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单词 row
释义

row


row 1

R0222700 (rō)n.1. A series of objects placed next to each other, usually in a straight line.2. A succession without a break or gap in time: won the title for three years in a row.3. A line of adjacent seats, as in a theater, auditorium, or classroom.4. A continuous line of buildings along a street.tr.v. rowed, row·ing, rows To place in a row.Idiom: a tough row to hoe Informal A difficult situation to endure.
[Middle English, from Old English rāw.]

row 2

R0222700 (rō)v. rowed, row·ing, rows v.intr. Nautical To use an oar or pair of oars in propelling a boat, typically by facing the stern and pulling the oar handle toward oneself, using an oarlock as a fulcrum to push the blade backward through the water repeatedly.v.tr.1. Nautical a. To propel (a boat) with oars.b. To carry in or on a boat propelled by oars.c. To use (a specified number of oars or people deploying them).2. To propel or convey in a manner resembling rowing of a boat.3. Sports a. To pull (an oar) as part of a racing crew.b. To race against by rowing.n. Nautical 1. a. The act or an instance of rowing.b. A shift at the oars of a boat.2. A trip or an excursion in a rowboat.
[Middle English rowen, from Old English rōwan; see erə- in Indo-European roots.]
row′er n.

row 3

R0326400 (rou)n.1. A noisy or quarrel or disturbance.2. A loud noise.intr.v. rowed, row·ing, rows To take part in a noisy quarrel or disturbance.
[Origin unknown.]

row

(rəʊ) n1. an arrangement of persons or things in a line: a row of chairs. 2. (Human Geography) a. chiefly Brit a street, esp a narrow one lined with identical housesb. (capital when part of a street name): Church Row. 3. a line of seats, as in a cinema, theatre, etc4. (Mathematics) maths a horizontal linear arrangement of numbers, quantities, or terms, esp in a determinant or matrix5. (Chess & Draughts) a horizontal rank of squares on a chessboard or draughtboard6. in a row in succession; one after the other: he won two gold medals in a row. 7. a hard row to hoe a difficult task or assignment[Old English rāw, rǣw; related to Old High German rīga line, Lithuanian raiwe strip]

row

(raʊ) n1. a noisy quarrel or dispute2. a noisy disturbance; commotion: we couldn't hear the music for the row next door. 3. a reprimand4. give someone a row informal to scold someone; tell someone offvb5. (often foll by: with) to quarrel noisily6. (tr) archaic to reprimand[C18: origin unknown]

row

(rəʊ) vb1. (Rowing) to propel (a boat) by using oars2. (Rowing) (tr) to carry (people, goods, etc) in a rowing boat3. (Rowing) to be propelled by means of (oars or oarsmen)4. (Rowing) (intr) to take part in the racing of rowing boats as a sport, esp in eights, in which each member of the crew pulls one oar. Compare scull65. (Rowing) (tr) to race against in a boat propelled by oars: Oxford row Cambridge every year. n6. (Rowing) an act, instance, period, or distance of rowing7. (Rowing) an excursion in a rowing boat[Old English rōwan; related to Middle Dutch roien, Middle High German rüejen, Old Norse rōa, Latin rēmus oar] ˈrower n ˈrowing n

row1

(roʊ)

n. 1. a number of persons or things arranged in a line, esp. a straight line. 2. a line of persons or things so arranged. 3. a line of adjacent seats facing the same way, as in a theater. 4. a street formed by two continuous lines of buildings. 5. one of the horizontal lines of squares on a checkerboard; rank. v.t. 6. to put in a row (often fol. by up). Idioms: hard, long, or tough row to hoe, an extremely difficult set of circumstances to contend with. 7. in a row, one after another; in succession. [1175–1225; Middle English row(e); compare Old English rǣw]

row2

(roʊ)

v.i. 1. to propel a vessel by the leverage of oars or the like. v.t. 2. to propel (a vessel) with oars or the like. 3. to convey in a boat that is rowed. 4. to convey or propel (something) in a manner suggestive of rowing. 5. to require, use, or be equipped with (a number of oars). 6. to use (oarsmen) for rowing. 7. to row against in a race. n. 8. an act or period of rowing. 9. an excursion in a rowboat. [before 950; Middle English; Old English rōwan, c. Middle Low German rōjen, Middle High German rüejen to steer, Old Norse rōa; akin to Latin rēmus oar] row′er, n.

row3

(raʊ)

n. 1. a noisy dispute or quarrel. v.i. 2. to quarrel noisily. [1740–50]

row

  • windbreak - A row of trees acting as a fence.
  • acrostic - From Greek akron, "end," and stikhos, "row, line of verse."
  • queue - Has the forms queued and queuing or queueing; queueing has five vowels in a row.
  • row - The verb comes from Germanic ro-, "steer," and row, "orderly line," which is from Germanic raigwa.

