| 释义 | 
		Definition of perforate in English: perforateverb ˈpəːfəreɪtˈpərfəˌreɪt [with object]often as adjective perforated1Pierce and make a hole or holes in.  Example sentencesExamples -  Typically, the instrument has seven finger holes and one thumb hole together with a flaring bell, often perforated by several sound holes.
 -  Instead, clusters of pits located almost anywhere along the vessel have perforated or porose pit membranes.
 -  The ring and disk were perforated by ten holes each, and gravity tended to align the holes ten times per revolution.
 -  The page will also be perforated with the holder's image.
 -  One side of each box is perforated with small holes and the opposite side is an open, plain square of light.
 -  During the routine operation, her bowel was perforated.
 -  It's a uniquely hard limestone that can be perforated in a way, he says, that no other limestone can.
 -  Its buildings are wooden huts perforated by bullet holes.
 -  One of the stab wounds had perforated his heart.
 -  A possible explanation was that part of the disc being removed had perforated the artery - there was no suggestion that any surgical implement had caused the damage.
 -  Frozen in place, he noted how the red costume was perforated with holes of varying sizes, and that the flesh beneath was a sickly gray.
 -  Many of the victims' eardrums have been perforated because of the noise.
 -  The cell wall is usually delicately ornamented and perforated by minute holes.
 -  At one end it is equipped either with a finely woven basket-work bulb or one of metal perforated with minute holes, so as to prevent the particles of the tea leaves from being drawn up into the mouth.
 -  The muscle is incorporated because it acts as a vehicle for perforating blood vessels that supply the overlying skin and fat and that originate from the deep inferior epigastric artery.
 -  From shoes to gloves to bags, it's no secret that perforated leather is in.
 -  His image perforated my train of thoughts for couple of hours.
 -  If there is fluid around the structure the appendix may have perforated.
 -  In rare cases the eardrum will become perforated (a hole will form in it), and pus will then be seen running out of the ear.
 -  Here, stiff strips of paper have been tinted a dull green or brown by a chlorophyll wash and perforated with a hole punch.
 
  Synonyms pierce, penetrate, enter, puncture, prick, bore through, riddle, hole, make/punch/put holes in - 1.1 Make a row of small holes in (paper) so that a part may be torn off easily.
 continuous stationery is perforated to allow separation into single sheets  Example sentencesExamples -  I want tablecloths made out of woven fabric, not perforated butcher paper.
 -  The chocolate is accessed by a perforated tear strip on the back face of the card.
 -  Why on earth, one of you asks, do we still have round road tax discs and waste all that paper, and effort, as we tear off the perforated bits?
 -  I had picked it out just for him too, tore it out of that huge perforated book that my mom had bought for me that year.
 -  However,… the world does not in fact break easily along neatly perforated lines.
 -  The inside page was a perforated absentee ballot application which was returned to our post office box.
 -  I picked a very cool Valentine for him out of my huge Valentine's book, the kind where the cards had perforated edges and were just torn out.
 -  Available in the form of rolls, the sacks are torn off at perforated sections.
 -  The large sheet of folded and perforated paper contains 2 ballot papers and a declaration of identity.
 
  
 
 adjective ˈpəːf(ə)rətˈpərfəˌreɪt Biology Medicine Perforated.  Example sentencesExamples -  One possibility would be to look for preserved hyphae in Ediacaran fossils and in associated microbial mats, specifically hyphae with perforate cell walls.
 -  The perforate, thin-walled structure to the bowl-shaped sponge is distinctive, particularly where the relatively close, but irregular, packing of the various ranked canals and ostia is evident.
 -  The basic morphology consists of two nested, perforate cones connected by a series of septa.
 -  Usually, an open surgical technique is performed to interrupt the flow of these incompetent perforate veins.
 -  All multinucleate and uninucleate components of the larva are connected by perforate plugged junctions.
 
