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单词 net
释义 net
I. \ˈnet, usu -ed.+V\ noun
(-s)
Usage: often attributive
Etymology: Middle English net, nett, nette, from Old English net, nett; akin to Old Saxon net, netti net, Middle Dutch net, nette, Old High German nezzi, Old Norse net, nōt, Gothic nati net, Latin nodus knot, Old Irish nascim I bind, and probably to Latin nassa fish basket and perhaps to Sanskrit nahyati he binds; basic meaning: to knot, weave
1.
 a. : a meshed arrangement of threads, cords, or ropes that have been twisted, knotted, or woven together at regular intervals
 b. : any of various devices made of net and used especially for catching fish, birds, or insects
 c. : something made of net and used especially for protecting, confining, carrying, or dividing (as a cargo net or tennis net)
2. : something designed to entrap or ensnare
 < a man that flatters his neighbor spreads a net for his feet — Prov 29:5 (Revised Standard Version) >
 < the engineer cannot escape the net of circumstances in which he is caught — W.P.Webb >
3.
 a. : a machine-twisted fabric in fine to coarse geometric meshes made usually of silk, rayon, nylon, or cotton and used for dresses, curtains, veils, or trimmings
 b. : a handmade or machine-made background fabric for lace usually in fine geometric meshes
4. : something resembling a net in reticulation : a network of lines, fibers, or figures
 < a perfect net of steamer, bus and air service — Frederick Arnold >
5.
 a. : a three-sided structure that consists of poles and netting enclosing a wicket and that is used in cricket for batting and bowling practice
 b. : a three-sided structure enclosed in netting and used as a goal in hockey or lacrosse — often used in plural
 c. : a return of the ball in a racket game that goes into the net
6.
 a. : a rigging of ropes and twine on a free balloon that supports the weight of the basket and distributes the load over the entire upper surface of the envelope
 b. : a rectangular net of cordage used to restrain the envelope of a kite, balloon, or airship during inflation and before the car is attached
7.
 a. : a group of communications stations operating under unified control on assigned frequencies and in accordance with a plan for the systematic handling and relay of radio traffic
  < Army radio net >
 b. : network 5
8. : a device made usually of canvas stretched in a frame and used for catching persons leaping from a building or other structure
II. verb
(netted ; netted ; netting ; nets)
transitive verb
1. : to cover or enclose with or as if with a net
 < to leave his favorite tree … after … netting it to keep off the birds — Maria Edgeworth >
 < how dense a fold of danger nets him round — Alfred Tennyson >
2. : to make in the style of or by means of network
 < is netting herself the sweetest cloak you can conceive — Jane Austen >
3. : to catch as if in a net : capture by stratagem or wile
 < and now I am here, netted and in the toils — Sir Walter Scott >
4.
 a. : to use nets in for catching fish
  < netted the wallow and brought out scores of small fish — Francis Birtles >
 b. : to catch by means of a net
  < netted 15 tons of smelt in 10 minutes — American Guide Series: Michigan >
5. : to cover with or as if with a network
 < her high plump cheeks were netted with little purple veins — Marguerite Steen >
6. : to hit (a ball) into the net for the loss of a point in a racket game
intransitive verb
1. : to make nets or netting
 < was netting away as if nothing unusual had occurred — Elizabeth C. Gaskell >
2. : to hit a ball into the net for the loss of a point in a racket game
3. : to combine into a communications net or network
III. adjective
Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French — more at neat (bright)
1. archaic : neat, trim
2. obsolete : clean, bright
3. : free from all charges or deductions: as
 a. : remaining after the deduction of all charges, outlay, or loss
  < net earnings >
  < net proceeds >
  — opposed to gross
 b. : excluding all tare or tret
  < net weight >
4.
 a. : free from adulteration : pure
  < net wine >
 b. : excluding all nonessential or extraneous considerations : basic, fundamental
  < the net effect is one that disturbs many scholars — C.V.Newsom >
  < the net result is a huge canvas of small-town life — C.J.Rolo >
IV. transitive verb
(netted ; netted ; netting ; nets)
1.
 a. : to make by way of profit : clear
  < netted $8000 a year from the restaurant >
 b. : to produce by way of profit : yield
  < the restaurant netted $8000 a year >
2. : to get possession, control, use, or benefit of : gain
 < war experiences which netted him just about all the decorations there are — Clarence Woodbury >
 < netting us less security than we would otherwise enjoy — Sidney Hook >
V. noun
(-s)
1. : a net amount, profit, weight, or price
 < reduced taxes … partly accounted for the high netTime >
2. : the score of a golfer in a handicap match after deducting his handicap from his gross
3. : the fundamental point : essence, gist
 < the net of all these articles is that competition is dying — Raymond Moley >
VI. transitive verb
(netted ; netted ; netting ; nets)
Etymology: Middle French netir, from Old French, from net clean, pure, bright — more at neat
dialect chiefly England : wash, rinse
VII. noun
Usage: often capitalized
Etymology: by shortening
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更新时间:2024/11/11 10:23:24