释义 |
enter
enterto come or go into; penetrate: enter a room; enter the bloodstream Not to be confused with:inter – place in a grave or tomb: They will inter him tomorrow.intern – to restrict or confine within prescribed limits, as prisoners of war: They will intern the prisoners at the camp for at least a month.en·ter E0158200 (ĕn′tər)v. en·tered, en·ter·ing, en·ters v.tr.1. To come or go into: The train entered the tunnel.2. To penetrate; pierce: The bullet entered the victim's skull.3. To introduce; insert: She entered the probe into the patient's artery.4. a. To become a participant, member, or part of; join: too old to enter the army; entered the discussion at a crucial moment.b. To gain admission to (a school, for example).5. To cause to become a participant, member, or part of; enroll: entered the children in private school; entered dahlias in a flower show.6. To embark on; begin: With Sputnik, the Soviet Union entered the space age.7. To make a beginning in; take up: entered medicine.8. To write or put in: entered our names in the guest book; enters the data into the computer.9. To place formally on record; submit: enter a plea of not guilty; enter a complaint.10. To go to or occupy in order to claim possession of (land).11. To report (a ship or cargo) to customs.v.intr.1. To come or go in; make an entry: As the president entered, the band played "Hail to the Chief."2. To effect penetration.3. To become a member or participant.n. A key on a keyboard or keypad used to enter or confirm a command or other textual input.Phrasal Verbs: enter into1. To participate in; take an active role or interest in: enter into politics; enter into negotiations.2. To become party to (a contract): The nations entered into a trade agreement.3. To become a component of; form a part of: Financial matters entered into the discussion.4. To consider; investigate: The report entered into the effect of high interest rates on the market. enter on (or upon)1. To set out on; begin: We enter on a new era in our history.2. To begin considering; take up: After discussing the budget deficit, they entered on the problem of raising taxes.3. To take possession of: She entered upon the estate of her uncle. [Middle English entren, from Old French entrer, from Latin intrāre, from intrā, inside; see en in Indo-European roots.] en′ter·a·ble adj.enter (ˈɛntə) vb1. to come or go into (a place, house, etc)2. to penetrate or pierce3. (tr) to introduce or insert4. to join (a party, organization, etc)5. (when: intr, foll by into) to become involved or take part (in): to enter a game; to enter into an agreement. 6. (tr) to record (an item such as a commercial transaction) in a journal, account, register, etc7. (tr) to record (a name, etc) on a list8. (tr) to present or submit: to enter a proposal. 9. (Theatre) (intr) theatre to come on stage: used as a stage direction: enter Juliet. 10. (when: intr, often foll by into, on, or upon) to begin; start: to enter upon a new career. 11. (often foll by: upon) to come into possession (of)12. (Law) (tr) to place (evidence, a plea, etc) before a court of law or upon the court records13. (Law) (tr) law a. to go onto and occupy (land)b. chiefly US to file a claim to (public lands)[C13: from Old French entrer, from Latin intrāre to go in, from intrā within] ˈenterable adj ˈenterer nen•ter (ˈɛn tər) v.t. 1. to come or go in or into: to enter a room; The thought never entered my mind. 2. to penetrate or pierce: The bullet entered the flesh. 3. to put in or insert. 4. to become a member of; join. 5. to cause to be admitted, as into a school or a competition: to enter a horse in a race. 6. to begin upon; engage or become involved in: to enter the medical profession. 7. to share in; have an intuitive understanding of: able to enter the spirit of the work. 8. to make a record of; record or register. 9. Law. a. to make a formal record of (a fact). b. to occupy or take possession of (lands), esp. under rightful claim. 10. to put forward, submit, or register formally: to enter an objection; to enter a bid. v.i. 11. to come or go in. 12. to be admitted, as into a school or competition. 13. to make a beginning (often fol. by on or upon): to enter upon a new phase in history. 14. to come upon the stage (used in stage directions, often as a 3rd person imperative): Enter Othello. 15. enter into, a. to participate in; engage in. b. to investigate; consider. c. to sympathize with; share in. d. to form a constituent part or ingredient of. [1200–50; < Old French entrer < Latin intrāre to enter, derivative of intrā within] en′ter•a•ble, adj. en′ter•er, n. enter go into">go into come into">come into1. 'enter'If you enter a room or building, you go into it. Colonel Rolland entered a small cafe.Enter can be used without an object. They stopped talking as soon as they saw Brody enter.2. 'go into' and 'come into'Enter is a rather formal word, and you do not usually use it in conversation. Instead you say that someone goes into or comes into a room or building. He shut the street door behind me as I went in.Boylan came silently into the room.enter Past participle: entered Gerund: entering
Present |
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I enter | you enter | he/she/it enters | we enter | you enter | they enter |
Preterite |
