释义 |
speed
speed S0620700 (spēd)n.1. Physics The rate or a measure of the rate of motion, especially:a. Distance traveled divided by the time of travel.b. The limit of this quotient as the time of travel becomes vanishingly small; the first derivative of distance with respect to time.c. The magnitude of a velocity.2. Swiftness of action: He wrote the first chapter with great speed.3. a. The act of moving rapidly: finished the race in a burst of speed.b. The state of being in rapid motion; rapidity: The river's speed made a rescue difficult.4. A transmission gear or set of gears in a motor vehicle: What speed is the car in now?5. a. A numerical expression of the sensitivity of a photographic film, plate, or paper to light.b. The capacity of a lens to accumulate light at an appropriate aperture.c. The length of time required or permitted for a camera shutter to open and admit light.6. Slang A stimulant drug, especially amphetamine or methamphetamine.7. Slang One that suits or appeals to a person's inclinations, skills, or character: Living in a large city is not my speed.8. Archaic Prosperity; luck.v. sped (spĕd) or speed·ed, speed·ing, speeds v.intr.1. a. To go, move, or proceed quickly: sped to the rescue.b. To drive at a speed exceeding a legal limit: was speeding on the freeway.2. To pass quickly: The days sped by. The months have sped along.3. To move, work, or happen at a faster rate; accelerate: His pulse speeded up.4. Slang To be under the influence of a stimulant drug.5. Archaic a. To prove successful; prosper.b. To get along in a specified manner; fare.v.tr.1. To cause to move or proceed quickly; hasten: no wind to speed the boat.2. To increase the speed or rate of; accelerate. Often used with up: speed up a car; sped up production.3. To further, promote, or expedite (a legal action, for example).4. Archaic To help to succeed or prosper; aid.Idioms: at speed At high speed: added a spoiler to the car to reduce lift when operating at speed. up to speed1. Operating at maximum speed. Producing something or performing at an acceptable rate or level.2. Informal Fully informed; conversant: I'm not up to speed on these issues yet. [Middle English spede, from Old English spēd, success, swiftness; see spē- in Indo-European roots.]Synonyms: speed, hurry, hasten, quicken, accelerate These verbs mean to proceed or cause to proceed rapidly or more rapidly. Speed refers to swift motion or action: The train sped through the countryside. Postal workers labored overtime to speed delivery of the holiday mail. Hurry implies a markedly faster rate than usual, often with concomitant confusion or commotion: Hurry, or you'll miss the plane! Don't let anyone hurry you into making a decision. Hasten suggests urgency and often eager or rash swiftness: My doctor hastened to reassure me that the tests were negative. His off-color jokes only hastened his dismissal. Quicken and especially accelerate refer to increase in rate of activity, growth, or progress: The skater's breathing quickened as he neared the end of his routine. The runner quickened her pace as she drew near the finish line. The economic expansion has continued but is no longer accelerating. Heat greatly accelerates the deterioration of perishable foods. See Also Synonyms at haste.speed (spiːd) n1. the act or quality of acting or moving fast; rapidity2. the rate at which something moves, is done, or acts3. (General Physics) physics a scalar measure of the rate of movement of a body expressed either as the distance travelled divided by the time taken (average speed) or the rate of change of position with respect to time at a particular point (instantaneous speed). It is measured in metres per second, miles per hour, etc4. (Mechanical Engineering) a rate of rotation, usually expressed in revolutions per unit time5. (Mechanical Engineering) a. a gear ratio in a motor vehicle, bicycle, etcb. (in combination): a three-speed gear. 6. (Photography) photog a numerical expression of the sensitivity to light of a particular type of film, paper, or plate. See also ISO rating7. (Photography) photog a measure of the ability of a lens to pass light from an object to the image position, determined by the aperture and also the transmitting power of the lens. It increases as the f-number is decreased and vice versa8. (Recreational Drugs) a slang word for amphetamine9. archaic prosperity or success10. at speed quickly11. up to speed a. operating at an acceptable or competitive levelb. in possession of all the relevant or necessary informationvb, speeds, speeding, sped or speeded12. to move or go or cause to move or go quickly13. (Law) (intr) to drive (a motor vehicle) at a high speed, esp above legal limits14. (Automotive Engineering) (intr) to drive (a motor vehicle) at a high speed, esp above legal limits15. (tr) to help further the success or completion of16. (Recreational Drugs) (intr) slang to take or be under the influence of amphetamines17. (Mechanical Engineering) (intr) to operate or run at a high speed18. archaic a. (intr) to prosper or succeedb. (tr) to wish success to[Old English spēd (originally in the sense: success); related to spōwan to succeed, Latin spēs hope, Old Slavonic spěti to be lucky] ˈspeeder nspeed (spid) n., v. sped speed•ed, speed•ing. n. 1. rapidity in moving, traveling, performing, etc.; swiftness. 