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单词 trackpad
释义

touch /tuch/

transitive verb
  1. To come or be in contact with
  2. To cause to be in contact
  3. To feel or tap lightly, esp with the hand
  4. To get at
  5. To reach as far as
  6. To attain
  7. To equal, rival or compare with
  8. To make a light application to
  9. To begin to eat, eat a little of
  10. To make use of
  11. To affect, esp injuriously
  12. To hit, wound or injure
  13. To disturb or harm (usu with neg)
  14. To cope or deal with
  15. To impress
  16. To affect with emotion, esp pity
  17. To have to do with
  18. To concern
  19. To strike home to
  20. To mark or modify by light strokes
  21. To tinge
  22. To extract money from (with for; informal)
  23. To make some reference to, say something about esp in passing
  24. To meet without cutting, or meet tangentially (geometry)
  25. To play (eg an instrument or melody) (music)
  26. To call at (eg a port)
  27. To cause to touch the ground behind the try-line (commonly with down; rugby)
  28. To test as with a touchstone
  29. To receive, draw, pocket
  30. To bribe (obsolete)
  31. To cheat (slang)
intransitive verb
  1. To be or come in contact
  2. To make a passing call at a port
  3. To verge
  4. To make some mention or reference (with on or upon)
  5. To have reference
noun
  1. The sense by which nature, texture and quality of objects can be perceived through physical contact with the hands, feet, skin, lips, etc
  2. The particular texture and qualities as perceived through such contact
  3. An act of touching or the sense of being touched
  4. A feeling
  5. A slight application, modification, stroke
  6. A small quantity
  7. A slight attack of illness
  8. A tinge
  9. A trace
  10. A smack
  11. Ability, skill
  12. A trait
  13. A little
  14. A slight hit, wound, blemish or reproach
  15. The manner or nicety of producing tone on (now esp) a keyed instrument
  16. The instrument's response
  17. A characteristic manner, style or trait
  18. A stroke of art
  19. The relation of communication, sympathy, harmony
  20. Communication, contact
  21. A game in which one has to pursue and touch others
  22. The area outside the field of play (football, etc)
  23. A test, eg with a touchstone
  24. A touchstone
  25. A black marble or similar monumental stone (obsolete)
  26. An official stamp of fineness on gold, etc
  27. Fineness
  28. Stamp (figurative)
  29. Theft (slang)
  30. A sum got by theft or by touching (slang)
  31. A person from whom money can be obtained by touching (slang)
  32. That which will find buyers at such and such a price (slang)
ORIGIN: OFr tuchier (Fr toucher); origin doubtful

touchˈable adjective

  1. Capable of being touched
  2. Fit to be touched

touchˈableness noun

touched adjective

  1. Having been touched
  2. Affected with emotion, esp pity
  3. Slightly unsound mentally

touchˈer noun

touchˈily adverb

touchˈiness noun

touchˈing noun adjective

  1. Affecting
  2. Moving
  3. Pathetic
preposition

Concerning

touchˈingly adverb

touchˈingness noun

touchˈless adjective

  1. Without a sense of touch
  2. Intangible
  3. Not involving physical contact

touchˈy adjective (touchˈier; touchˈiest)

  1. Over-sensitive
  2. Irascible
  3. Risky, requiring careful handling or caution (esp US)

touch and go noun

  1. A narrow escape
  2. A critical or precariously balanced situation

adjective

  1. Precarious
  2. Off-hand

touchˈback noun (American football)

A play in which the ball is dead on or behind a team's own goal line, having been put across the line by an opponent but actually put down by a member of that team

touchˈ-box noun

A tinderbox for a matchlock

touchˈdown noun

  1. Touching of the ball to the ground by a player behind the try-line (rugby)
  2. The possession of the ball by a player behind the opponents' goal line (American football)
  3. (of air- or spacecraft) the act of alighting

touch football noun

Football in which tackling is replaced by touching

touch hole noun

The small hole of a cannon through which the fire is communicated to the charge

touchˈ-in-goal noun (rugby)

The areas at each end of the pitch behind the try-lines and outside the touchlines

touch judge noun (rugby)

An official who marks when and where the ball goes into touch

touchˈline noun

Either of the lines marking the side boundary in football, etc

touch mark noun

The maker's official stamp on pewter

touchˈ-me-not noun

  1. Any of various plants of the genus Impatiens, having seed-pods which, when ripe, spring open at a touch
  2. Lupus
  3. A forbidden topic

adjective

Stand-offish

touch-me-notˈishness noun

touchpad noun (computing)

A small portable input device, operated by touching different areas on its surface (also trackpad)

touchˈpaper noun

Paper steeped in saltpetre for firing gunpowder, fireworks, etc

touchˈ-piece noun

A coin or medal formerly given by a king to those he touched for king's evil

touchˈ-plate noun

A plate bearing the pewterers' official stamp

touch rugby or touch rugger noun

A modified form of rugby in which touching takes the place of tackling

touch screen noun (computing)

A screen that doubles as an input device, and is operated by being touched

touchˈ-screen adjective

touchˈstone noun

  1. Lydian stone, a highly siliceous (usu black) stone or other stone for testing gold or silver by the colour of the mark each makes on it
  2. Any criterion

touch therapy noun

A therapy, such as massage, laying-on of hands, reflexology or aromatherapy, involving physical contact

touchˈtone adjective

(of telephones) having push buttons (rather than a dial) that cause distinct tones to sound at the exchange

noun

(Touchtone®) telephone equipment using this system

touchˈ-type transitive verb and intransitive verb

To type without looking at the keys of the typewriter

touchˈ-typing noun

touchˈ-typist noun

touchˈ-up noun

  1. The act or process of renovating or making minor improvements
  2. An instance of this

touchˈwood noun

Decayed wood that can be used as tinder

touchy-feelˈy adjective (informal)

