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单词 ladder
释义

ladder

noun
 
/ˈlædə(r)/
/ˈlædər/
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  1. enlarge image
     
    a piece of equipment for climbing up and down a wall, the side of a building, etc., consisting of two lengths of wood or metal that are joined together by steps or rungs
    • to climb up/fall off a ladder
    see also rope ladder, stepladder
    Extra Examples
    • He went up the ladder onto the deck.
    • I was standing lower down the ladder.
    • Several of the ladder's rungs were broken.
    • She was up a ladder fixing the roof.
    • We put up the ladder against the wall.
    • We put up the ladder and went to get the paint.
    Topics Houses and homesb2, Buildingsb2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • rickety
    • metal
    • wooden
    verb + ladder
    • ascend
    • clamber up
    • climb
    preposition
    • on a/​the ladder
    • up a/​the ladder
    • down a/​the ladder
    phrases
    • the bottom of a ladder
    • the foot of a ladder
    • the top of a ladder
    See full entry
  2.  
    [usually singular] a series of stages by which you can make progress in your life or career
    • to move up or down the social ladder
    • the career ladder
    • (British English) to get onto the property ladder (= buy your first home)
    Extra Examples
    • His good looks helped him on the ladder to success.
    • She was anxious to move up the promotion ladder.
    • creatures higher up the evolutionary ladder
    • helping her on the ladder to success
    • the ladder of fame
    • the old problem of how to get onto the first step on the ladder
    • the people at the top of the social ladder
    • Ann is on the bottom rung of the promotional ladder.
    • He progressed up the ladder and is now a partner in the firm.
    • How quickly you move up the career ladder depends largely on your level of commitment.
    • Humans are relative newcomers on the evolutionary ladder.
    • I started out at the very bottom of the ladder.
    • It is increasingly difficult for young people to get on the housing ladder.
    • She was not interested in climbing the corporate ladder.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • economic
    • evolutionary
    • social
    verb + ladder
    • ascend
    • climb
    • move up
    preposition
    • higher up the ladder
    • lower down the ladder
    • ladder of
    phrases
    • get one foot on the ladder
    • have one foot on the ladder
    • a rung on the ladder
    See full entry
  3. (British English)
    (North American English run)
    a long, thin hole in tights or stockings where some threads have broken
    • I've got a ladder in my new tights.
    Topics Clothes and Fashionc2
  4. (also ladder tournament)
    a competition in a particular sport or game in which teams or players are arranged in a list and they can move up the list by defeating one of the teams or players above
    • He’s third on the tennis ladder at work.
  5. Word OriginOld English hlǣd(d)er, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch leer and German Leiter.

ladder

verb
/ˈlædə(r)/
/ˈlædər/
[intransitive, transitive] (British English)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they ladder
/ˈlædə(r)/
/ˈlædər/
he / she / it ladders
/ˈlædəz/
/ˈlædərz/
past simple laddered
/ˈlædəd/
/ˈlædərd/
past participle laddered
/ˈlædəd/
/ˈlædərd/
-ing form laddering
/ˈlædərɪŋ/
/ˈlædərɪŋ/
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  1. ladder (something) if tights or stockings ladder or you ladder them, a long, thin hole appears in them
    Word OriginOld English hlǣd(d)er, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch leer and German Leiter.
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更新时间:2024/11/15 9:41:31