2. relative rate of motion or progress: the speed of light. 3. a gear ratio in a motor vehicle or bicycle. 4. a. the sensitivity of a photographic film or paper to light. b. the length of time a shutter is opened to expose film. c. the largest opening at which a lens can be used. 5. Slang. a stimulating drug, esp. methamphetamine or amphetamine. 6. a person, thing, activity, etc., that suits one's ability, inclinations, or personality: Quiet, easygoing people are more my speed. 7. Archaic. success or prosperity. v.t. 8. to promote the success of; further, forward, or expedite. 9. to direct (the course, way, etc.) with speed. 10. to increase the rate of speed of (usu. fol. by up): to speed up production. 11. to cause to move or go with speed. 12. Archaic. to cause to succeed or prosper. v.i. 13. to go or proceed with rapidity. 14. to drive a vehicle at a rate that exceeds the legal limit. 15. to increase the rate of speed (usu. fol. by up). 16. to get on or fare in a specified or particular manner. 17. Archaic. to succeed or prosper. Idioms: 1. at full or top speed, a. at the greatest speed possible. b. to the maximum of one's capabilities. 2. up to speed, a. operating at full or optimum speed. b. functioning at an anticipated or competitive level: a new firm not yet up to speed. [before 900; (n.) Middle English spede good luck, prosperity, rapidity, Old English spēd, c. Old Saxon spōd, Old High German spuot] speed′er, n. syn: speed, velocity, celerity refer to swift or energetic movement or operation. speed may apply to human or nonhuman activity; it emphasizes the rate in time at which something travels or operates: the speed of an automobile; the speed of thought. velocity, a more technical term, is commonly used to refer to high rates of speed: the velocity of a projectile. celerity, a somewhat literary term, usu. refers to human movement or operation, and emphasizes dispatch or economy in an activity: the celerity of his response. Speed See Also: RUNNING - (Poems have become) as instant as coffee or onion soup mix —Donald Hall
- (They’ll whip her back … ) as quick as shit through a goose —Derek Lambert
- As swift as meditation, or the thoughts of love —William Shakespeare
- As swiftly as a reach of still water is crisped by the wind —Rudyard Kipling
- Be not in a hurry, like the almond, first to blossom and last to ripen. Be rather like the mulberry, last to blossom and first to ripen —The Holy Bible/Apocrypha
- The crowd was moving fast … like a big spread ravelling, and the separate threads disappeared down the dark street —Flannery O’Connor
- Drive [a car] like the hounds of hell —Rosamund Pilcher
- Fast as a bird on the wing —Anon
- Fast as a cat scurrying up a tree at the approach of a strange dog —Anon
- Fast as a cook cracks eggs —Thomas Nash
- Fast as a heartbeat —John D. MacDonald
- Fast as a jet —Mark Helprin
- Fast as a pickpocket —Anon
- Fast as a propeller —Bertold Brecht
- (Scrambles into the room,) fast as a spider —Robert Silverberg
- Fast as greased lightning —American colloquialism
- Fast as the blink of an eye —Anon
- Fast-moving as the gray fox that climbs trees after squirrels —Marge Piercy
- (Little and) fleet as a terrier running beside a bloodhound —Erich Maria Remarque
- (To vanish,) fleet as days and months and years, fleet as the generations of mankind —William Wordsworth
- Flying like ice in a sleet storm —Ben Ames Williams
- Fly like a donkey with pepper up its behind —Aharon Megged
- Galloped through [religious mass] like a man with witches after him —Edith Wharton
- Goes like a ship-lash flicked across a horse’s neck —Rudyard Kipling
- Going like flames —Samuel Beckett
- Going like sixty —F. D. Reeve
- Go like a house afire —Anon
One of many “Go like” similes that have worked their way into the American language mainstream since the late 1830s. Some other examples: “Go like a shot,” “Go like hell” and “Go like mad.” - Go through like a dose of salts —American colloquialism
While purgative salts are pretty much a thing of the past, the simile endures as a way to describe a very rapid pace. With the penchant for brand names, “Go through like Ex-Lax” has become a common alternative. - Go through them [reading materials] like a kid through potato chips —James Crumley
- He rushed past her like a football tackle —James Thurber
- (Wedding plans were) hurtling along like a train on tracks —Paul Reidinger
- Insectlike swiftness —Saul Bellow
- It must be done like lightning —Ben Jonson
- Just a glance, like passing your eyes over the spines of books without being able to read the title … that quick —Arthur A. Cohen
