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单词 kite
释义 kite
I. \ˈkīt, usu -īd.+V\ noun
(-s)
Etymology: Middle English, from Old English cȳta; akin to Middle High German kūze owl, Old Norse kȳta to quarrel, Greek goan to lament, Lithuanian gausti to sound drone — more at comely
1. : any of various usually rather small hawks of the family Accipitridae that have long narrow wings, a deeply forked tail, a weak bill, and feet adapted for taking such prey as insects and small reptiles, that feed also on offal, and that are noted for graceful sustained flight; specifically : a common comparatively large European scavenger (Milvus milvus) with chiefly reddish brown plumage — compare black kite, black-shouldered kite, swallow-tailed kite, white-tailed kite
2. : a person that preys on others
3. : a contrivance consisting of a surface of a light material stretched over a light often diamond-shaped framework, often provided with a balancing tail, and intended to be flown in the air at the end of a long string — see box kite
4.
 a. : accommodation bill
 b. : a check drawn against uncollected funds in a bank account
 c. : a check that has been fraudulently raised before cashing
5. kites plural : the lightest and usually the loftiest sails (as skysails, spinnakers) ordinarily carried only in a light breeze — called also flying kites
6. : something suggested or tried in order to see how people react : a tentative proposal or venture : trial balloon, feeler
 < published what has all the appearance of being a kite for his whole project — Peter Ure >
7.
 a. : a drag to be towed under water at any depth up to about 40 fathoms that on striking bottom is upset and rises to the surface — called also sentry
 b. : a device (as a heavy wooden platform) attached to a submerged line towed by a mine sweeper or between two vessels to make the line tow at a predetermined depth for clearing mined areas
8.
 a. : a heavier-than-air aircraft which is without propelling means other than the towline pull and whose support is derived from the force of the wind moving past its surfaces
 b. slang Britain : airplane
9. : a step cut for a gem having a diamond shape and eight quadrilateral facets
10. : a letter smuggled past prison censorship
II. verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
intransitive verb
1. : to get money or credit by a kite; specifically : to create a false bank balance by manipulating deposit accounts
2. : to go in a rapid, carefree, or flighty manner:
 a. : to run or move very fast
  < that dog went kiting down the street traveling all of 20 knots — Kenneth Roberts >
 b. : gallivant
  < would kite off to the movies just about dishwashing time >
  < used to kite around with the other kids in the evening >
 c. : to rise rapidly : soar
  < tin prices kited in world markets … to another record high — Wall Street Journal >
 d. : to leave suddenly : decamp
  < walked out on me … took the boys and kited — Vance Bourjaily >
3. : to fly a hawk-shaped paper kite over the haunts of game birds (as grouse) to frighten them into lying close
transitive verb
1. : to cause to soar; specifically : to inflate (as a price) in amount
 < war-risk insurance has kited shipping costs skyward — Time >
2. : to use (a kite) to get money or credit
 < had kited the worthless draft on innocent victims — M.M.Hunt >
specifically : to raise the amount of (a check) by fraud before cashing it
 < a $27.50 check could be kited to $327.50 — Newsweek >
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更新时间:2025/1/11 14:33:27