 
 Origin   Late Middle English (as an adjective): from Latin perforat- 'pierced through', from the verb perforare, from per- 'through' + forare 'pierce'.    Definition of perforate in US English: perforateverbˈpərfəˌreɪt [with object]1Pierce and make a hole or holes in.  the worms had perforated the pages of the book from cover to cover  Example sentencesExamples -  His image perforated my train of thoughts for couple of hours.
 -  In rare cases the eardrum will become perforated (a hole will form in it), and pus will then be seen running out of the ear.
 -  Many of the victims' eardrums have been perforated because of the noise.
 -  The ring and disk were perforated by ten holes each, and gravity tended to align the holes ten times per revolution.
 -  Here, stiff strips of paper have been tinted a dull green or brown by a chlorophyll wash and perforated with a hole punch.
 -  The cell wall is usually delicately ornamented and perforated by minute holes.
 -  If there is fluid around the structure the appendix may have perforated.
 -  At one end it is equipped either with a finely woven basket-work bulb or one of metal perforated with minute holes, so as to prevent the particles of the tea leaves from being drawn up into the mouth.
 -  A possible explanation was that part of the disc being removed had perforated the artery - there was no suggestion that any surgical implement had caused the damage.
 -  During the routine operation, her bowel was perforated.
 -  Frozen in place, he noted how the red costume was perforated with holes of varying sizes, and that the flesh beneath was a sickly gray.
 -  From shoes to gloves to bags, it's no secret that perforated leather is in.
 -  It's a uniquely hard limestone that can be perforated in a way, he says, that no other limestone can.
 -  Typically, the instrument has seven finger holes and one thumb hole together with a flaring bell, often perforated by several sound holes.
 -  The page will also be perforated with the holder's image.
 -  The muscle is incorporated because it acts as a vehicle for perforating blood vessels that supply the overlying skin and fat and that originate from the deep inferior epigastric artery.
 -  One of the stab wounds had perforated his heart.
 -  Instead, clusters of pits located almost anywhere along the vessel have perforated or porose pit membranes.
 -  One side of each box is perforated with small holes and the opposite side is an open, plain square of light.
 -  Its buildings are wooden huts perforated by bullet holes.
 
  Synonyms pierce, penetrate, enter, puncture, prick, bore through, riddle, hole, make holes in, punch holes in, put holes in - 1.1 Make a row of small holes in (paper) so that a part may be torn off easily.
 Example sentencesExamples -  I had picked it out just for him too, tore it out of that huge perforated book that my mom had bought for me that year.
 -  I want tablecloths made out of woven fabric, not perforated butcher paper.
 -  However,… the world does not in fact break easily along neatly perforated lines.
 -  I picked a very cool Valentine for him out of my huge Valentine's book, the kind where the cards had perforated edges and were just torn out.
 -  The large sheet of folded and perforated paper contains 2 ballot papers and a declaration of identity.
 -  Why on earth, one of you asks, do we still have round road tax discs and waste all that paper, and effort, as we tear off the perforated bits?
 -  The inside page was a perforated absentee ballot application which was returned to our post office box.
 -  Available in the form of rolls, the sacks are torn off at perforated sections.
 -  The chocolate is accessed by a perforated tear strip on the back face of the card.
 
  
 
 adjectiveˈpərfəˌreɪt Medicine Biology Perforated.  Example sentencesExamples -  Usually, an open surgical technique is performed to interrupt the flow of these incompetent perforate veins.
 -  The perforate, thin-walled structure to the bowl-shaped sponge is distinctive, particularly where the relatively close, but irregular, packing of the various ranked canals and ostia is evident.
 -  One possibility would be to look for preserved hyphae in Ediacaran fossils and in associated microbial mats, specifically hyphae with perforate cell walls.
 -  The basic morphology consists of two nested, perforate cones connected by a series of septa.
 -  All multinucleate and uninucleate components of the larva are connected by perforate plugged junctions.
 
 
 Origin   Late Middle English (as an adjective): from Latin perforat- ‘pierced through’, from the verb perforare, from per- ‘through’ + forare ‘pierce’.     |