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单词 moor
释义

moor


moor

a tract of peaty wasteland with poor drainage; to secure a vehicle such as a boat, ship, or dirigible in a particular place; to fix firmly; secure: moor the ship to the dock
Not to be confused with:Moor – a Muslim of the mixed Berber and Arab people inhabiting northwest Africamore – in greater quantity, amount, measure, degree, or number: I need more time.

Moor

a Muslim of the mixed Berber and Arab people inhabiting northwest Africa
Not to be confused with:moor – a tract of peaty wasteland with poor drainage; to secure a vehicle such as a boat, ship, or dirigible in a particular place; to fix firmly; secure: moor the ship to the dockmore – in greater quantity, amount, measure, degree, or number: I need more time.

Moor

M0413200 (mo͝or)n.1. A member of a traditionally Muslim people of mixed Berber and Arab ancestry, now living chiefly in northwest Africa.2. One of the Muslims who invaded Spain in the 8th century and established a civilization in Andalusia that lasted until the late 15th century.
[Middle English More, from Old French, from Medieval Latin Mōrus, from Latin Maurus, Mauritanian, from Greek Mauros.]

moor 1

M0413200 (mo͝or)v. moored, moor·ing, moors v.tr.1. To make fast (a vessel, for example) by means of cables, anchors, or lines: moor a ship to a dock; a dirigible moored to a tower.2. To fix in place; secure: a mailbox moored to the sidewalk with bolts. See Synonyms at fasten.3. To provide with an abiding emotional attachment: a politician moored to the family back home.v.intr.1. To secure a vessel or aircraft with lines or anchors.2. To be secured with lines or anchors: The freighter moored alongside the wharf.
[Middle English moren.]

moor 2

M0413200 (mo͝or)n. An uncultivated area covered with low-growing vegetation and often high but poorly drained.
[Middle English mor, from Old English mōr.]

moor

(mʊə; mɔː) n (Physical Geography) a tract of unenclosed ground, usually having peaty soil covered with heather, coarse grass, bracken, and moss[Old English mōr; related to Old Saxon mōr, Old High German muor swamp] ˈmoory adj

moor

(mʊə; mɔː) vb1. (Nautical Terms) to secure (a ship, boat, etc) with cables or ropes2. (Nautical Terms) (of a ship, boat, etc) to be secured in this way3. (Nautical Terms) (not in technical usage) a less common word for anchor11[C15: of Germanic origin; related to Old English mǣrelsrāp rope for mooring]

Moor

(mʊə; mɔː) n (Peoples) a member of a Muslim people of North Africa, of mixed Arab and Berber descent. In the 8th century they were converted to Islam and established power in North Africa and Spain, where they established a civilization (756–1492)[C14: via Old French from Latin Maurus, from Greek Mauros, possibly from Berber]

moor1

(mʊər)

n. 1. a tract of open, peaty wasteland, often overgrown with heath, common in high altitudes where drainage is poor; heath. 2. a tract of land preserved for game. [before 900; Middle English more, Old English mōr; c. Old Saxon mōr, Middle Dutch moer, Old High German muor, Middle Low German mōr marsh] moor′y, adj.

moor2

(mʊər)

v.t. 1. to secure (a ship, boat, dirigible, etc.) in a particular place, as by cables and anchors or by lines. 2. to fix firmly; secure. v.i. 3. to moor a ship, small boat, etc. 4. to be made secure by cables or the like. [1485–95; akin to Old English mǣrelsrāp rope for mooring a ship; see marline]

Moor

(mʊər)

n. 1. a member of any of the groups of North African Arabs and Berbers who ruled parts of the Iberian Peninsula from the 8th century to 1492. 2. Archaic. any native of North Africa W of Egypt. [1350–1400; Middle English More < Middle French, variant of Maure < Latin Maurus < Greek Maûros]

moor

- Meaning "tie up a boat," it was probably borrowed from German or Dutch.See also related terms for tie.

