释义 |
strand
Strand S0793200 (strănd) A thoroughfare in west-central London, England, running parallel to the northern bank of the Thames River and eastward from Trafalgar Square in the West End to the City of London. Among its well-known fixtures is the Savoy Hotel.
strand 1 S0793200 (strănd)n. Land, typically a beach, bordering a body of water.v. strand·ed, strand·ing, strands v.tr.1. a. To drive or run (a boat, for example) ashore or aground.b. To cause (a whale or other sea animal) to be unable to swim free from a beach or from shallow water.2. To bring into or leave in a difficult or helpless position: The convoy was stranded in the desert.3. Baseball To leave (a base runner) on base at the end of an inning.4. Linguistics To separate (a grammatical element) from other elements in a construction, either by moving it out of the construction or moving the rest of the construction. In the sentence What are you aiming at, the preposition at has been stranded.v.intr.1. To be driven or run ashore or aground: The boat stranded on the rocks.2. To be stranded, as on a beach. Used of sea animals. [Middle English, from Old English.]
strand 2 S0793200 (strănd)n.1. A complex of fibers or filaments that have been twisted together to form a cable, rope, thread, or yarn.2. a. A single filament, such as a fiber or thread, of a woven or braided material.b. A ropelike length of something: a strand of pearls; a strand of DNA.c. A wisp or lock of hair.3. One of the elements woven together to make an intricate whole, such as the plot of a novel.tr.v. strand·ed, strand·ing, strands 1. To make or form (a rope, for example) by twisting strands together.2. To break a strand of (a rope, for example). [Middle English strond.]strand (strænd) vb1. to leave or drive (ships, fish, etc) aground or ashore or (of ships, fish, etc) to be left or driven ashore2. (tr; usually passive) to leave helpless, as without transport or money, etcn3. (Physical Geography) a shore or beach4. (Human Geography) a foreign country[Old English; related to Old Norse strönd side, Middle High German strant beach, Latin sternere to spread]
strand (strænd) n1. (Textiles) a set of or one of the individual fibres or threads of string, wire, etc, that form a rope, cable, etc2. (Textiles) a single length of string, hair, wool, wire, etc3. (Jewellery) a string of pearls or beads4. a constituent element in a complex whole: one strand of her argument. vb (tr) to form (a rope, cable, etc) by winding strands together[C15: of uncertain origin]
Strand (strænd) n (Placename) the Strand a street in W central London, parallel to the Thames: famous for its hotels and theatresstrand1 (strænd) v.t. 1. to drive or cause to run onto a shore; run aground. 2. to leave in a helpless position: stranded in the middle of nowhere. v.i. 3. to become stranded. n. 4. the land bordering a body of water; shore; beach. [before 1000; Middle English (n.), Old English, c. Middle Low German strant, Old Norse strǫnd; akin to strew] strand2 (strænd) n. 1. one of the larger elements, each consisting of a bundle of yarns, that are plaited together to form a rope. 2. a similar part of a wire rope or cable. 3. any fiber or thread twisted or plaited into cord, string, etc. 4. a fiber or filament, as in animal or plant tissue. 5. an interwoven element in a larger structure: the strands of a plot. 6. a filament of hair. 7. any particular length of cord or string upon which pearls, beads, etc., are threaded. v.t. 8. to form by twisting strands together. 9. to break one or more strands of (a rope). [1490–1500; orig. uncertain] Strand (strænd) n. Mark, born 1934, U.S. poet, born in Canada: U.S. poet laureate 1990–91. strand Past participle: stranded Gerund: stranding
Present |
---|
I strand | you strand | he/she/it strands | we strand | you strand | they strand |
Preterite |
---|
I stranded | you stranded | he/she/it stranded | we stranded | you stranded | they stranded |
Present Continuous |
---|
I am stranding | you are stranding | he/she/it is stranding | we are stranding | you are stranding | they are stranding |
Present Perfect |
---|
I have stranded | you have stranded | he/she/it has stranded | we have stranded | you have stranded | they have stranded |
Past Continuous |
---|
I was stranding | you were stranding | he/she/it was stranding | we were stranding | you were stranding | they were stranding |
Past Perfect |
---|
I had stranded | you had stranded | he/she/it had stranded | we had stranded | you had stranded | they had stranded |
Future |
---|
I will strand | you will strand | he/she/it will strand | we will strand | you will strand | they will strand |
