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单词 knock the daylights out of
释义

day /dā/

noun
  1. The time from sunrise to sunset
  2. Twenty-four hours, from midnight to midnight (formerly by some reckoned from sunrise, or sunset, or (by astronomers) from noon)
  3. The time the earth takes to make a revolution on its axis, this being the sidereal day (between two transits of the first point of Aries, or approximately of the same star), distinguished from the apparent solar day (between two transits of the sun), and the mean solar day (between two transits of the mean, or imaginary uniformly moving, sun)
  4. Morning and afternoon, as opposed to evening and night
  5. The hours devoted to work (working day)
  6. A day set apart for a purpose, such as for receiving visitors
  7. Lifetime
  8. Time of existence, vogue or influence
  9. A time
  10. Daylight
  11. The space between mullions of a window
  12. Ground surface over a mine
ORIGIN: OE dæg; Ger Tag; not L diēs

days adverb (informal)

During the day, each day

day bed noun

  1. A kind of couch or sofa
  2. A hospital bed for a day-patient
  3. A bed for resting on during the day

dayˈ-blindˈness noun

A defect of vision in which objects are best seen by a dim light, hemeralopia

dayˈ-boardˈer noun

A pupil who attends but does not sleep at a boarding school

dayˈboat noun

A small pleasure boat with no sleeping accommodation

day book noun (bookkeeping)

  1. A book for entering the transactions of each day
  2. A book of original entry

dayˈ-boy or dayˈ-girl see day-scholar below.

dayˈbreak noun

Dawn

day care noun

Daytime supervision and help given by trained nursing and other staff to a group of pre-school children, or elderly or disabled people

day care centre or day centre noun

A centre which provides social amenities and/or supervision for elderly or disabled people, vagrants, alcoholics, petty offenders, etc

dayˈ-coal noun

The upper stratum of coal

dayˈdream noun

A pleasant fantasy or reverie (also intransitive verb)

dayˈdreamer noun

dayˈflower noun

A tropical plant of the Commelina genus with fast-wilting blue flowers

dayˈ-fly noun

A mayfly

day hospital noun

A hospital where patients receive treatment or therapy during the day and return home or to another hospital at night

dayˈ-lāˈbour noun

Labour paid by the day

dayˈ-lāˈbourer noun

dayˈ-length noun (botany)

The number of hours of daylight in a day, a trigger for flowering in some plants

dayˈ-level noun (mining)

A level driven from the surface

dayˈlight noun

  1. The light of day
  2. A clear space

daylight lamp noun (physics)

A lamp which emits light of wavelengths similar to those of ordinary daylight

daylight robbery see under rob1

dayˈlight-savˈing noun

Increasing the amount of daylight available for work or play, by advancing the clock, usu by one hour

Daylight Saving Time noun

The time adopted for daylight-saving purposes

day lily noun

A plant (genus Hemerocallis) whose blossoms last only for a day

dayˈlong adjective

During the whole day

dayˈmark noun

An unlighted sea-mark

day name noun (W Afr)

A personal name given to indicate the day of the week on which the person was born

day-neutral plant noun (botany)

A plant in which flowering is not sensitive to day-length

day nursery noun

A place where young children are cared for while their parents work

day of action noun

A day designated by an organization for industrial action, demonstrations, etc in support of a cause

Day of Atonement noun

Yom Kippur

day off noun

A day's holiday

Day of Judgement noun

The day of God's final judgement on mankind

dayˈ-old adjective

One day old

day one noun

  1. The first day
  2. The very beginning

day out noun

  1. A day spent away from home for pleasure, as a holiday, etc
  2. A servant's free day (archaic)

dayˈpack noun (US)

A daysack

dayˈ-patient noun

A hospital patient who attends for treatment (eg minor surgery) and goes home the same day

dayˈ-peep noun (literary; Milton)

Dawn

day release noun

A system by which workers are freed from employment during the day so as to attend an educational course

day-releaseˈ adjective

day return noun

  1. A usu reduced rail or bus fare for a journey to a place and back on the same day
  2. A ticket for this type of journey

day room noun

A room used as a communal living room in a school, hospital or hostel, etc

dayˈsack noun

A small rucksack for use on short walks or hikes

dayˈsailor or dayˈsailer noun

A dayboat powered by sail

dayˈ-scholar noun

A pupil who attends a boarding school during the school-hours, but lives at home (also dayˈ-boy or dayˈ-girl)

day school noun

A school held during the day, as opposed both to a night school and to a boarding school

day shift noun

  1. A group of workers that takes its turn during the day
  2. The daytime period of work

dayˈ-sight noun

Night-blindness

daysˈman noun (archaic)

