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单词 dead point
释义

dead /ded/

adjective
  1. No longer alive
  2. Inanimate
  3. Deathlike
  4. (of a ball) at rest, out of play
  5. Out of use
  6. Obsolete
  7. Inactive
  8. No longer alight
  9. Cold and cheerless
  10. Dull
  11. Numb
  12. Insensitive
  13. Unproductive
  14. As good as dead
  15. Inelastic
  16. Without vegetation
  17. Utter, complete, absolute (slang)
  18. Unerring
transitive verb (obsolete)
  1. To deaden, dull
  2. To benumb
intransitive verb (obsolete)
  1. To lose vitality
  2. To become numb
adverb
  1. In a dead manner
  2. Absolutely
  3. Utterly
  4. Directly
  5. Exactly (informal)
  6. Extremely, esp as intensive eg dead easy, dead slow
noun

The time of greatest stillness, coldness, etc, eg the dead of night, of winter

ORIGIN: OE dēad; Gothic dauths, Ger tot, from root of die1

deadˈen transitive verb

  1. To make dead
  2. To deprive partly of vigour, sensibility or sensation
  3. To blunt
  4. To lessen
  5. To make soundproof

deadˈener noun

deadˈening noun and adjective

deadˈer noun (informal)

A corpse

deadˈliness noun

deadˈly adjective

  1. Causing death
  2. Fatal
  3. Implacable
  4. Very great (informal)
adverb
  1. In a manner resembling death
  2. Extremely (informal)

deadˈness noun

dead air noun

An unintentional and undesirable period of silence during a radio broadcast

deadˈ-aliveˈ or deadˈ-and-aliveˈ adjective

Dull, inactive

dead-ball line noun (rugby)

A line marked out behind the goal-line at each end of the pitch, beyond which the ball is out of play

deadˈbeat noun (informal)

  1. A down-and-out
  2. A lazy person
  3. One who does not pay debts (US)

dead-beatˈ adjective (informal)

Quite overcome, exhausted

dead-beat escapement noun

A clock escapement in which there is no recoil to the escape wheel

deadˈ-bolt or deadˈ-lock noun

One moved by turning the key or knob without intervention of a spring

deadˈ-born adjective

Stillborn

deadˈ-cart noun

A cart for collecting the bodies of those who died of a pestilence

dead-cat bounce noun (stock exchange sl)

A temporary recovery of share prices following a sharp fall, not indicative of a true upturn but merely caused by some reinvestment by speculators who had already sold shares

dead centre noun

  1. In a reciprocating engine or pump, either of the positions, at top and bottom of a piston stroke, at which the crank and connecting rod are in line and there is no actual turning effect (usu top or bottom dead centre)
  2. A non-rotating centre in the tailstock of a lathe

dead cert noun (slang)

Something absolutely certain, eg a certain winner in a horse race

deadˈ-clothes plural noun

Clothes to bury the dead in

deadˈ-colˈouring noun

The first broad outlines of a picture

deadˈ-deal noun

A board for measuring and lifting a corpse

deadˈ-doˈing adjective (Spenser)

Putting to death, destructive

dead drop same as dead-letter box below.

dead duck noun (informal)

A plan, idea or person, etc that has no chance of success or survival

dead end noun

  1. A pipe, passage, etc closed at one end
  2. A blind alley (lit and figurative)

dead-endˈ adjective

Leading nowhere (lit and figurative)

deadˈeye noun

  1. A round, flattish wooden block with a rope or iron band passing around it, and pierced with three holes for a lanyard (nautical)
  2. An unerring marksman

deadˈ-fall noun

A trap with a weight that falls when its support is removed

deadˈ-finˈish noun (Aust)

  1. A thicket or a thicket-forming shrub of the mimosa family (genus Albizia or Acacia)
  2. A complete standstill or vanquishment

deadˈ-fire noun

An appearance of fire taken as an omen of death

deadˈ-freight noun

Money paid for the empty space in a ship by a person who engages to freight her, but fails to make out a full cargo

deadˈ-ground noun (military)