See Also: LOOKS - (Scurried off, his) legs going like a windmill —Paige Mitchell
See Also: MOVEMENT - Like a sunbeam, swift and bright —Sir Walter Scott
- Move with the speed of a Grand Prix Racer —Anon
- Moving fast as a train —Anon
- My days are swifter than a weaver’s shuttle —The Holy Bible/Job
While this simile is not much used these days, it is the one that has seeded the many contemporary variations. - Quick and nimble, more like a bear than a squirrel —Henry G. Bohn’s Handbook of Proverbs
- Quick as a lizard —Anthony Trollope
- Quick as an attack dog —Gloria Norris
- (Acted) quick as a knife —Penelope Gilliatt
- (The wolf … ate her up as) quick as a slap —Anne Sexton
- Quick as a striking snake —George Garrett
- Quick as a weasel —Robert B. Parker
- Quick as a wink —Anon
While variations such as “Quick as dust” and “Quick as scat” have faded from the American vocabulary, “Quick as a wink” endures to the point of overuse. - (Goes) quick as light —Noël Coward, lyrics for “Chase Me Charlie”
- Quick as lightning —Frances Sheridan
The American adaption of the simile first used by Sheridan in a play named Discovery is “Quick as greased lightning.” - Quick as mercury —Marguerite Yourcenar
- (Slipped down) quick as minnows —Marge Piercy
- (Barry’s eye was as) quick as sound —Frank Swinnerton
- Quicker than a crab underwater —John Updike
- Quicker than boiling asparagus —Caesar Augustus
According to Stevenson’s Proverbs, Maxims and Famous Sayings, Augustus used this expression whenever he wanted anything to be done fast. - Quick on his feet as a running deer —Stephen Vincent Benét
- (Lavella’s brain) raced like a trapped rabbit —William Beechcroft
- (Feet) rapid as the river —Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- Rash as fire —William Shakespeare
- (Raleigh) rushed through (these hypotheses) like rosary beads —Michael Malone
- (Men) rushing like they were bolt out of a cannon —Richard Ford
- Rushing wildly from room to room like a flustered hen —Christopher Isherwood
- Scurried like a crab —Michael Malone
- She was so swift … it was like having a small cute dog with you —Isak Dinesen
- Some people are too fast for their own good, like Asahel in the Book of Samuel —Saul Bellow
- Sped around like intergalactic missiles —Lisa Harris
Harris’s simile describes the activity of the Lubavitcher women in Crown Heights, the subject of her book The World of a Hasidic Family. - (The game) speeds along like a fast freight —W. P. Kinsella
The game speeding along is baseball, the background for The Iowa Baseball Confederacy and other Kinsella novels. - Speedy as a steam roller —George Ade
- Started for me (as to attack) like a streak of lightning —Rex Stout
- Swift as a cloud between sea and sky —Percy Bysshe Shelley
- Swift as a greyhound —Ouida
- Swift as a mugger —David Leavitt
- Swift as an arrow —Anon
This has been attributed to numerous sources dating back to the early seventeenth century. - Swift as a plunging knife —Rudyard Kipling
- Swift as a shadow —William Shakespeare
- Swift as desire —Mary Pix
- Swift as fear —Thomas Parnell
- Swift as the eagle (flieth) —The Holy Bible/Deuteronomy
- Swift as the waters —The Holy Bible/Job
- Swift as thought —William Shakespeare
- Swift as unbridled rage —Henry Abbey
- Swifter than the wind —William Shakespeare
- Swift in motion as a ball —William Shakespeare
- (Fluttering her bristly black lashes as) swiftly as butterflies’ wings —Margaret Mitchell
The girl fluttering her lashes is Scarlett O’Hara of Gone with the Wind fame. - Travelling fast as a wish —Elizabeth Bishop
- (The race) went by like an express train —Enid Bagnold
- (She dressed and) went off like a top with the whip behind it —Vicki Baum
- Went past … like lightning past a hill —Jessamyn West
- Went through it like a clown through a paper hoop —Temole Scott
- Went through like shit through a tin horn —American colloquialism
speedFast, quick, rapid, and swift are all used to say taht something moves or happens with great speed. Rapid and swift are not usually used in conversation. Fast is used both as an adjective and an adverb. There is no adverb 'fastly'. ...fast communications.I ran as fast as I could.1. 'quick'Quick is an adjective. You do not usually used it as an adverb. Instead you use the adverb quickly. It is this muscle which gives us our quick, springing movements.I walked quickly up the passage.In conversation, you can use the comparative form quicker as an adverb. I swam on a bit quicker.Goats could ruin a farmer's field quicker than baboons.He began to speak more quickly.You can use the superlative form quickest as an adverb in speech or writing. ...and Freedman reacted quickest to head the ball into the net.2. 