  1. A person who appoints a day to hear a cause
  2. An umpire

Days of Awe plural noun

High Holidays (qv under high1)

days of grace plural noun

Three days allowed for payment of bills, etc beyond the day named

dayˈspring noun (literary)

Dawn

dayˈstar noun

  1. The morning star
  2. The sun (poetic)

day surgery noun

Minor surgery that is carried out in hospital on a patient who goes home the same day

dayˈtale /-tāl or -təl/ or dāˈtal /-təl/ noun (old)

Reckoning by the day, esp of work or wages

dayˈtaler or daˈtaller /-təl-ər/ noun

A day-labourer

dayˈtime noun

  1. The time of daylight
  2. Day as opposed to evening and night
adjective

Happening during the day

dayˈ-to-dayˈ adjective

  1. Daily, routine
  2. Short-term

day trader noun

A person who buys and sells securities on the same day with a view to making quick profits from price movements

day trading noun

day trip noun

A trip made to somewhere and back within one day

dayˈ-tripper noun

dayˈwear noun

Clothes intended for wearing during the day or informally

dayˈ-weaˈried adjective (Shakespeare)

Wearied with the work of the day

dayˈ-work noun

all in a (or the) day's work

A normal or acceptable part of one's job or of what one is doing

at the end of the day (informal)

When all is said and done

back in the day (informal)

At some earlier time

call it a day

To announce a decision to cease

day about

On alternate days

day by day

Daily

day in, day out

For an indefinite succession of days

from day to day

Concerned only with the present

have had its (or one's) day

To have become worn-out or useless

in the cold light of day

In full and impartial knowledge of the facts

in this day and age

At the present time

knock or beat the (living) daylights out of (informal)

To beat severely

make someone's day

To make the day memorable for someone

one day or one of these days

At some indefinite time in the (near) future

scare the (living) daylights out of (informal)

To terrify

see daylight

To arrive at some comprehension, illumination or prospect of a solution

that will be the day (informal)

That is very unlikely

the day

  1. The time spoken of or expected
  2. Today (Scot)

the day after the fair

Too late

the other day

Not long ago

the time of day

  1. The hour of the clock
  2. A greeting

those were the days

Those times were the best

win the day

To gain the victory

knock /nok/

intransitive verb
  1. To strike hard or heavily
  2. To drive or be driven against something
  3. To strike esp a door for admittance
  4. To rap
  5. To make a noise by, or as if by, striking
  6. (of machinery) to rattle or clank regularly
  7. (of an internal-combustion engine) to make the noise caused by detonation
transitive verb
  1. To strike
  2. To drive against
  3. To bring to a specified state or position by striking or pushing
  4. To make by striking
  5. To impress strongly, stun, daze, confound (slang)
  6. To disparage, criticize in a carping way (informal)
  7. To approach (a specified age) (informal)
  8. To have sexual intercourse with (slang)
noun
  1. A sudden stroke
  2. A rap
  3. The noise of detonation in an internal-combustion engine
  4. A reversal, shock, setback (informal)
  5. A criticism (informal)
  6. An innings, a spell at batting (cricket)
  7. A clock (Scot)
ORIGIN: OE cnocian; perh imit

knockˈer noun

  1. Someone who knocks
  2. A device suspended on a door for making a knock
  3. A carper or critic (informal)
  4. (in pl) a woman's breasts (slang)
  5. Someone who makes unsolicited door-to-door calls on domestic householders, eg hoping to buy valuables from them, or selling, etc
  6. A goblin thought to inhabit a mine who points out the presence of ore by knocks (dialect)

knockˈing noun

  1. A beating on a door
  2. A rap
  3. A noise as if of something that knocks
  4. Knock in an internal-combustion engine
  5. The practice of making unsolicited calls on householders, eg hoping to buy valuables from them

knockˈabout noun

  1. A boisterous performance with horseplay
  2. A performer of such turns
  3. Someone who does odd jobs, esp on a station (Aust)
  4. A small yacht without a bowsprit (N American)
  5. A small motor car suitable for doing short journeys