Row

 a number of things or persons set out in a circle, in a string or series, or in a line—Wilkes.Examples: row of answers, 1674; of beans; of grain, 1707; of houses, 1450; of onions, 1880; of piles, 1229; of pillars, 1610; of pineapples, 1779; of stakes, 1719; of theatre seats, 1710; of teeth, 1887; of words, 1510; of writers, 1576.

row


Past participle: rowed
Gerund: rowing
Imperative
row
row
Present
I row
you row
he/she/it rows
we row
you row
they row
Preterite
I rowed
you rowed
he/she/it rowed
we rowed
you rowed
they rowed
Present Continuous
I am rowing
you are rowing
he/she/it is rowing
we are rowing
you are rowing
they are rowing
Present Perfect
I have rowed
you have rowed
he/she/it has rowed
we have rowed
you have rowed
they have rowed
Past Continuous
I was rowing
you were rowing
he/she/it was rowing
we were rowing
you were rowing
they were rowing
Past Perfect
I had rowed
you had rowed
he/she/it had rowed
we had rowed
you had rowed
they had rowed
Future
I will row
you will row
he/she/it will row
we will row
you will row
they will row
Future Perfect
I will have rowed
you will have rowed
he/she/it will have rowed
we will have rowed
you will have rowed
they will have rowed
Future Continuous
I will be rowing
you will be rowing
he/she/it will be rowing
we will be rowing
you will be rowing
they will be rowing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been rowing
you have been rowing
he/she/it has been rowing
we have been rowing
you have been rowing
they have been rowing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been rowing
you will have been rowing
he/she/it will have been rowing
we will have been rowing
you will have been rowing
they will have been rowing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been rowing
you had been rowing
he/she/it had been rowing
we had been rowing
you had been rowing
they had been rowing
Conditional
I would row
you would row
he/she/it would row
we would row
you would row
they would row
Past Conditional
I would have rowed
you would have rowed
he/she/it would have rowed
we would have rowed
you would have rowed
they would have rowed
Thesaurus
Noun1.row - an arrangement of objects or people side by side in a linerow - an arrangement of objects or people side by side in a line; "a row of chairs"line - a formation of people or things one beside another; "the line of soldiers advanced with their bayonets fixed"; "they were arrayed in line of battle"; "the cast stood in line for the curtain call"serration - a row of notches; "the pliers had serrations to improve the grip"terrace - a row of houses built in a similar style and having common dividing walls (or the street on which they face); "Grosvenor Terrace"
2.row - an angry disputerow - an angry dispute; "they had a quarrel"; "they had words"dustup, quarrel, run-in, wrangle, wordsdifference of opinion, dispute, difference, conflict - a disagreement or argument about something important; "he had a dispute with his wife"; "there were irreconcilable differences"; "the familiar conflict between Republicans and Democrats"affray, altercation, fracas - noisy quarrelpettifoggery, spat, squabble, tiff, bicker, bickering, fuss - a quarrel about petty pointsbust-up - a serious quarrel (especially one that ends a friendship)
3.row - a long continuous strip (usually running horizontally); "a mackerel sky filled with rows of clouds"; "rows of barbed wire protected the trenches"strip - a relatively long narrow piece of something; "he felt a flat strip of muscle"
4.row - (construction) a layer of masonry; "a course of bricks"coursedamp course, damp-proof course - a course of some impermeable material laid in the foundation walls of building near the ground to prevent dampness from rising into the buildinglayer, bed - single thickness of usually some homogeneous substance; "slices of hard-boiled egg on a bed of spinach"row of bricks - a course of bricks place next to each other (usually in a straight line)wall - an architectural partition with a height and length greater than its thickness; used to divide or enclose an area or to support another structure; "the south wall had a small window"; "the walls were covered with pictures"
5.row - a linear array of numbers, letters, or symbols side by sidearray - an orderly arrangement; "an array of troops in battle order"table, tabular array - a set of data arranged in rows and columns; "see table 1"
6.row - a continuous chronological succession without an interruption; "they won the championship three years in a row"chronological sequence, chronological succession, succession, successiveness, sequence - a following of one thing after another in time; "the doctor saw a sequence of patients"
7.row - the act of rowing as a sportrow - the act of rowing as a sport rowingfeathering, feather - turning an oar parallel to the water between pullscrab - a stroke of the oar that either misses the water or digs too deeply; "he caught a crab and lost the race"sculling - rowing by a single oarsman in a racing shellathletics, sport - an active diversion requiring physical exertion and competition
Verb1.row - propel with oars; "row the boat across the lake"stroke - row at a particular ratefeather, square - turn the oar, while rowingboat - ride in a boat on waterpull - operate when rowing a boat; "pull the oars"scull - propel with sculls; "scull the boat"