Ground that cannot be covered by fire

dead hand noun

  1. A persisting oppressive influence
  2. Mortmain

deadˈ-head or deadˈhead noun

  1. A person who enjoys privileges without paying, eg a seat in a theatre, etc
  2. An ineffective, unproductive person
  3. A sprue (see sprue1)

transitive verb

To remove the withered heads of (flowers), in order to encourage further growth

dead heat noun

  1. A heat or race in which two or more competitors are equal
  2. The result of this, a tie

dead-heatˈ intransitive verb

deadˈhouse noun

A mortuary

dead language noun

One no longer spoken

deadˈ-lettˈer noun

  1. A letter undelivered and unclaimed at the post-office
  2. A law or ordinance made but not enforced

dead-letter box or dead-letter drop noun

A place where secret messages, etc may be left for later collection

deadˈ-lift or deadˈ-pull noun

  1. A lift or pull made without help or leverage, etc
  2. Hence an effort under discouraging conditions

deadˈlights plural noun

  1. Storm-shutters for a cabin window
  2. Thick windows in a ship's side or deck

deadˈline noun

  1. Closing date, last possible time
  2. Orig a line in a military prison, on going beyond which a prisoner was liable to be shot

dead load noun

The weight of a structure, vehicle, etc itself without any burden

deadˈlock noun

  1. The case when matters have become so complicated that all is at a complete standstill
  2. See also dead-bolt above

intransitive verb and transitive verb

To reach or bring to a standstill because of difficulties, etc

dead loss noun

  1. A complete loss
  2. A useless ally or endeavour (figurative)

deadˈ-levˈel noun

  1. A stretch of land without any rising ground
  2. Sameness

deadly nightshade noun

Belladonna

deadly sin noun

A mortal sin (see under seven)

dead man's handle noun

A device, eg on an electric train, which allows current to pass only so long as there is pressure on it

dead man's pedal noun

A foot-operated safety device on the same principle, used esp on diesel trains

dead march noun

A piece of solemn music played at funeral processions, esp of soldiers

deadˈ-meat noun

The flesh of animals ready for the market

dead men plural noun (informal)

Empty bottles after a party or drinking bout

dead-men's bells noun

The foxglove

dead men's fingers plural noun

  1. A type of soft coral, a very common actinozoan coelenterate (Alcyonium digitatum)
  2. The poisonous parts of a crab or other edible shellfish (informal)

deadˈ-nettle noun

Any species of Lamium, labiate plants superficially like nettles but stingless

dead-onˈ adjective (informal)

Accurate, spot-on (see also dead on below)

deadˈpan noun

  1. An expressionless face
  2. A person having or assuming such a face

adjective

  1. Expressionless
  2. Emotionless
  3. Completely serious or mock serious

adverb

In a deadpan manner

deadˈ-pay noun

Continued pay dishonestly drawn for men who are actually dead

dead point noun

Another (eg engineering) name for dead centre above

deadˈ-reckˈoning noun

An estimation of a ship's or aircraft's place simply by the logbook

dead ringer noun (slang)

A person who, or a thing that, looks exactly like someone or something else

deadˈ-rope noun

A rope not running in any block

Dead Sea apple or Dead Sea fruit noun

Another name for

apple of Sodom (see under apple).

deadˈ-setˈ noun

  1. A complete standstill, as of a gun dog pointing at game
  2. A determined and prolonged onslaught, esp with a view to captivation

adjective

Absolutely determined

dead shot noun

An unerring marksman

dead's part noun (Scots law)

The part of a person's moveable property which may be bequeathed by will, and which is not due to spouse and children

dead spit noun (informal)

An exact likeness

deadˈstock noun

Farm equipment

deadˈstroke adjective

Without recoil

dead tree edition noun (comput sl)

A paper version of material also available electronically

deadˈ-wall noun

A wall unbroken by windows or other openings

deadˈ-waˈter noun

  1. Still water
  2. Eddy water closing in behind a ship's stern

deadˈ-weightˈ noun

  1. Unrelieved weight
  2. Heavy and oppressive burden
  3. Difference in a ship's displacement loaded and light

dead white European male noun (informal)

Any of the writers, philosophers, etc traditionally studied and seen by some as representing an excessively Eurocentric and masculine view of culture

deadˈ-wind noun

  1. Calm (in the vortex of a storm)
  2. Headwind (obsolete)

dead wood or deadˈ-wood noun

  1. Pieces of timber laid on the upper side of the keel at either end
  2. Useless material or personnel

deadˈ-work noun

Work, itself unprofitable, but necessary as a preliminary

be dead meat (informal)

To be in very serious trouble

dead against see dead set against below.

dead as a dodo, as a doornail, as a herring or as mutton

Absolutely dead

dead drunk

Helplessly drunk

dead from the neck up (informal)

Impenetrably stupid

dead in the water

  1. (of a ship) without the power to move
  2. Unable to make progress or succeed (figurative)

dead men's shoes

Succession to someone who dies

dead on

(used of time, musical notes, etc) exact or exactly

dead set see under set

dead set against or dead against

Utterly opposed to

dead to the world (informal)

