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单词 hold one's tongue
释义

hold1 /hōld/

transitive verb (hōldˈing; pat held; pap held, and obsolete hōldˈen)
  1. To keep
  2. To have
  3. To grasp
  4. To have in one's possession, keeping or power
  5. To sustain
  6. To defend successfully
  7. To maintain
  8. To assert authoritatively
  9. To think, believe
  10. To occupy
  11. To pass on a title to
  12. To bind
  13. To contain
  14. To have a capacity of
  15. To enclose
  16. To confine
  17. To restrain
  18. To detain
  19. To retain
  20. To reserve
  21. To keep the attention of
  22. To catch
  23. To stop
  24. To continue
  25. To persist in
  26. To celebrate, observe
  27. To conduct
  28. To carry on
  29. To convoke and carry on
  30. To esteem or consider
  31. To aim, direct
  32. To endure
  33. To bet (archaic)
intransitive verb
  1. To grasp
  2. To remain fixed
  3. To be true or unfailing
  4. To continue unbroken or unsubdued
  5. To remain valid
  6. To continue, to persist
  7. To adhere
  8. To derive right
  9. When making a telephone call, to wait, without replacing the receiver, eg to be connected to a person one wants to speak to (also hold the line)
noun
  1. An act or manner of holding
  2. Grip
  3. Power of gripping
  4. Tenacity
  5. A thing held
  6. A place of confinement
  7. Custody
  8. Stronghold
  9. (a sign for) a pause (music)
  10. An order to keep in reserve (a room, etc) or to suspend (operations) (N American)
  11. A means of influencing or controlling
ORIGIN: OE haldan (WSax healdan); OHGer haltan, Gothic haldan

holdˈer noun

holdˈing noun

  1. Anything held
  2. A farm managed for its owner
  3. Hold
  4. Influence
  5. Intensive embracing and prolonged eye contact as a technique for developing intimacy between parent (esp mother) and child, claimed by some to be a cure for autism (psychiatry)
  6. Stacking (of aircraft waiting to land)
  7. Tenure (Scots law)
  8. The burden of a song (Shakespeare)
  9. (in pl) property owned (eg land or investments)

holdˈall noun

An accommodating receptacle for clothes, etc, esp a large strong bag

holdˈback noun

  1. A check
  2. A strap joining the breeching to the shaft of a vehicle
  3. Something withheld, esp money (see also hold back below)

hold 'em see Texas hold 'em under Texas

holdˈerbat noun (building)

A metal collar formed from two semicircular parts which can be clamped together round a pipe, with a projecting piece for fixing to a wall

holdˈfast noun

  1. That which holds fast
  2. A long nail
  3. A catch
  4. A plant's fixing organ other than a root

holding company noun

An industrial company that owns and controls part or all of one or more other companies, usu without having a direct hand in production

holding ground noun

Any part of the seabed where an anchor will hold

holding operation noun

A course of action designed to preserve the status quo

holding pattern noun

A specific course which aircraft are instructed to follow when waiting to land

holdˈout noun (informal)

  1. Refusal to agree to something or to take part in an activity
  2. A person who refuses in this way

holdˈover noun (N American)

  1. Someone or something held over
  2. A leftover, relic

holdˈ-up noun

  1. An attack with a view to robbery
  2. A highwayman
  3. An act or state of holding up
  4. A stoppage
  5. (in pl) women's stockings worn without a suspender belt, supported by elasticated tops

get hold of

  1. To obtain
  2. To get in touch with

hold a call or put a call on hold

To delay completing a direct connection between a caller and the telephone number or person that they are trying to reach, keeping the caller waiting, eg until the line is clear, or the person sought can come to a telephone

hold against (informal)

To remember as a failing or as a misdemeanour on the part of

hold back

  1. To restrain
  2. To hesitate
  3. To keep in reserve (holdˈback noun)

hold by

  1. To believe in
  2. To act in accordance with

hold down

  1. To restrain
  2. To keep (a job) by carrying out its duties efficiently, esp in spite of difficulties

hold forth

  1. To put forward
  2. To show
  3. To speak in public, to declaim

hold good

To remain the case

hold hands

  1. (of two people) to be hand in hand or clasping both of each other's hands
  2. (of several people) each to clasp the hand of the person on either side, thus forming a line, circle, etc

hold hard!

Stop!

hold in

  1. To restrain, check
  2. To restrain oneself

hold it!