'rapid' and 'swift'Rapid and swift are adjectives. The corresponding adverbs are rapidly and swiftly. Jobs tend to be plentiful at a time of rapid economic growth.They walked rapidly past the churchyard....a swift decision.He walked swiftly towards home.3. asking about speedFast is the word you usually use when you are asking about the speed of something. How fast is the fish swimming?...looking out of the window to see how fast we were going.4. vehiclesYou use fast to say that a vehicle is capable of moving with great speed. ...a fastcar.5. peopleYou do not usually use fast to talk about people, but you can use it in front of words like driver and runner to say that someone drives quickly or is capable of running quickly. Not being a fast runner, I was glad I had parked close to the hall.6. changesWhen you are talking about the speed at which something increases or decreases, you usually use rapid. People are worried about the rapid and massive increase in military spending.7. no delayFast, immediate, quick, rapid, and swift are all used to say that something happens without any delay. I only got a fast return on my investment once.My immediate reaction was just disgust.They are pressing for a quick resumption of arms negotiations.... managers plagued by demands for rapid decisions.The response was swift and intense.8. short durationYou can use quick, rapid, or swift to say that something lasts only a short time. ...a quick visit.You are likely to make a rapid recovery....the swift descent from tentility to near-poverty.
speed speed up">speed upSpeed can be a noun or a verb. 1. used as a nounThe speed of someone or something is the rate at which they move. He increased his speed to 115mph....the speed of light.Speed is often used in prepositional phrases beginning with at or with. You can say that someone or something moves at a particular speed. He goes on driving at the same speed.The bullets hit Ilie Popescu at a speed of 1,350 feet per second.If you want to emphasize how fast something is moving, you can use at and an adjective in front of speed. I drove at great speed to West Bank.A plane flew low over the ship at lightning speed.If you want to emphasize how quickly something happens or is done, you use with and an adjective in front of speed. The shape of their bodies changes with astonishing speed.They have succeeded in expanding their industries with remarkable speed.2. used as a verbIn stories, if someone speeds somewhere, they move or travel there quickly. When speed has this meaning, its past tense and past participle is sped. They sped along Main Street towards the highway.They drove through Port Philip and sped on down south.3. 'speed up'If something speeds up or if you speed it up, it moves, happens, or is done more quickly. They're way ahead of us. Speed up!The past tense and past participle of speed up is speeded up. Tom speeded up and overtook them.The process is now being speeded up.speed Past participle: speeded/sped Gerund: speeding
Present |
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I speed | you speed | he/she/it speeds | we speed | you speed | they speed |
Preterite |
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I speeded/sped | you speeded/sped | he/she/it speeded/sped | we speeded/sped | you speeded/sped | they speeded/sped |
Present Continuous |
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I am speeding | you are speeding | he/she/it is speeding | we are speeding | you are speeding | they are speeding |
Present Perfect |
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I have speeded/sped | you have speeded/sped | he/she/it has speeded/sped | we have speeded/sped | you have speeded/sped | they have speeded/sped |
Past Continuous |
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I was speeding | you were speeding | he/she/it was speeding | we were speeding | you were speeding | they were speeding |
Past Perfect |
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I had speeded/sped | you had speeded/sped | he/she/it had speeded/sped | we had speeded/sped | you had speeded/sped | they had speeded/sped |
Future |
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I will speed | you will speed | he/she/it will speed | we will speed | you will speed | they will speed |
Future Perfect |
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I will have speeded/sped | you will have speeded/sped | he/she/it will have speeded/sped | we will have speeded/sped | you will have speeded/sped | they will have speeded/sped |
Future Continuous |
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I will be speeding | you will be speeding | he/she/it will be speeding | we will be speeding | you will be speeding | they will be speeding |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been speeding | you have been speeding | he/she/it has been speeding | we have been speeding | you have been speeding | they have been speeding |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been speeding | you will have been speeding | he/she/it will have been speeding | we will have been speeding | you will have been speeding | they will have been speeding |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been speeding | you had been speeding | he/she/it had been speeding | we had been speeding | you had been speeding | they had been speeding |