  1. Very soundly asleep
  2. Unconscious

I, etc wouldn't be seen dead (informal)

I, etc would make sure never to be seen

leave for dead

  1. To abandon, presuming dead
  2. To surpass spectacularly (informal)

over my dead body (informal)

When I am beyond caring, and not until then

put the dead wood on (slang)

To gain a great advantage over

the dead

Those who are dead

point1 /point/

noun
  1. A dot
  2. A small mark used in Semitic alphabets to indicate a vowel, to differentiate a consonant, or for other purpose
  3. A dot separating the integral and fractional parts of a decimal
  4. A mark of punctuation
  5. That which has position but no magnitude (geometry)
  6. A whit (as in no point; Shakespeare)
  7. A place or station, considered in relation to position only
  8. A place or division in a scale, course, or cycle (as in boiling point, dead point)
  9. A moment of time, without duration
  10. A precise moment
  11. A state
  12. A juncture
  13. A critical moment
  14. The verge
  15. A culmination
  16. A conclusion
  17. Resolution (obsolete)
  18. Condition, case, plight (as in in good point; obsolete)
  19. Any one of nine fixed positions on a shield (heraldry)
  20. The entry, or the first notes, of a subject, eg in a fugue (formerly marked by a dot; obsolete)
  21. A short strain or phrase of music, a call on an instrument, esp military, as in a point of war (archaic)
  22. A unit in scoring, judging, or measurement
  23. A unit used in quoting changes of prices of stocks and securities
  24. A percentage of the profits from a venture
  25. A feature or character taken into account in judging
  26. A distinctive mark or characteristic
  27. A unit of measurement of type, approx 1/72 inch
  28. One of thirty-two divisions of the compass (points of the compass) or the angle between two successive divisions (1/8 of a right angle)
  29. A unit in rationing by coupon
  30. (in piquet) the strongest suit held and called, or the score for holding it
  31. A particular
  32. A heading, clause, or item
  33. A position forming a main element in the structure of an argument or discourse
  34. A matter in debate, under attention, or to be taken into account
  35. That which is relevant
  36. That upon which one insists or takes a stand
  37. The precise matter
  38. The essential matter
  39. That without which a story, joke, etc, is meaningless or ineffective
  40. A clearly defined aim, object, or reason
  41. Use, value
  42. A particular imparted as a hint
  43. Lace made with a needle (also pointˈ-lace)
  44. Loosely, lace
  45. A piece of point-lace (obsolete)
  46. A sharp end
  47. A tip, or free end
  48. A thing, part, or mark with a sharp end
  49. A piercing weapon or tool
  50. An etching needle
  51. The sharp end of a sword
  52. (in pl) sword-fighting
  53. A tine
  54. A spike
  55. A tapering piece in electrical apparatus, such as the end of a lightning conductor
  56. (in pl) the pair of electrical contacts that complete the circuit in the distributor of an internal-combustion engine
  57. A cape or headland
  58. A horse's or other animal's extremity
  59. A tagged lace formerly used for fastening clothes
  60. A nib
  61. A movable rail by means of which trains are transferred from one track to another
  62. A tapering division of a backgammon board
  63. A fielder, or a fielding position, on the offside fairly near the batsman on a line with the popping crease (cricket)
  64. A defence position (lacrosse)
  65. The leading party of an advanced guard
  66. A position at the head of a herd or a body of troops
  67. A socket for making a connection with electric wiring
  68. Pointedness
  69. Pungency
  70. Sting
  71. The act or position of pointing
  72. The vertical rising of a hawk, indicating the position of the prey
  73. A feat (obsolete)
  74. Pointe
  75. 1/100 part of a carat
adjective (phonetics)

Articulated with the tip of the tongue

transitive verb
  1. To insert points in
  2. To mark with points
  3. To mark off in groups of syllables for singing
  4. To sharpen
  5. To give point to
  6. To prick in or turn over with the point of a spade
  7. To show the position or direction of or draw attention to (now usu with out)
  8. To place in a certain direction, direct (with at)
  9. To indicate
  10. To insert white hairs in (a fur)
  11. To rake out old mortar from, and insert new mortar in, the joints of
  12. To ration by points
intransitive verb
  1. To have or take a position in a direction (with at, to, toward, etc)
  2. To indicate a direction or position by extending a finger, a stick, etc
  3. Of dogs, to indicate the position of game by an attitude
  4. To hint
  5. To aim
ORIGIN: Partly Fr point point, dot, stitch, lace, partly Fr pointe, sharp point, pungency, respectively from L punctum and LL puncta, from L pungere, punctum to prick