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I entered | you entered | he/she/it entered | we entered | you entered | they entered |
Present Continuous |
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I am entering | you are entering | he/she/it is entering | we are entering | you are entering | they are entering |
Present Perfect |
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I have entered | you have entered | he/she/it has entered | we have entered | you have entered | they have entered |
Past Continuous |
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I was entering | you were entering | he/she/it was entering | we were entering | you were entering | they were entering |
Past Perfect |
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I had entered | you had entered | he/she/it had entered | we had entered | you had entered | they had entered |
Future |
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I will enter | you will enter | he/she/it will enter | we will enter | you will enter | they will enter |
Future Perfect |
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I will have entered | you will have entered | he/she/it will have entered | we will have entered | you will have entered | they will have entered |
Future Continuous |
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I will be entering | you will be entering | he/she/it will be entering | we will be entering | you will be entering | they will be entering |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been entering | you have been entering | he/she/it has been entering | we have been entering | you have been entering | they have been entering |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been entering | you will have been entering | he/she/it will have been entering | we will have been entering | you will have been entering | they will have been entering |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been entering | you had been entering | he/she/it had been entering | we had been entering | you had been entering | they had been entering |
Conditional |
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I would enter | you would enter | he/she/it would enter | we would enter | you would enter | they would enter |
Past Conditional |
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I would have entered | you would have entered | he/she/it would have entered | we would have entered | you would have entered | they would have entered | ThesaurusVerb | 1. | enter - to come or go into; "the boat entered an area of shallow marshes"come in, get in, go in, go into, move into, get intotake the field - go on the playing field, of a football teampenetrate, perforate - pass into or through, often by overcoming resistance; "The bullet penetrated her chest"re-enter - enter again; "You cannot re-enter the country with this visa"file in - enter by marching in a filepop in - enter briefly; "He popped in for two minutes"walk in - enter by walking; "She walks in at all hours, as if she lived here"call at, out in - enter a harbor; "the ship called in Athens"take water - enter the water; "the wild ducks took water"turn in - make an entrance by turning from a road; "Turn in after you see the gate"board, get on - get on board of (trains, buses, ships, aircraft, etc.)intrude, irrupt - enter uninvited; "They intruded on our dinner party"; "She irrupted into our sitting room"encroach upon, intrude on, obtrude upon, invade - to intrude upon, infringe, encroach on, violate; "This new colleague invades my territory"; "The neighbors intrude on your privacy"dock - come into dock; "the ship docked"enter upon, luck into, come upon - take possession of; "She entered upon the estate of her rich relatives"exit, get out, go out, leave - move out of or depart from; "leave the room"; "the fugitive has left the country" | | 2. | enter - become a participant; be involved in; "enter a race"; "enter an agreement"; "enter a drug treatment program"; "enter negotiations"participatejump - enter eagerly into; "He jumped into the game"chuck up the sponge, drop by the wayside, drop out, fall by the wayside, throw in the towel, throw in, give up, quit - give up in the face of defeat of lacking hope; admit defeat; "In the second round, the challenger gave up" | | 3. | enter - register formally as a participant or member; "The party recruited many new members"enrol, enroll, recruit, inscribemuster in, draft, enlist - engage somebody to enter the armyunionise, unionize - recruit for a union or organize into a union; "We don't allow people to come into our plant and try to unionize the workers"register - enroll to vote; "register for an election"matriculate - enroll as a studentregister - record in writing; enter into a book of names or events or transactions | | 4. | enter - be or play a part of or in; "Elections figure prominently in every government program"; "How do the elections figure in the current pattern of internal politics?"figurebe - have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer" | | 5. | enter - make a record of; set down in permanent formrecord, put downrecording, transcription - the act of making a record (especially an audio record); "she watched the recording from a sound-proof booth"chalk up, tally - keep score, as in gamesclock in, clock on, punch in - register one's arrival at workrecord, tape - register electronically; "They recorded her singing"accession - make a record of additions to a collection, such as a librarypost - display, as of records in sports gamesring up - to perform and record a sale on a cash register; "Sally rang up Eve's purchase of tomatoes"manifest - record in a ship's manifest; "each passenger must be manifested"inscribe - write, engrave, or print as a lasting recordchronicle - record in chronological order; make a historical recordfile away, file - place in a container for keeping records; "File these bills, please"document - record in detail; "The parents documented every step of their child's development"log - enter into a log, as on ships and planesclock up, log up - record a distance travelled; on planes and carsfilm, shoot, take - make a film or photograph of something; "take a scene"; "shoot a movie"videotape, tape - record on videotapephotograph, shoot, snap - record on photographic film; "I photographed the scene of the accident"; "She snapped a picture of the President"score, mark - make underscoring marksnotch - notch a surface to record somethingmaintain, keep - maintain by writing regular records; "keep a diary"; "maintain a record"; "keep notes"film - record in film; "The coronation was filmed"save, preserve - to keep up and reserve for personal or special use; "She saved the old family photographs in a drawer"register - record in writing; enter into a book of names or events or transactionsbook - record a charge in a police register; "The policeman booked her when she tried to solicit a man" | | 6. | enter - come on stagedramatic art, dramaturgy, theater, theatre, dramatics - the art of writing and producing plays | | 7. | enter - take on duties or office; "accede to the throne"accedeascend - become king or queen; "She ascended to the throne after the King's death"take office - assume an office, duty, or title; "When will the new President take office?"come after, succeed, follow - be the successor (of); "Carter followed Ford"; "Will Charles succeed to the throne?" | | 8. | enter - put or introduce into something; "insert a picture into the text"infix, insert, introduceattach - cause to be attachedplug in, plug into, connect - plug into an outlet; "Please plug in the toaster!"; "Connect the TV so we can watch the football game tonight"penetrate - insert the penis into the vagina or anus of; "Did the molester penetrate the child?"cannulate, cannulise, cannulize, canulate, intubate - introduce a cannula or tube into; "Cannulate the blood vessel in the neck"input - enter (data or a program) into a computerinstil, instill - enter drop by drop; "instill medication into my eye"embed, imbed, implant, plant, engraft - fix or set securely or deeply; "He planted a knee in the back of his opponent"; "The dentist implanted a tooth in the gum"sandwich - insert or squeeze tightly between two people or objects; "She was sandwiched in her airplane seat between two fat men"graft, transplant - place the organ of a donor into the body of a recipient | | 9. | enter - set out on (an enterprise or subject of study); "she embarked upon a new career"embarkbegin, commence, set out, start, start out, set about, get down, get - take the first step or steps in carrying out an action; "We began working at dawn"; "Who will start?"; "Get working as soon as the sun rises!"; "The first tourists began to arrive in Cambodia"; "He began early in the day"; "Let's get down to work now"take up - pursue or resume; "take up a matter for consideration" |
enterverb1. come or go in or into, arrive, set foot in somewhere, cross the threshold of somewhere, make an entrance He entered and stood near the door. come or go in or into exit, leave, withdraw, go, depart, issue from, take your leave2. penetrate, get in, insert into, pierce, pass into, perforate The bullet entered his right eye.3. join, start work at, begin work at, sign up for, enrol in, become a member of, enlist in, commit yourself to He entered the company as a junior trainee. join resign, leave, retire, withdraw, go, pull out, drop out4. participate in, join (in), be involved in, get involved in, play a part in, partake in, associate yourself with, start to be in A million young people enter the labour market each year.5. begin, start, take up, move into, set about, commence, set out on, embark upon I have entered a new phase in my life.6. compete in, contest, take part in, join in, fight, sign up for, go in for As a boy he entered many music competitions.7. record, note, register, log, list, write down, take down, inscribe, set down, put in writing Prue entered the passage in her notebook, then read it aloud again.8. submit, offer, present, table, register, lodge, tender, put forward, proffer I entered a plea of guilty to the charges.enter into something begin, take part in, undertake, participate in, embark on, get involved with, become involved with I have not entered into any financial agreements with them.enterverb1. To come or go into (a place):come in, go in, penetrate.Nautical: put in.Idioms: gain entrance, set foot in.2. To pass into or through by overcoming resistance:break (through), penetrate, perforate, pierce, puncture.3. To become a member of:enlist, enroll, join, muster in, sign up.Informal: sign on.4. To go about the initial step in doing (something):approach, begin, commence, embark, get off, inaugurate, initiate, institute, launch, lead off, open, set about, set out, set to, start, take on, take up, undertake.Informal: kick off.Idioms: get cracking, get going, get the show on the road.5. To place on a list or in a record:insert, post, record, register.Translationsenter (ˈentə) verb1. to go or come in. Enter by this door. 