Conditional |
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I would speed | you would speed | he/she/it would speed | we would speed | you would speed | they would speed |
Past Conditional |
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I would have speeded/sped | you would have speeded/sped | he/she/it would have speeded/sped | we would have speeded/sped | you would have speeded/sped | they would have speeded/sped | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | speed - distance travelled per unit time velocityangular velocity - (physics) the rate of change of the angular position of a rotating body; usually expressed in radians per second or radians per minuteairspeed - the speed of an aircraft relative to the air in which it is flyingescape velocity - the minimum velocity needed to escape a gravitational fieldgroundspeed - the speed of an aircraft relative to the groundhypervelocity - excessive velocity; "the meteorites struck the earth with hypervelocity impacts"muzzle velocity - the velocity of a projectile as it leaves the muzzle of a gunpeculiar velocity - velocity with respect to the local standard of restradial velocity - velocity along the line of sight toward or away from the observerlight speed, speed of light, c - the speed at which light travels in a vacuum; the constancy and universality of the speed of light is recognized by defining it to be exactly 299,792,458 meters per secondsteerageway - (nautical) the minimum rate of motion needed for a vessel to be maneuveredterminal velocity - the constant maximum velocity reached by a body falling through the atmosphere under the attraction of gravityrate - a magnitude or frequency relative to a time unit; "they traveled at a rate of 55 miles per hour"; "the rate of change was faster than expected" | | 2. | speed - a rate (usually rapid) at which something happens; "the project advanced with gratifying speed"fastness, swiftnesspace, rate - the relative speed of progress or change; "he lived at a fast pace"; "he works at a great rate"; "the pace of events accelerated"haste, hastiness, hurriedness, hurry, precipitation - overly eager speed (and possible carelessness); "he soon regretted his haste"execution speed - (computer science) the speed with which a computational device can execute instructions; measured in MIPSgraduality, gradualness - the quality of being gradual or of coming about by gradual stages | | 3. | speed - changing location rapidly hurrying, speedingmovement, move, motion - the act of changing location from one place to another; "police controlled the motion of the crowd"; "the movement of people from the farms to the cities"; "his move put him directly in my path"speedup, acceleration, quickening - the act of accelerating; increasing the speeddeceleration - the act of decelerating; decreasing the speed; "he initiated deceleration by braking"scud, scudding - the act of moving along swiftly (as before a gale) | | 4. | speed - the ratio of the focal length to the diameter of a (camera) lens systemf number, focal ratio, stop numberratio - the relative magnitudes of two quantities (usually expressed as a quotient) | | 5. | speed - a central nervous system stimulant that increases energy and decreases appetite; used to treat narcolepsy and some forms of depressionamphetamine, pep pill, upperamphetamine sulfate, amphetamine sulphate - a sulfate derivative of amphetamine that is used as a stimulant for the central nervous systembennie, Benzedrine - a form of amphetamineDexedrine, dextroamphetamine sulphate - an isomer of amphetamine (trade name Dexedrine) used as a central nervous system stimulantdrug of abuse, street drug - a drug that is taken for nonmedicinal reasons (usually for mind-altering effects); drug abuse can lead to physical and mental damage and (with some substances) dependence and addictiondeoxyephedrine, meth, methamphetamine, methamphetamine hydrochloride, Methedrine, shabu, chicken feed, crank, chalk, trash, glass, ice - an amphetamine derivative (trade name Methedrine) used in the form of a crystalline hydrochloride; used as a stimulant to the nervous system and as an appetite suppressantexcitant, stimulant drug, stimulant - a drug that temporarily quickens some vital process | Verb | 1. | speed - move fast; "He rushed down the hall to receive his guests"; "The cars raced down the street"belt along, bucket along, cannonball along, hie, hotfoot, pelt along, race, rush, rush along, step on it, hastengo, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"barge, push forward, thrust ahead - push one's way; "she barged into the meeting room"shoot down, tear, buck, charge, shoot - move quickly and violently; "The car tore down the street"; "He