pointˈed adjective

  1. Having a sharp point
  2. Sharp
  3. Gothic (architecture)
  4. Keen
  5. Telling
  6. Epigrammatic
  7. Precise
  8. Explicit
  9. Aimed at particular persons
  10. (of a remark) having a marked personal application

pointˈedly adverb

pointˈedness noun

pointˈer noun

  1. Someone who points, in any sense
  2. A rod for pointing to a blackboard, map, screen, etc
  3. A symbol, eg an arrow, on a screen, moved by means of a mouse (computing)
  4. An index-hand
  5. A hint, tip, suggestion, indication
  6. A hyperlink (computing)
  7. A tool for clearing out old mortar from joints
  8. A breed of dogs that point on discovering game
  9. A horse ridden in point-to-point races (horse-racing)
  10. (in pl) two stars of the Great Bear nearly in a straight line with the Pole Star

pointˈing noun

  1. The action of the verb
  2. The mortar between joints

pointˈless adjective

pointˈlessly adverb

pointˈlessness noun

pointˈy adjective

Having points, or pointed in shape

point after noun (American football)

A goal kick taken after a touchdown is scored

pointˈ-and-clickˈ adjective

Of or relating to a computer interface in which the user moves a cursor on a screen by manipulating a mouse and clicks on a mouse button to select or activate a program, etc

pointˈ-and-shootˈ adjective

(of a camera) setting focus and exposure automatically

point duty noun

The duty of a policeman stationed at a particular point to regulate traffic

pointed arch noun

A lancet arch

point guard noun (basketball)

A player positioned away from the basket who directs attacking play

pointing device noun (computing)

Any device such as a mouse or trackball used to move a pointer on a screen

pointˈing-stock noun

A thing to be pointed at, a laughing stock

pointˈ-lace noun see n above.

point man noun

  1. A soldier at the head of a body of troops or patrol
  2. A person who takes the lead (US)

point mutation noun

A genetic mutation converting one allele into another

point of honour see under honour

point of no return noun

That point on a flight from which one can only go on, for lack of fuel to return (also figurative)

point of order noun

A question raised during a formal meeting or debate, eg in Parliament, as to whether proceedings are according to the rules

point of sale noun

(in retailing) the place where a sale is made (abbrev POS)

pointˈ-of-saleˈ adjective

Of, relating to, or occurring at the place where a sale is made

point-of-sale terminal noun

An electronic terminal used at retail outlets (eg supermarket checkouts) which records, and processes esp for stock-control purposes, sales-transaction information (abbrev POS or POST)

point of the compass see n above.

point of view noun

The position from which one looks at anything, literally or figuratively

point set noun (mathematics)

An aggregate

pointsˈman noun

  1. Someone on point duty
  2. Someone in charge of rail points

point source noun

A source of radiation that is, or is considered as, a mathematical point

pointˈ-to-pointˈ adjective

  1. From one fixed point to another
  2. Across country

noun

A cross-country race, a steeplechase

point-to-poinˈter noun

A horse ridden in a point-to-point

poinˈty-headˈed adjective (N Am inf)

  1. Intellectual
  2. Intelligent

at a point, at point or points or at all points (Shakespeare, etc)

  1. In readiness
  2. Resolved
  3. Completely
  4. In all respects

at the point of

On the verge of

cardinal point see under cardinal

carry one's point

To gain what one contends for

dead point see under dead

from point to point (obsolete)

From one detail to another

give points to

  1. To give odds to
  2. To give an advantageous hint on any subject

in point

Apposite

in point of

In the matter of

in point of fact

As a matter of fact

make a point of

To treat as essential, make a special object of

not to put too fine a point on it

To speak bluntly

on the point of

  1. Close upon
  2. Very near

point for point

Exactly in all particulars

point out

To point to, show, bring someone's attention to

point up

To emphasize

potatoes and point

A feigned Irish dish, potatoes alone, with a herring, etc, to point at

put upon points

To ration by points

score points off someone

  1. To advance at the expense of another
  2. To outwit, get the better of someone in an argument or repartee

stand upon points

To be punctilious

stretch (or strain) a point

To go further (esp in concession) than strict rule allows

to point (Spenser, Shakespeare)

To the smallest detail

to the point

Apposite

up to a point

Partly, not wholly

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更新时间:2025/1/8 14:13:36