  1. Keep the position exactly!
  2. Stop!

hold of (Prayer Book)

To regard

hold off

  1. To keep at a distance
  2. To refrain (from)

hold on

  1. To persist in something
  2. To continue
  3. To cling
  4. To keep (with to)
  5. Stop (imperative)
  6. To wait a bit

hold one's hands up

To admit one is at fault

hold one's own

  1. To maintain one's position
  2. (in the course of an illness) not to fail or lose strength

hold one's peace or one's tongue

To keep silence

hold out

  1. To endure, last
  2. To continue resistance
  3. To offer

hold out for

To wait determinedly for (something one wants or has asked for)

hold out on (informal)

To keep information, money, etc from

hold over

  1. To postpone
  2. To keep possession of (land or a house beyond the term of agreement)

hold (someone) in hand

To amuse in order to gain some advantage

hold the line

  1. See hold (vi) above
  2. To persist or maintain one's position while under pressure

hold the road

(of a vehicle) to remain stable and under the driver's control, eg in wet weather, at high speeds or on bends

hold to or hold someone to

To keep, or make someone keep (a promise), adhere to (a decision), etc

hold together

  1. To remain united
  2. To cohere

hold up

  1. To raise
  2. To keep back
  3. To endure
  4. To bring to, or keep at, a standstill
  5. To stop and rob
  6. To rob by threatening assault

hold up one's head

To face the world with self-respect

hold water see under water

hold with

  1. To take sides with, support
  2. To approve of

keep hold of

To maintain one's possession of or grip on

no holds barred

Not observing any rules of fair play (noˈ-holds-barredˈ adjective)

on hold

  1. Postponed
  2. In abeyance
  3. Waiting to be connected

tongue /tung/

noun
  1. The fleshy organ in the mouth, used in tasting, swallowing and speech
  2. The tongue of an ox, etc, as food
  3. The rasping organ in molluscs
  4. The power of speech
  5. The manner of speaking
  6. A language
  7. Speech
  8. Discourse
  9. Voice
  10. Utterance
  11. Anything like a tongue in shape
  12. A point of land
  13. A bell clapper
  14. The reed of a musical instrument
  15. A flap in the opening of a shoe or boot
  16. The catch of a buckle
  17. The pointer of a balance
  18. Any narrow projection
  19. A langue or language (qv) of a religious or military order
  20. A vote (Shakespeare)
transitive verb
  1. To utter
  2. To lick
  3. To touch with the tongue
  4. To provide with a tongue
  5. To talk, prate (with it)
  6. To produce or play by tonguing (music)
  7. To pronounce (dialect)
  8. To articulate
  9. To attack with words (Shakespeare)
intransitive verb
  1. To give tongue
  2. To stick out
  3. To practise tonguing (music)
ORIGIN: OE tunge; ON tunga, Ger Zunge the tongue; L lingua (from dingua)

tongued adjective

  1. Having a tongue
  2. Played by tonguing (music)

tongueˈless adjective

  1. Having no tongue
  2. Unspoken of (Shakespeare)

tongueˈlet noun

A little tongue

tongueˈlike adjective

tongueˈster noun

A babbler

tonguˈing noun (music)

Articulation to separate the notes in playing wind instruments (see also flutter)

tongue-and-grooveˈ noun

  1. A system of joining boards by fitting a projection along the side of one into a groove in the next
  2. These boards

tongue-doubtˈie adjective (ie doughty; Milton)

Bragging

tongue-in-cheekˈ adjective and adverb

With ironic, insincere or humorous intention

tongueˈ-lashing noun

A severe verbal reprimand

tongueˈ-tacked adjective

Tongue-tied

tongueˈ-tie noun (medicine)

A congenital condition in which the tongue's mobility is impeded by an abnormally short frenum

tongueˈ-tied adjective

  1. Unable to speak out, esp because of fear or embarrassment
  2. Affected with tongue-tie

tongueˈ-twister noun

A formula or sequence of words difficult to pronounce without blundering

tongueˈ-work noun

Babble, chatter

tongue worm noun

A tongue-shaped parasite, Linguatula serrata, occurring in the nasal passages of dogs, foxes and wolves

give tongue

  1. To give utterance, to voice
  2. To give voice as hounds on a scent do

hold one's tongue see under hold1

lose one's tongue

To become speechless from emotion

on the tip of one's tongue see under tip1

speaking in tongues or gift of tongues

Glossolalia or xenoglossia

with one's tongue hanging out (informal)

Eagerly

with (one's) tongue in (one's) cheek

Tongue-in-cheek ( adverb)

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更新时间:2024/9/22 19:20:56