came charging into my office"dash, scoot, scud, dart, flash, shoot - run or move very quickly or hastily; "She dashed into the yard"accelerate, quicken, speed up, speed - move faster; "The car accelerated" | | 2. | speed - move faster; "The car accelerated" accelerate, quicken, speed upbrisk, brisk up, brisken - become brisk; "business brisked up"deepen, intensify - become more intense; "The debate intensified"; "His dislike for raw fish only deepened in Japan" | | 3. | speed - move very fast; "The runner zipped past us at breakneck speed"hurry, travel rapidly, zipgo, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"dart, fleet, flit, flutter - move along rapidly and lightly; skim or dart; "The hummingbird flitted among the branches"run - move fast by using one's feet, with one foot off the ground at any given time; "Don't run--you'll be out of breath"; "The children ran to the store"whizz along, zoom, zoom along, whizz - move along very quicklyaccelerate, quicken, speed up, speed - move faster; "The car accelerated" | | 4. | speed - travel at an excessive or illegal velocity; "I got a ticket for speeding"go, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast" | | 5. | speed - cause to move faster; "He accelerated the car"accelerate, speed upalter, change, modify - cause to change; make different; cause a transformation; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue" |
speednoun1. rate, pace, momentum, tempo, velocity He drove off at high speed.2. velocity, swiftness, acceleration, precipitation, rapidity, quickness, fastness, briskness, speediness, precipitateness Speed is the essential ingredient of all athletics.3. swiftness, rush, hurry, expedition, haste, rapidity, quickness, fleetness, celerity I was amazed at his speed of working. swiftness slowness, sluggishness, tardiness, delayverb1. race, rush, hurry, zoom, career, bomb (along), tear, flash, belt (along) (slang), barrel (along) (informal, chiefly U.S. & Canad.), sprint, gallop, hasten, press on, quicken, lose no time, get a move on (informal), burn rubber (informal), bowl along, put your foot down (informal), step on it (informal), make haste, go hell for leather (informal), exceed the speed limit, go like a bomb (Brit. & N.Z. informal), go like the wind, go like a bat out of hell The engine noise rises only slightly as I speed along. race creep, crawl, take your time, dawdle, tarry2. exceed the speed limit, drive too fast, break the speed limit This man was not qualified to drive and was speeding.3. help, further, advance, aid, promote, boost, assist, facilitate, fast-track, impel, expedite Invest in low-cost language courses to speed your progress. help slow, delay, hold up, hamper, hinder, retard, slow downspeed something up accelerate, promote, hasten, help along, further, forward, advance Excessive drinking will speed up the ageing process.speednoun1. Rate of motion or performance:pace, tempo, velocity.Informal: clip.2. Rapidness of movement or activity:celerity, dispatch, expedition, expeditiousness, fleetness, haste, hurry, hustle, quickness, rapidity, rapidness, speediness, swiftness.verb1. To increase the speed of.Also used with up:accelerate, expedite, hasten, hurry, hustle, quicken, step up.2. To move swiftly:bolt, bucket, bustle, dart, dash, festinate, flash, fleet, flit, fly, haste, hasten, hurry, hustle, pelt, race, rocket, run, rush, sail, scoot, scour, shoot, sprint, tear, trot, whirl, whisk, whiz, wing, zip, zoom.Informal: hotfoot, rip.Slang: barrel, highball.Chiefly British: nip.Idioms: get a move on, get cracking, go like lightning, go like the wind, hotfoot it, make haste, make time, make tracks, run like the wind, shake a leg, step on it.Translationsspeed (spiːd) noun1. rate of moving. a slow speed; The car was travelling at high speed. 速度 速度2. quickness of moving. 急行 急行 verb1. (past tense, past participles sped (sped) ˈspeeded) to (cause to) move or progress quickly; to hurry. The car sped/speeded along the motorway. 迅速(前進) 迅速(前进) 2. (past tense, past participle ˈspeeded) to drive very fast in a car etc, faster than is allowed by law. The policeman said that I had been speeding. 超速(開車) 超速(开车) ˈspeeding noun driving at (an illegally) high speed. He was fined for speeding. 超速行駛 超速行驶ˈspeedy adjective done, carried out etc quickly. a speedy answer. 迅速的 迅速的ˈspeedily adverb 迅速地 迅速地ˈspeediness noun 敏捷 敏捷ˈspeed bump noun a raised part across the road to make drivers slow down. 減速路障 减速路障ˈspeed trap noun a device used by the police to catch drivers exceeding the speed limit. 汽車超速監視器 汽车超速监视器speedometer (spiːˈdomitə) noun an instrument on a car etc showing how fast one is travelling. 速度 速度speed up – past tense, past participle ˈspeeded – 1. to increase speed. The car speeded up as it left the town. 加速行駛 加速行驶2. to quicken the rate of. We are trying to speed up production. 增加生產 增加生产- What's the speed limit on this road? (US)
What is the speed limit on this road? (UK) → 这条路限速是多少?