row

1noun line, bank, range, series, file, rank, string, column, sequence, queue, tier a row of pretty little cottagesin a row consecutively, running, in turn, one after the other, successively, in sequence They have won five championships in a row.

row

2noun (Informal)1. quarrel, dispute, argument, squabble, tiff, trouble, controversy, scrap (informal), fuss, falling-out (informal), fray, brawl, fracas, altercation, slanging match (Brit.), shouting match (informal), turf war (informal), shindig (informal), ruction (informal), ruckus (informal), shindy (informal), bagarre (French) A man was stabbed to death in a family row.2. disturbance, noise, racket, uproar, commotion, pandemonium, rumpus, tumult, hubbub 'Whatever is that row?' she demanded.3. telling-off, talking-to (informal), lecture, reprimand, ticking-off (informal), dressing-down (informal), rollicking (Brit. informal) (informal), tongue-lashing, reproof, castigation, flea in your ear (informal) I can't give you a row for scarpering off.verb1. quarrel, fight, argue, dispute, scrap (informal), brawl, squabble, spar, wrangle, go at it hammer and tongs They rowed all the time.

row 1

nounA group of people or things arranged in a row:column, file, line, queue, rank, string, tier.

row 2

nounA quarrel, fight, or disturbance marked by very noisy, disorderly, and often violent behavior:affray, brawl, broil, donnybrook, fray, free-for-all, melee, riot, ruction, tumult.Informal: fracas.Slang: rumble.verbTo quarrel noisily:brawl, broil, caterwaul, wrangle.
Translations
争吵排划渡划船划船游览

row1

(rəu) noun a line. two rows of houses; They were sitting in a row; They sat in the front row in the theatre. 一排 (一)排

row2

(rəu) verb1. to move (a boat) through the water using oars. He rowed (the dinghy) up the river. 用槳划(船) 划渡2. to transport by rowing. He rowed them across the lake. 划船載運 划运 noun a trip in a rowing-boat. They went for a row on the river. 划船遊覽 划船游览ˈrower noun a person who rows; an oarsman. 划船的船夫 划船者ˈrowing-boat, ˈrow-boat noun a boat which is moved by oars. 划艇 划艇

row3

(rau) noun1. a noisy quarrel. They had a terrible row; a family row. 爭吵 吵嚷2. a continuous loud noise. They heard a row in the street. 持續吵鬧聲 争吵

row

争吵zhCN, 划船zhCN, 吵架zhCN, 排zhCN

row


See:
  • a hard row to hoe
  • a long row to hoe
  • a tough row to hoe
  • all one's ducks in a row, get/have
  • get (one's) ducks in a row
  • get ducks in a row
  • get one's ducks in a row
  • get your ducks in a row
  • get/have your ducks in a row
  • have (one's) ducks in a row
  • hoe (one's) own row
  • hoe own row
  • in a row
  • kick up a fuss
  • kick up a fuss, row, etc.
  • kick up a row
  • make a fuss
  • on skid row
  • row back
  • row out to
  • row out to (something or some place)
  • skid row
  • skid row bum
  • skid row, on
  • skid-row bum
  • tough row to hoe
  • tough/hard/long row to hoe, a

row


row

11. Chiefly Brit a street, esp a narrow one lined with identical houses 2. Maths a horizontal linear arrangement of numbers, quantities, or terms, esp in a determinant or matrix 3. a horizontal rank of squares on a chessboard or draughtboard

row

21. an act, instance, period, or distance of rowing 2. an excursion in a rowing boat

row

[] (computer science) The characters, or corresponding bits of binary-coded characters, in a computer word. Equipment which simultaneously processes the bits of a character, the characters of a word, or corresponding bits of binary-coded characters in a word. Corresponding positions in a group of columns.

row

record

row

(1) A horizontal set of data or components. In a graph, it is called the "x-axis." Contrast with column.