moor


Past participle: moored
Gerund: mooring
Imperative
moor
moor
Present
I moor
you moor
he/she/it moors
we moor
you moor
they moor
Preterite
I moored
you moored
he/she/it moored
we moored
you moored
they moored
Present Continuous
I am mooring
you are mooring
he/she/it is mooring
we are mooring
you are mooring
they are mooring
Present Perfect
I have moored
you have moored
he/she/it has moored
we have moored
you have moored
they have moored
Past Continuous
I was mooring
you were mooring
he/she/it was mooring
we were mooring
you were mooring
they were mooring
Past Perfect
I had moored
you had moored
he/she/it had moored
we had moored
you had moored
they had moored
Future
I will moor
you will moor
he/she/it will moor
we will moor
you will moor
they will moor
Future Perfect
I will have moored
you will have moored
he/she/it will have moored
we will have moored
you will have moored
they will have moored
Future Continuous
I will be mooring
you will be mooring
he/she/it will be mooring
we will be mooring
you will be mooring
they will be mooring
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been mooring
you have been mooring
he/she/it has been mooring
we have been mooring
you have been mooring
they have been mooring
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been mooring
you will have been mooring
he/she/it will have been mooring
we will have been mooring
you will have been mooring
they will have been mooring
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been mooring
you had been mooring
he/she/it had been mooring
we had been mooring
you had been mooring
they had been mooring
Conditional
I would moor
you would moor
he/she/it would moor
we would moor
you would moor
they would moor
Past Conditional
I would have moored
you would have moored
he/she/it would have moored
we would have moored
you would have moored
they would have moored
Thesaurus
Noun1.moor - one of the Muslim people of north AfricaMoor - one of the Muslim people of north Africa; of mixed Arab and Berber descent; converted to Islam in the 8th century; conqueror of Spain in the 8th centuryMoslem, Muslim - a believer in or follower of Islam
2.moor - open land usually with peaty soil covered with heather and bracken and mossmoorlandchampaign, plain, field - extensive tract of level open land; "they emerged from the woods onto a vast open plain"; "he longed for the fields of his youth"
Verb1.moor - secure in or as if in a berth or dockmoor - secure in or as if in a berth or dock; "tie up the boat"berth, tie upwharf - moor at a wharf; "The ship was wharfed"fasten, fix, secure - cause to be firmly attached; "fasten the lock onto the door"; "she fixed her gaze on the man"
2.moor - come into or dock at a wharfmoor - come into or dock at a wharf; "the big ship wharfed in the evening"berth, wharfdock - come into dock; "the ship docked"
3.moor - secure with cables or ropes; "moor the boat"fasten, fix, secure - cause to be firmly attached; "fasten the lock onto the door"; "she fixed her gaze on the man"

moor

1noun moorland, fell (Brit.), heath, muir (Scot.) The small town is high up on the moors.

moor

2verb tie up, fix, secure, anchor, dock, lash, berth, fasten, make fast She had moored her boat on the right bank of the river.

moor

verb1. To join one thing to another:affix, attach, clip, connect, couple, fasten, fix, secure.2. To make secure:anchor, catch, fasten, fix, secure.Idiom: make fast.
Translations
停泊沼地系泊荒野

moor1

(muə) noun a large stretch of open, unfarmed land with poor soil often covered with heather, coarse grass etc. 荒野 荒野ˈmoorland noun a stretch of moor. 曠野 高沼地,广袤的荒野

moor2

(muə) verb to fasten (a ship etc) by a rope, cable or anchor. We moored (the yacht) in the bay. (繫繩子、繩索或下錨)泊船 系泊,停泊 ˈmooring noun the act, or a means, of fastening a ship. The mooring broke. 泊船 系泊ˈmoorings noun plural the place where a ship is anchored or fastened. 泊船處 系泊处

moor

停泊zhCN, 沼地zhCN

Moor


moor

a tract of unenclosed ground, usually having peaty soil covered with heather, coarse grass, bracken, and moss

Moor

a member of a Muslim people of North Africa, of mixed Arab and Berber descent. In the 8th century they were converted to Islam and established power in North Africa and Spain, where they established a civilization (756--1492)
www.vivagranada.com/alhambra
www.spanish-fiestas.com/andalucia/history-moorish-spain.htm

Moor

 

(pseudonym of Dmitrii Stakhievich Orlov). Born Oct. 22 (Nov. 3), 1883, in Novocherkassk; died Oct. 24, 1946, in Moscow. Soviet graphic artist and one of the founders of the Soviet political poster. Honored Art Worker of the RSFSR (1932).