adjective

  1. Boisterous (orig theatre)
  2. Suitable for rough use (obsolete)

knockˈ-back noun

  1. A setback
  2. A refusal or rejection (slang)
  3. A refusal of parole from prison (slang)

knockˈ-down noun

  1. An act or instance of knocking down
  2. An introduction (US, Aust and NZ informal)

adjective

  1. Such as to overthrow, powerful
  2. Adapted for being taken to pieces
  3. (of prices) very low

knockedˈ-down adjective

Supplied in parts or kit form for assembly by the purchaser

knockˈer-up noun

A person employed to rouse workers in the morning

knock-for-knock agreement, policy, etc noun

An arrangement between motor insurance companies by which, after an accident involving two cars, each company settles the damage to the car it insures without considering which driver was to blame

knocking copy noun

Advertising material that denigrates competing products

knockˈing-shop or knocking shop noun (slang)

A brothel

knockˈ-knee noun

The state of being knock-kneed

knock-kneedˈ adjective

  1. Having knees that knock or touch in walking
  2. Weak (figurative)

knockˈ-on see knock on and knock-on effect below.

adjective (informal)

Causing or caused by a series of consequences

knockˈout noun

  1. The act of knocking out
  2. A blow that knocks out
  3. A conspiracy among dealers at an auction to keep prices artificially low
  4. Any person or thing of outstanding attraction or excellence (informal)
  5. A knockout competition
  6. See also technical knockout under technical

adjective

  1. (of a competition) eliminating losers at each round
  2. Stunningly attractive or excellent (informal)

knockout auction noun

An auction at which the majority of bidders are dealers in league to keep prices artificially low

knockout drops plural noun (informal)

A drug put in a drink to make the drinker unconscious

knockˈ-rating noun

The measurement of freedom from knocking of a fuel in an internal-combustion engine, as compared with a standard fuel

knockˈ-up noun

(in tennis, etc) practice immediately before a match

knock about or around

  1. To mistreat physically
  2. To discuss informally
  3. To saunter, loaf about
  4. To be around in the area
  5. To travel about, roughing it and having varied experiences
  6. To be a casual friend of, associate with (with with)

knock back (informal)

  1. To drink or eat, esp swiftly
  2. To cost
  3. To shock, disconcert
  4. To rebuff, reject, turn down

knock cold

  1. To knock (someone) out
  2. To shock violently

knock copy

To disparage a rival's products

knock down

  1. To fell with a blow
  2. To demolish
  3. To assign (an article) with a tap of the auctioneer's hammer (to)
  4. To reduce in price (informal)
  5. To spend (one's resources) on a drinking binge (Aust and NZ sl)
  6. To misappropriate, filch (US) (knock-down adjective see above)

knock into a cocked hat see under cock1

knock into the middle of next week (informal)

To hit (someone) very hard

knock off (informal)

  1. To stop work
  2. To stop, discontinue
  3. To accomplish hastily
  4. To deduct
  5. To steal, rob (slang)
  6. To copy illegally, to pirate (slang)
  7. To kill (slang)
  8. To have sexual intercourse with (slang)

knock on

  1. To grow old (informal)
  2. To knock (the ball) forward with the hand or arm (an infringement of the rules in rugby; knockˈ-on noun)

knock-on effect

The effect one action or occurrence has on one or more indirectly related matters or circumstances

knock one's head against a brick wall

To meet with total resistance or refusal to compromise

knock on the head (informal)

To suppress, put an end to

knock on wood see touch wood under touch

knock out

  1. To dislodge by a blow
  2. To strike unconscious or incapable of recovering in time (boxing)
  3. To defeat in a knockout competition
  4. To overcome, demolish, destroy, disable
  5. To produce, esp quickly or roughly (informal)
  6. To tire (oneself) out (slang)
  7. To overwhelm with amazement, admiration, etc (slang)
  8. To disable (a specific gene) in order to study the effect that it has on an organism (genetics)

knock sideways (informal)

To put off one's usual course

knock the bottom out of (informal)

  1. To make, or show to be, invalid
  2. To make ineffectual, bring to nothing

knock the (living) daylights out of see under day

knock together (informal)

To get together or construct hastily

knock under (archaic)

To give in, yield

knock up

  1. To rouse by knocking
  2. To wear out
  3. To construct or arrange hastily
  4. To achieve (a certain score) (games, esp cricket)
  5. To practise immediately before a match (tennis, etc)
  6. To make pregnant (slang)

on the knocker

  1. On credit (slang)
  2. Immediately, on the nail (Aust sl)

up to the knocker (obs sl)

Up to the required standard of excellence or fashion

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更新时间:2025/2/10 10:05:49