(2) A group of related and adjacent fields of data about a subject or transaction in a database. A collection of rows makes up a database file (table). Also called a "record" or "tuple." See relational database.


Rows in a Relational Table
In a relational database, rows are also called "records" and "tuples."
MedicalSeecolumn

ROW


AcronymDefinition
ROWRest Of World
ROWRight-Of-Way
ROWRivers of the World (Dawsonville, GA)
ROWRules of Warfare (gaming)
ROWRedistribution of Wealth (taxation and development)
ROWRewards Of Work
ROWReverse Osmosis Water (filtration method)
ROWRendu-Osler-Weber Syndrome (aka Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia)
ROWRight of Way
ROWRest of the World
ROWReceiver of Wreck
ROWRelocate Out of Washington (DC)
ROWRing Of Wealth (gaming, RuneScape MMORPG)
ROWRoswell, NM, USA - Industrial Air Center (Airport Code)
ROWRun-Of-Week
ROWRoll Welding
ROWRegulation/Overtime Wins (ice hockey)
ROWRage of Wotan (gaming clan)
ROWResidents of the Wrangells (Glennallen, AK; est. 2003)
ROWRemote Operational Web

row


  • all
  • noun
  • verb
  • phrase

Synonyms for row

noun line

Synonyms

  • line
  • bank
  • range
  • series
  • file
  • rank
  • string
  • column
  • sequence
  • queue
  • tier

phrase in a row

Synonyms

  • consecutively
  • running
  • in turn
  • one after the other
  • successively
  • in sequence

noun quarrel

Synonyms

  • quarrel
  • dispute
  • argument
  • squabble
  • tiff
  • trouble
  • controversy
  • scrap
  • fuss
  • falling-out
  • fray
  • brawl
  • fracas
  • altercation
  • slanging match
  • shouting match
  • turf war
  • shindig
  • ruction
  • ruckus
  • shindy
  • bagarre

noun disturbance

Synonyms

  • disturbance
  • noise
  • racket
  • uproar
  • commotion
  • pandemonium
  • rumpus
  • tumult
  • hubbub

noun telling-off

Synonyms

  • telling-off
  • talking-to
  • lecture
  • reprimand
  • ticking-off
  • dressing-down
  • rollicking
  • tongue-lashing
  • reproof
  • castigation
  • flea in your ear

verb quarrel

Synonyms

  • quarrel
  • fight
  • argue
  • dispute
  • scrap
  • brawl
  • squabble
  • spar
  • wrangle
  • go at it hammer and tongs

Synonyms for row

noun a group of people or things arranged in a row

Synonyms

  • column
  • file
  • line
  • queue
  • rank
  • string
  • tier

noun a quarrel, fight, or disturbance marked by very noisy, disorderly, and often violent behavior

Synonyms

  • affray
  • brawl
  • broil
  • donnybrook
  • fray
  • free-for-all
  • melee
  • riot
  • ruction
  • tumult
  • fracas
  • rumble

verb to quarrel noisily

Synonyms

  • brawl
  • broil
  • caterwaul
  • wrangle

Synonyms for row

noun an arrangement of objects or people side by side in a line

Related Words

  • line
  • serration
  • terrace

noun an angry dispute

Synonyms

  • dustup
  • quarrel
  • run-in
  • wrangle
  • words

Related Words

  • difference of opinion
  • dispute
  • difference
  • conflict
  • affray
  • altercation
  • fracas
  • pettifoggery
  • spat
  • squabble
  • tiff
  • bicker
  • bickering
  • fuss
  • bust-up

noun a long continuous strip (usually running horizontally)

Related Words

  • strip

noun (construction) a layer of masonry

Synonyms

  • course

Related Words

  • damp course
  • damp-proof course
  • layer
  • bed
  • row of bricks
  • wall

noun a linear array of numbers, letters, or symbols side by side

Related Words

  • array
  • table
  • tabular array

noun a continuous chronological succession without an interruption

Related Words

  • chronological sequence
  • chronological succession
  • succession
  • successiveness
  • sequence

noun the act of rowing as a sport

Synonyms

  • rowing

Related Words

  • feathering
  • feather
  • crab
  • sculling
  • athletics
  • sport

verb propel with oars

Related Words

  • stroke
  • feather
  • square
  • boat
  • pull
  • scull
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更新时间:2024/9/22 5:37:50