Future Perfect |
---|
I will have stranded | you will have stranded | he/she/it will have stranded | we will have stranded | you will have stranded | they will have stranded |
Future Continuous |
---|
I will be stranding | you will be stranding | he/she/it will be stranding | we will be stranding | you will be stranding | they will be stranding |
Present Perfect Continuous |
---|
I have been stranding | you have been stranding | he/she/it has been stranding | we have been stranding | you have been stranding | they have been stranding |
Future Perfect Continuous |
---|
I will have been stranding | you will have been stranding | he/she/it will have been stranding | we will have been stranding | you will have been stranding | they will have been stranding |
Past Perfect Continuous |
---|
I had been stranding | you had been stranding | he/she/it had been stranding | we had been stranding | you had been stranding | they had been stranding |
Conditional |
---|
I would strand | you would strand | he/she/it would strand | we would strand | you would strand | they would strand |
Past Conditional |
---|
I would have stranded | you would have stranded | he/she/it would have stranded | we would have stranded | you would have stranded | they would have stranded | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | strand - a pattern forming a unity within a larger structural whole; "he tried to pick up the strands of his former life"; "I could hear several melodic strands simultaneously"pattern, form, shape - a perceptual structure; "the composition presents problems for students of musical form"; "a visual pattern must include not only objects but the spaces between them" | | 2. | strand - line consisting of a complex of fibers or filaments that are twisted together to form a thread or a rope or a cableline - something (as a cord or rope) that is long and thin and flexible; "a washing line"ply - one of the strands twisted together to make yarn or rope or thread; often used in combination; "three-ply cord"; "four-ply yarn"rope yarn - the strands out of which ropes are made | | 3. | strand - a necklace made by a stringing objects together; "a string of beads"; "a strand of pearls";chain, stringnecklace - jewelry consisting of a cord or chain (often bearing gems) worn about the neck as an ornament (especially by women) | | 4. | strand - a very slender natural or synthetic fiberfibril, filamentbarb - one of the parallel filaments projecting from the main shaft of a feathercobweb, gossamer - filaments from a web that was spun by a spiderchromatid - one of two identical strands into which a chromosome splits during mitosismyofibril, myofibrilla, sarcostyle - one of many contractile filaments that make up a striated muscle fiberrhizoid - any of various slender filaments that function as roots in mosses and ferns and fungi etchypha - any of the threadlike filaments forming the mycelium of a fungusparaphysis - a sterile simple or branched filament or hair borne among sporangia; may be pointed or clubbedfiber, fibre - a slender and greatly elongated substance capable of being spun into yarn | | 5. | strand - a poetic term for a shore (as the area periodically covered and uncovered by the tides)shore - the land along the edge of a body of water | | 6. | Strand - a street in west central London famous for its theaters and hotelsWest End - the part of west central London containing the main entertainment and shopping areas | Verb | 1. | strand - leave stranded or isolated with little hope of rescue; "the travellers were marooned"maroondesert, desolate, forsake, abandon - leave someone who needs or counts on you; leave in the lurch; "The mother deserted her children" | | 2. | strand - drive (a vessel) ashoreland - bring ashore; "The drug smugglers landed the heroin on the beach of the island" | | 3. | strand - bring to the ground; "the storm grounded the ship"run aground, groundland - bring ashore; "The drug smugglers landed the heroin on the beach of the island" |
strandnoun1. filament, fibre, thread, length, lock, string, twist, rope, wisp, tress high fences, topped by strands of barbed wire2. component, part, element, ingredient, constituent, feature There have been two strands to his tactics.strandnounSomething that suggests the continuousness of a fine continuous filament:skein, thread.Translationsstrand1 (strӕnd) : be stranded1. (of a ship) to go aground. The ship was stranded on the rocks. 擱淺 搁浅2. (also be left stranded) to be left helpless without eg money or friends. He was left stranded in Yugoslavia without his money or his passport. 處於困境(無錢,無助) 处于困境(无钱,无助)