speed
speed1. n. methamphetamine; amphetamine in general. (Drugs.) Kids think that speed won’t get them into trouble. 2. in. to use methamphetamine; to be high on methamphetamine or amphetamine. (Drugs.) Kids who speed think it is a harmless blow-off. See:- a turn of speed
- at full speed
- at lightning speed
- at top speed
- at/with lightning speed
- clock (someone or something) at (a certain speed)
- clock (someone or something) at speeds of (some amount)
- clock at speeds of
- full pelt/speed/tilt
- full speed ahead
- full speed/steam ahead!
- full steam/speed ahead
- have speeds of (some amount)
- hit speeds of
- hit speeds of (some amount)
- Make haste slowly
- more haste, less speed
- pick up speed
- reach speeds of
- reach speeds of (up to) (some amount)
- speed
- speed away
- speed by
- speed demon
- speed freak
- speed merchant
- speed off
- speed through
- speed trap
- speed up
- speedhead
- speeds of
- speeds of (some amount)
- turn of speed
- up to par
- up to speed
- with lightning speed
speed
speed, change in distance with respect to time. Speed is a scalar rather than a vectorvector, quantity having both magnitude and direction; it may be represented by a directed line segment. Many physical quantities are vectors, e.g., force, velocity, and momentum. ..... Click the link for more information. quantity; i.e., the speed of a body tells one how fast the body is moving but not the direction of the motion. If during time t a body travels over a distance s, then the average speed of that body is equal to s/t. The speed and direction of a body's motion together determine the body's velocityvelocity, change in displacement with respect to time. Displacement is the vector counterpart of distance, having both magnitude and direction. Velocity is therefore also a vector quantity. The magnitude of velocity is known as the speed of a body. ..... Click the link for more information. .Speed The time rate of change of position of a body without regard to direction. It is the numerical magnitude only of a velocity and hence is a scalar quantity. Linear speed is commonly measured in such units as meters per second, miles per hour, or feet per second. Average linear speed is the ratio of the length of the path traversed by a body to the elapsed time during which the body moved through that path. Instantaneous speed is the limiting value of the foregoing ratio as the elapsed time approaches zero. See Velocity speed[spēd] (graphic arts) The sensitivity of a photographic film, expressed according to one of several scales. (mechanics) The time rate of change of position of a body without regard to direction; in other words, the magnitude of the velocity vector. (optics) The light-gathering power of a lens, expressed as the reciprocal of the f number. The time that a camera shutter is open. (physics) In general, the rapidity with which a process takes place. Speedan “illiterate loiterer”; slow-moving servant. [Br. Lit.: Two Gentlemen of Verona]See: Lazinessspeed1. Physicsa. a scalar measure of the rate of movement of a body expressed either as the distance travelled divided by the time taken (average speed) or the rate of change of position with respect to time at a particular point (instantaneous speed). It is measured in metres per second, miles per hour, etc. b. (not in technical usage) another word for velocity2. a rate of rotation, usually expressed in revolutions per unit time 3. a gear ratio in a motor vehicle, bicycle, etc. 4. Photog a numerical expression of the sensitivity to light of a particular type of film, paper, or plate 5. Photog a measure of the ability of a lens to pass light from an object to the image position, determined by the aperture and also the transmitting power of the lens. It increases as the f-number is decreased and vice versa 6. a slang word for amphetamineSPEEDEarly system on LGP-30. Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959).speed