Involving emotion and personal contact as distinct from intellectual activity

an easy (or a soft) touch (informal)

A person or institution easily persuaded, esp to lend money

in (or out of) touch

In (or out of) communication or direct relations

near touch

A close shave

touch base (with) (chiefly N American informal)

To make personal contact with

touch down

  1. (of an air or spacecraft) to land
  2. To ground the ball behind the opposing team's goal line (rugby)

touch off

To trigger, to cause to begin (also figurative)

touch up

  1. To improve by a series of small touches
  2. To stimulate (eg a horse) by a light blow
  3. To caress, touch or molest sexually

touch wood or (N American) knock on wood or knock wood

To touch something wooden as a superstitious act to guard against bad luck (also used as an interjection to accompany the gesture or as a substitute for it)

track1 /trak/

noun
  1. A mark or trail left
  2. A beaten path or road
  3. A made path
  4. A sequence or course of thoughts or actions
  5. The predetermined line of travel of an aircraft
  6. A line of motion or travel
  7. A course, usu oval-shaped, on which races are run
  8. A railway line, the rails and the space between
  9. The groove cut in a gramophone record by the recording instrument
  10. One out of several items recorded on a disc or tape
  11. One of several areas or paths on magnetic recording equipment (eg magnetic tape) receiving information from a single input channel
  12. A film's soundtrack
  13. Any of several more or less demanding courses of study designed to meet the respective needs of students divided into groups according to ability (US)
  14. A plastic or metal rod from which curtains, lights, etc can be suspended
  15. The endless band on which the wheels of a caterpillar vehicle run (tracked adjective equipped with such metal bands)
  16. (in a factory, etc) a conveyor carrying goods in process of manufacture
  17. Track and field events collectively (N American)
  18. The distance between a pair of wheels measured as the distance between their respective points of contact with the ground
  19. A path followed by a particle, esp when rendered visible in photographic emulsion by cloud chamber, bubble chamber or spark chamber
  20. (usu in pl) a red mark on the skin caused by using intravenous drugs (slang)
transitive verb
  1. To follow the track of
  2. To find by so doing
  3. To traverse
  4. To beat, tread (a path, etc)
  5. To follow the progress of
  6. To follow the movement of (a satellite, spacecraft, etc) by radar, etc, and record its positions
  7. (of a stylus or laser beam) to read information from (a vinyl record, CD, etc)
  8. To follow or move in relation to (a moving object) while filming it
  9. To leave dirty marks on (a floor) (with on or up; N American)
  10. To make dirty marks on eg a floor with (snow, mud, etc) (N American)
intransitive verb
  1. To follow a trail
  2. To make one's way (informal)
  3. To run in alignment, esp (of gramophone needles) to follow the grooves
  4. (of a camera or camera operator) to follow or move in relation to a moving object being filmed
  5. To move a dolly camera in a defined path while taking a shot (tracking shot)
ORIGIN: Fr trac; prob Gmc; cf track2

trackˈable adjective

trackˈage noun

Provision of railway tracks

trackˈer noun

  1. A person or thing that tracks
  2. An investment fund that aims to follow a stock market index

trackie adjective (informal)

(of a garment) originally constituting part of a tracksuit

noun

(in pl) a tracksuit

trackˈing noun

  1. The action of the verb
  2. Excessive leakage current between two insulated points due eg to moisture (elec eng)
  3. Disposition of the tone arm on a gramophone so that the stylus remains correctly positioned in the groove
  4. The addition of prerecorded music to a motion picture instead of using specially-commissioned music
  5. The division of study courses or students into tracks (qv above) (US)

trackˈless adjective

  1. Without a path
  2. Untrodden
  3. Leaving no trace
  4. Running without rails

trackˈlessly adverb

trackˈlessness noun

track and field noun

Athletic events collectively, incl running and hurdling races (track events), and jumping and throwing competitions (field events)

trackˈ-and-fieldˈ adjective

trackˈball or trackˈerball noun (computing)

A spherical ball that can be rotated with the palm of the hand causing the cursor to move across the screen

trackˈbed noun

The foundations of a railway track

tracker dog noun

One used for tracking, esp in police searches

track event noun see track and field above.

tracking station noun

A station with radar and radio equipment allowing it to track spacecraft, aircraft and satellites through the atmosphere or space

trackˈlayer noun

  1. A tracklaying vehicle
  2. A trackman (N American)

trackˈlaying adjective

(of a vehicle) having caterpillar tracks

trackˈman noun (N American)

A platelayer

trackˈpad noun same as touchpad (see under touch)

track record noun

A record of past performance, orig that of an athlete, now generally that of any individual, company, etc

track rod noun

A rod connecting the front wheels of a vehicle, ensuring alignment and accurate steering

track shoe noun

A lightweight spiked running shoe worn by athletes

trackˈsuit noun

A loose warm suit intended to be worn by athletes when warming up or training, but sometimes worn by others in an error of judgement

trackˈ-walker noun

A person who has charge of a railway track

trackˈway noun

  1. A beaten track
  2. An ancient road

across the tracks or the wrong side of the tracks (informal)

A slum or other socially disadvantaged area

cover one's tracks

To take measures to prevent discovery of one's actions, motives, etc

in one's tracks

Just where one stands

keep (or lose) track of

Keep (or fail to keep) oneself informed about

make tracks (informal)

  1. To make off
  2. To go quickly

make tracks for (informal)

To go towards

off the beaten track

  1. Away from frequented roads
  2. Out of the usual, not normal or conventional (figurative)

off the track

Off course, in the wrong direction

on the right (or wrong) track

Pursuing a correct (or mistaken) course

track down

To find after intensive search

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更新时间:2024/11/14 0:58:15