strand2 (strӕnd) noun a thin thread, eg one of those twisted together to form rope, string, knitting-wool etc, or a long thin lock of hair. She pushed the strands of hair back from her face. (繩、線的)股,縷 (绳、线的)股,缕 strand
strand (someone or something) on (something)To cause someone or something to be stuck or trapped something from which they or it is unable to move or escape. Often used in passive constructions. Without gas, our car was totally stranded on the side of the road. The storm blew our boat off course and stranded us on a remote island.See also: on, strandstrand someone on somethingto abandon someone on something from which there is no escape. The shipwreck stranded our little group on a deserted beach. We were stranded on the little island by a storm.See also: on, strandStrand
Strand, street in London, England, roughly parallel with the Thames River, running from the Temple to Trafalgar Square. It is a street of law courts, hotels, theaters, and office buildings and is the main artery between the City and the West End.strand[strand] (engineering) One of a number of steel wires twisted together to form a wire rope or cable or an electrical conductor. A thread, yarn, string, rope, wire, or cable of specified length. One of the fibers or filaments twisted or laid together into yarn, thread, rope, or cordage. (geology) A beach bordering a sea or an arm of an ocean. (navigation) To run aground; term strand usually refers to a serious grounding, while the term “ground” refers to any grounding, however slight. (textiles) An element of a woven material. strand1. A number of individual steel wires twisted together. 2. A number of individual steel wires laid together (not twisted). 3. In pre-stressed concrete, a type of prestressing tendon.strand1 Chiefly poetic1. a shore or beach 2. a foreign country
strand21. a set of or one of the individual fibres or threads of string, wire, etc., that form a rope, cable, etc. 2. a single length of string, hair, wool, wire, etc.
Strand the. a street in W central London, parallel to the Thames: famous for its hotels and theatres Strand (1)AND-parallel logic programming language. Essentiallyflat Parlog83 with sequential-and and sequential-oreliminated.
["Strand: New Concepts on Parallel Programming", Ian Foster etal, P-H 1990]. Strand88 is a commercial implementation.Strand (2)A query language, implemented on top of INGRES (anRDBMS). ["Modelling Summary Data", R. Johnson, Proc ACMSIGMOD Conf 1981].strand
strand [strand] a thread or fiber or a structure resembling one.antisense strand the strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid that is complementary to the strand" >sense strand; in DNA it is the template strand on which the mRNA is synthesized.sense strand the strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid that encodes the product; in DNA it is the strand that encodes the RNA, having thus the same base sequence except changing T for U in the RNA. See also strand" >antisense strand.strand (strand), In microbiology, a filamentous or threadlike structure.strand (strand) A single thread or fiber, e.g., of nucleic acids in a chromosome.LegalSeeStrandingSTRaND
Acronym | Definition |
---|
STRaND➣Surrey Training, Research, and Nanosatellite Demonstrator (UK) |
strand
Synonyms for strandnoun filamentSynonyms- filament
- fibre
- thread
- length
- lock
- string
- twist
- rope
- wisp
- tress
noun componentSynonyms- component
- part
- element
- ingredient
- constituent
- feature
Synonyms for strandnoun something that suggests the continuousness of a fine continuous filamentSynonymsSynonyms for strandnoun a pattern forming a unity within a larger structural wholeRelated Wordsnoun line consisting of a complex of fibers or filaments that are twisted together to form a thread or a rope or a cableRelated Wordsnoun a necklace made by a stringing objects togetherSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun a very slender natural or synthetic fiberSynonymsRelated Words- barb
- cobweb
- gossamer
- chromatid
- myofibril
- myofibrilla
- sarcostyle
- rhizoid
- hypha
- paraphysis
- fiber
- fibre
noun a poetic term for a shore (as the area periodically covered and uncovered by the tides)Related Wordsnoun a street in west central London famous for its theaters and hotelsRelated Wordsverb leave stranded or isolated with little hope of rescueSynonymsRelated Words- desert
- desolate
- forsake
- abandon
verb drive (a vessel) ashoreRelated Wordsverb bring to the groundSynonymsRelated Words |