Moor was basically self-taught. By 1917 he had become an accomplished master of caricature. From 1908 to 1917 he contributed to the satirical magazine Budil’nik (Alarm Clock), in which, through his drawings, he served the cause of the proletarian revolution.

During the Civil War of 1918–20, Moor produced eye-catching posters imbued with revolutionary fervor; such posters included “Soviet Turnip “(1919), “Have You Volunteered? “(1920), and “Wrangel Is Still Alive, Finish Him Off Without Mercy “(1920). After the war, Moor created posters, including “Help! “(1921–22), “Worker, Be Vigilant!” (1937), and “What Did You Do to Help the Front?“ (1941), and satirical cartoons for the newspaper Pravda (from 1920), and the magazines Krokodil (Crocodile; from 1922), Bezbozhnik u stanka (The Atheist at the Press; 1923–28), and U stanka (At the Press; 1924–25). Moor also made india-ink illustrations for H. Barbusse’s novel Under Fire (1938; now in the Tret’iakov Gallery) and for Mayakovsky’s poem All Right! (1940; now in the V. V. Mayakovsky Museum, Moscow).

Moor’s drawings are expressive and at times contain elements of the grotesque; the contours of his drawings sharply outline the flat color areas. In 1928 he became a member of the Oktiabr’ (October) Association. Moor taught at the State Higher Arts and Technical Studios and the State Higher Institute of Art and Technology (1922–30), the Moscow Institute of Printing (1930–32), and the Moscow Art Institute (1939–43). V. N. Goriaev, A. M. Kanevskii, F. P. Reshetnikov, and B. I. Prorokov were among his pupils.

WORKS

labol’shevik! Moscow, 1967.

REFERENCE

Khalaminskii, Iu. Moor. Moscow, 1961.

A. D. KORZUKHIN

moor

[mu̇r] (ecology) bog (engineering) Securing a ship or aircraft by attaching it to a fixed object or a mooring buoy with chains or lines, or with anchors or other devices.

moor


moor

an upland habitat usually dominated by heather growing on peat which is not normally waterlogged.
LegalSeeMooring

MOOR


AcronymDefinition
MOORMassively Open Online Racing
MOORMassively Open Online Racing (gaming)
MOORMeldpunt Opbrekingen Openbare Ruimte (Dutch: Break Hotline Public Space; Netherlands)

Moor


Related to Moor: Moor religion
  • all
  • noun
  • verb

Synonyms for Moor

noun moorland

Synonyms

  • moorland
  • fell
  • heath
  • muir

verb tie up

Synonyms

  • tie up
  • fix
  • secure
  • anchor
  • dock
  • lash
  • berth
  • fasten
  • make fast

Synonyms for Moor

verb to join one thing to another

Synonyms

  • affix
  • attach
  • clip
  • connect
  • couple
  • fasten
  • fix
  • secure

verb to make secure

Synonyms

  • anchor
  • catch
  • fasten
  • fix
  • secure

Words related to Moor

noun one of the Muslim people of north Africa

Related Words

  • Moslem
  • Muslim

noun open land usually with peaty soil covered with heather and bracken and moss

Synonyms

  • moorland

Related Words

  • champaign
  • plain
  • field

verb secure in or as if in a berth or dock

Synonyms

  • berth
  • tie up

Related Words

  • wharf
  • fasten
  • fix
  • secure

verb come into or dock at a wharf

Synonyms

  • berth
  • wharf

Related Words

  • dock

verb secure with cables or ropes

Related Words

  • fasten
  • fix
  • secure
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更新时间:2024/11/14 6:17:26