speed (spēd), The magnitude of velocity without regard to direction. Compare: velocity. speed (spēd)n. Slang A stimulant drug, especially amphetamine or methamphetamine.v. sped (spĕd) or speeded, speeding, speeds v.intr. Slang To be under the influence of a stimulant drug.Drug slang A regional street synonym for amphetamine, which may also refer to methamphetamine and crack cocaine Vox populi Rapidity of movementSPEED Cardiology A clinical trial–Strategies for Patency Enhancement in the Emergency Department
speed Drug slang A street synonym for amphetamine, which may also refer to methamphetamine and crackspeed (spēd) The magnitude of velocity without regard to direction. Compare: velocityspeed Related to speed: Speed testspeedn. street slang for methamphetamine, a drug in a chrystaline form which supposedly stimulates the senses, is popular with some illicit drug users, and is addictive. It smells bad, has serious unhealthy side effects, and its possession, use and sale without a prescription are all crimes. (See: narcotics, controlled substance) Speed
SpeedRelated: Prepayment speedSpeed1. In mortgage-backed securities, the estimated rate at which homeowners will pay off the underlying mortgages of an MBS. The equivalent of the coupon on a mortgage-backed security is a percentage of the interest and principal paid on the mortgages backing the security. A risk associated with mortgage-backed securities is that too many homeowners will pay off their mortgages with too much speed, depriving the holder of the MBS from future interest payments.See SP
SPEED
Acronym | Definition |
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SPEED➣School of Professional Education and Executive Development | SPEED➣Systems Planning, Engineering, and Evaluation Device | SPEED➣Scottish Power Electronics and Electric Drives | SPEED➣Strategic Plan for Educational Enhancement and Development (Ministry of Education - Grenada) | SPEED➣Systemwide Project for Electronic Equipment at Depots | SPEED➣Special Procedures for Expediting Equipment Development |
speed Related to speed: Speed testSynonyms for speednoun rateSynonyms- rate
- pace
- momentum
- tempo
- velocity
noun velocitySynonyms- velocity
- swiftness
- acceleration
- precipitation
- rapidity
- quickness
- fastness
- briskness
- speediness
- precipitateness
noun swiftnessSynonyms- swiftness
- rush
- hurry
- expedition
- haste
- rapidity
- quickness
- fleetness
- celerity
Antonyms- slowness
- sluggishness
- tardiness
- delay
verb raceSynonyms- race
- rush
- hurry
- zoom
- career
- bomb (along)
- tear
- flash
- belt (along)
- barrel (along)
- sprint
- gallop
- hasten
- press on
- quicken
- lose no time
- get a move on
- burn rubber
- bowl along
- put your foot down
- step on it
- make haste
- go hell for leather
- exceed the speed limit
- go like a bomb
- go like the wind
- go like a bat out of hell
Antonyms- creep
- crawl
- take your time
- dawdle
- tarry
verb exceed the speed limitSynonyms- exceed the speed limit
- drive too fast
- break the speed limit
verb helpSynonyms- help
- further
- advance
- aid
- promote
- boost
- assist
- facilitate
- fast-track
- impel
- expedite
Antonyms- slow
- delay
- hold up
- hamper
- hinder
- retard
- slow down
phrase speed something upSynonyms- accelerate
- promote
- hasten
- help along
- further
- forward
- advance
Synonyms for speednoun rate of motion or performanceSynonymsnoun rapidness of movement or activitySynonyms- celerity
- dispatch
- expedition
- expeditiousness
- fleetness
- haste
- hurry
- hustle
- quickness
- rapidity
- rapidness
- speediness
- swiftness
verb to increase the speed ofSynonyms- accelerate
- expedite
- hasten
- hurry
- hustle
- quicken
- step up
verb to move swiftlySynonyms- bolt
- bucket
- bustle
- dart
- dash
- festinate
- flash
- fleet
- flit
- fly
- haste
- hasten
- hurry
- hustle
- pelt
- race
- rocket
- run
- rush
- sail
- scoot
- scour
- shoot
- sprint
- tear
- trot
- whirl
- whisk
- whiz
- wing
- zip
- zoom
- hotfoot
- rip
- barrel
- highball
- nip
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