進去 进去2. to come or go into (a place). He entered the room. 進入 进入3. to give the name of (another person or oneself) for a competition etc. He entered for the race; I entered my pupils for the examination. 報名參加 报名参加4. to write (one's name etc) in a book etc. Did you enter your name in the visitors' book? 把...記入 把...记入5. to start in. She entered his employment last week. 開始從事 开始从事enter into1. to take part in. He entered into an agreement with the film director. 參加 参加2. to take part enthusiastically in. They entered into the Christmas spirit. 熱情地參加 热情地参加3. to begin to discuss. We cannot enter into the question of salaries yet. 開始研討 开始研讨4. to be a part of. The price did not enter into the discussion. 成為...的一部分 成为...的一部分enter on/upon to begin. We have entered upon the new term. 開始,著手 开始,着手 to enter (not enter into) a room. enter
enter(something) by something and enter (something) through something to enter something or some place by way of a certain entrance. We entered the building by the west door. You should enter through the revolving door only.See:- Abandon hope, all ye who enter here
- breaking and entering
- enter
- enter (one's) head
- enter (one's) mind
- enter (one's) name
- enter (up)on (something)
- enter in
- enter in(to) (something)
- enter into
- enter into the spirit
- enter into the spirit (of something)
- enter mind
- enter on
- enter one's mind
- enter somebody's head
- enter somebody's/your name
- enter someone's head
- enter the fray
- enter the lists
- enter the lists, to
- enter upon
- get into the spirit (of something)
- get/enter into the spirit of something
- the iron entered into someone's soul
- the iron enters (into) (someone's) soul
enter
enterThe act of entering data into the computer. After a line of text is typed, pressing the Enter key, also called the "Return key," causes the computer to input the data. See Enter key.MedicalSeeonEnter
EnterTo form a constituent part; to become a part or partaker; to penetrate; share or mix with, as tin enters into the composition of pewter. To go or come into a place or condition; to make or effect an entrance; to cause to go into or be received into. In the law of real property, to go upon land for the purpose of taking possession of it. In strict usage, the entering is preliminary to the taking possession but in common parlance the entry is now merged in the taking possession. To place anything before a court, or upon or among the records, in a formal and regular manner, and usually in writing as in to enter an appearance, or to enter a judgment. In this sense the word is nearly equivalent to setting down formally in writing, in either a full or abridged form. FinancialSeeOnENTER
Acronym | Definition |
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ENTER➣Equivalent National Tertiary Entrance Rank (Australian education system) | ENTER➣Electronic New Testament Educational Resources |
enter
Synonyms for enterverb come or go in or intoSynonyms- come or go in or into
- arrive
- set foot in somewhere
- cross the threshold of somewhere
- make an entrance
Antonyms- exit
- leave
- withdraw
- go
- depart
- issue from
- take your leave
verb penetrateSynonyms- penetrate
- get in
- insert into
- pierce
- pass into
- perforate
verb joinSynonyms- join
- start work at
- begin work at
- sign up for
- enrol in
- become a member of
- enlist in
- commit yourself to
Antonyms- resign
- leave
- retire
- withdraw
- go
- pull out
- drop out
verb participate inSynonyms- participate in
- join (in)
- be involved in
- get involved in
- play a part in
- partake in
- associate yourself with
- start to be in
verb beginSynonyms- begin
- start
- take up
- move into
- set about
- commence
- set out on
- embark upon
verb compete inSynonyms- compete in
- contest
- take part in
- join in
- fight
- sign up for
- go in for
verb recordSynonyms- record
- note
- register
- log
- list
- write down
- take down
- inscribe
- set down
- put in writing
verb submitSynonyms- submit
- offer
- present
- table
- register
- lodge
- tender
- put forward
- proffer
phrase enter into somethingSynonyms- begin
- take part in
- undertake
- participate in
- embark on
- get involved with
- become involved with
Synonyms for enterverb to come or go into (a place)Synonyms- come in
- go in
- penetrate
- put in
verb to pass into or through by overcoming resistanceSynonyms- break
- penetrate
- perforate
- pierce
- puncture
verb to become a member ofSynonyms- enlist
- enroll
- join
- muster in
- sign up
- sign on
verb to go about the initial step in doing (something)Synonyms- approach
- begin
- commence
- embark
- get off
- inaugurate
- initiate
- institute
- launch
- lead off
- open
- set about
- set out
- set to
- start
- take on
- take up
- undertake
- kick off
verb to place on a list or in a recordSynonyms |