer to live in during their first year of study. ► be from especially spoken use this to talk about the place where you live: · My name's Sharon and I'm from Harlow.· The man is believed to be from somewhere in the north of England.· Where are you from? ► reside formal to live in a country, city, or area - used in official contexts: reside in: · Miss Badu grew up in Dallas but now resides in Brooklyn.· At that time there were many American writers residing in Paris.reside at: · Miss Tonelli, how exactly did you come to reside at your current address?reside abroad (=live in a foreign country): · The government bureau has prepared a booklet for U.S. citizens residing abroad. ► grow up to live in a place during the time when you are a child: · This is the neighborhood where my father grew up.grow up in: · Margaret Hallworth was born in Manchester but grew up in North Wales.grow up on: · I grew up on a farm in eastern Pennsylvania. ► inhabit if a group of people or animals inhabit an area of land, they live there, especially over a long period of time or permanently - used especially in reports and written contexts: · The island is mainly inhabited by sheep.· Some tribes still inhabit the more remote mountains and jungles of the country. ► be populated by if an area of land is populated by a particular type of people or animals, they are the people or animals who live there: · This area of Antarctica is populated only by seals and penguins.be heavily populated by (=to have a large number of a particular group): · Mindanao is an island in the southern Philippines heavily populated by Muslims. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADVERB► in Word family· The Teerlincs resided in more than one London parish and Levina, for a painter, enjoyed an unusual degree of social status.· Students who reside in subsidized public housing.· Everything, therefore, resides in and is sustained within one absolute consciousness. ► now· They now reside in the map collection of the New York Public Library.· The drawing was sold by Lord's at auction five years ago and now resides, fittingly, in Darlington.· Originally from New Hampshire, Sheridan made the journey west in 1994, and now resides in Utah. ► still· Bao Dai was still residing at his chateau near Cannes with his wife and five children.· Many of them still reside in South Florida today. ► there· Assessed at 26s. 6d., it must have been tenanted, since John did not reside there.· Various members of his family have resided there from time to time. NOUN► area· The population resides predominantly in areas classed as urban for local government purposes.· This engram resides in a tiny area in the brain's cerebellum - a place many neuroscientists never thought to look. ► person· However, there are a variety of different types of institutional setting in which an older person might reside.· There are approximately three million persons residing in the sierra who speak only Quechua or Aymara.· Far better to send an unofficial person, who can reside inconspicuously at the Embassy, coming and going unremarked. ► power· The only power a consumer has resides in the power to refuse to buy, a version of withdrawal of labour.· But what Jim had not resolved was where power resided when agreement could not be reached.· In keeping with the emphasis on parliamentarianism there was the idea that party power should reside within the parliamentary leadership alone.· The powers residing in herbs, stones, and aromas were both natural and divine.· But ultimately the power and the money reside with the brand itself.· But economic power no longer resides in the material world. WORD FAMILYnounresidentresidenceresidencyadjectiveresidentresidentialverbreside formal to live in a particular place: He spent most of his time in Rutherglen, where his family resided.► see thesaurus at livereside in something/somebody phrasal verb formal1to be present in or consist of something: Joe’s talent resides in his storytelling abilities.2 (also reside within something/somebody) if a power, right etc resides in something or someone, it belongs to them: Executive power resides in the president. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
随便看 |
|
英语词典包含52748条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。