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单词 exercise price
释义

exercise /ekˈsər-sīz/

noun
  1. Exertion of the body for health or amusement or the acquisition of a skill
  2. A similar exertion of the mind
  3. A task designed or prescribed for these purposes
  4. A putting in practice
  5. A written school task
  6. A study in music
  7. A set of problems, passages for translation, etc in a text-book
  8. An academic disputation
  9. Accomplishment (Shakespeare)
  10. (in pl) military drill or manoeuvres
  11. A ceremony or formal proceeding (N American)
  12. An act of worship or devotion
  13. A discourse, esp the discussion of a passage of Scripture, giving the coherence of text and context, etc (the addition giving the doctrinal propositions, etc)
  14. A meeting of a presbytery for this purpose
  15. Hence, formerly, the presbytery itself
transitive verb
  1. To put in practice
  2. To use
  3. To train by use
  4. To improve by practice
  5. To give exercise to
  6. To trouble, concern or occupy the thoughts of
  7. To wield
intransitive verb
  1. To take exercise
  2. To drill
ORIGIN: OFr exercice, from L exercitium, from L exercēre, -citum, from ex- and arcēre to shut up or restrain

exˈercisable adjective

exˈerciser noun

  1. Someone who or something which exercises
  2. A device, usu with elasticated cords, to help in exercising the muscles

exercise bicycle or exercise bike noun

A machine like a bicycle without wheels, used for indoor exercise

exercise book noun

  1. A book for writing school exercises in
  2. A book containing exercises to practise

exercise price noun (stock exchange)

Same as striking price (see under strike)

the object of the exercise

The purpose of a particular operation or activity

strike /strīk/

transitive verb (pat and pap struck)
  1. To give a blow to or with
  2. To hit, smite
  3. To come into forcible contact with
  4. To deal, deliver, or inflict
  5. To bring forcibly into contact
  6. To impel
  7. To put, send, move, render, or produce by a blow or stroke
  8. To render as if by a blow
  9. To impress
  10. To impress favourably
  11. To afflict
  12. To assail, affect
  13. To affect strongly or suddenly
  14. To mark off
  15. (of a line, path, etc) to draw, describe, give direction to
  16. To arrive at, estimate, compute, fix, settle (as a balance, an average, prices)
  17. To make (a compact or agreement), to ratify
  18. To occur to
  19. To assume (a pose or an attitude)
  20. To lower (eg a sail, flag, tent)
  21. To take down the tents of (strike camp)
  22. To dismantle
  23. To sound by percussion or otherwise
  24. To announce by a bell
  25. To come upon, reach
  26. To stamp
  27. To coin
  28. To print
  29. To delete, cancel
  30. To constitute (orig by cutting down a list)
  31. To broach (Shakespeare)
  32. To fight (a battle) (Shakespeare)
  33. To blast, bewitch
  34. To hook (a fish) by a quick turn of the wrist
  35. To smooth (dialect)
  36. To strickle (dialect)
  37. To stroke (obsolete and Bible)
intransitive verb
  1. To make one's way
  2. To set out
  3. To take a direction or course
  4. To dart, shoot, pass quickly
  5. To penetrate
  6. To jerk the line suddenly in order to impale the hook in the mouth of a fish
  7. To put forth roots
  8. To chance, alight, come by chance
  9. To interpose
  10. To deal or aim a blow, perform a stroke
  11. To sound or be sounded or announced by a bell
  12. To hit out
  13. To seize the bait
  14. To strike something, as a rock, sail, flag
  15. To attempt to hook the ball (rugby)
  16. To touch
  17. To run aground
  18. To surrender
  19. To go on strike
  20. To blast, blight (Shakespeare)

—There are numerous archaic and obsolete forms of the past tense (strake, stroke, strook, strooke and (Scot) strack, strak) and of the past participle (strickˈen, strokˈen, strook, strooke, strookˈen and struckˈen)

noun
  1. A stroke, striking
  2. An attack, esp by aircraft
  3. A raid
  4. The direction of a horizontal line at right angles to the dip of a bed (geology)
  5. A find (as of oil), a stroke of luck
  6. A cessation of work, or other obstructive refusal to act normally, as a means of putting pressure on employers, etc
  7. The part that receives the bolt of a lock
  8. (in tenpin bowling) the knocking down of all the pins with the first ball bowled, or the score resulting from this
  9. A ball thrown by the pitcher into the strike zone (baseball)
  10. A ball at which the batter swings and misses (baseball)
  11. The position of facing the bowling, licence to receive the next delivery (cricket)
  12. Blackmail, esp by introducing a bill in the hope of being bought off (old US sl)
  13. The quantity of coins, etc made at one time
  14. A strickle (dialect)
  15. A proportion of malt (cf straik1)
ORIGIN: OE strīcan to stroke, go, move

strikˈer noun

  1. Someone who or something that strikes
  2. A footpad (Shakespeare)
  3. An attacker, esp one whose task is to attempt to score goals (football)
  4. The batsman facing the bowling (cricket)

strikˈing noun

The action of the verb

adjective
  1. That strikes or can strike
  2. Impressive, arresting, noticeable

strikˈingly adverb

strikˈingness noun

strikeˈbound adjective

Closed or similarly affected because of a strike

strikeˈbreaker noun

A person who works during a strike or who does the work of a striker, esp if brought in with a view to defeating the strike

strikeˈbreaking noun

strike fault noun (geology)

A fault parallel to the strike

strike force noun

  1. A force designed and equipped to carry out a strike (military)
  2. A special police unit trained to strike suddenly and forcefully to suppress crime

strikeout see strike out below.

strike pay noun

An allowance paid by a trade union to members on strike

strikeˈ-slip fault noun (geology)

A fault in which movement is parallel to the strike

strike zone noun (baseball)

The area above home plate extending from the batter's knees to the middle of the torso

striking circle noun (hockey)

The area in front of goal from within which the ball must be hit in order to score

striking price noun (stock exchange)

A stipulated price at which a holder may exercise his or her put or call option (also exercise or strike price)

be struck off

(of doctors, lawyers, etc) to have one's name removed from the professional register because of misconduct

on strike

  1. Taking part in a strike
  2. (of a batsman) facing the bowling (cricket)

strike a match

To light it by friction or a grazing stroke

strike at

To attempt to strike, aim a blow at

strike back

  1. To return a blow
  2. To backfire, burn within the burner

strike down

  1. To fell
  2. To make ill or cause to die

strike hands

To join or slap together hands in confirmation of agreement

strike home

To strike right to the point aimed at (also figurative)

strike in

  1. To enter suddenly
  2. To interpose
  3. To agree, fit (obsolete)

strike into

To enter upon suddenly, break into

strike it lucky (informal)

To experience good luck

strike it rich (informal)

To make a sudden large financial gain, eg through discovering a mineral deposit, etc

strike off

  1. To erase from an account, deduct
  2. To remove (from a roll, register, etc)
  3. To print
  4. To separate by a blow

strike oil see under oil

strike out

  1. To efface
  2. To bring into light
  3. To direct one's energy and efforts boldly outwards
  4. To swim away
  5. To dismiss or be dismissed by means of three strikes (baseball)
  6. To fail completely (informal, esp N American; strikeˈout noun)
  7. To remove (testimony, an action, etc) from the record (law)
  8. To strike from the shoulder
  9. To form by sudden effort

strike root see under root1

strike through

To delete with a stroke of the pen

strike up

  1. To begin to beat, sing, or play
  2. To begin (eg an acquaintance)

struck on

Enamoured of

take strike (cricket)

(of a batsman) to prepare to face the bowling

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更新时间:2025/1/23 11:16:11