a pop / pɒp /

啪啪啪啪的一声啪啪

a pop6 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

popped, pop·ping.

  1. to make a short, quick, explosive sound: The cork popped.
  2. to burst open with such a sound, as chestnuts or corn in roasting.
  3. to come or go quickly, suddenly, or unexpectedly: She popped into the kitchen to check the stove.
v. 有主动词 verb

popped, pop·ping.

  1. to cause to make a sudden, explosive sound.
  2. to cause to burst open with such a sound.
  3. to open suddenly or violently: to pop the hood on a car; to pop the tab on a beer can.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a short, quick, explosive sound.
  2. a popping.
  3. a shot with a firearm.
adv. 副词 adverb
  1. with an explosive sound: The balloon went pop.
  2. quickly, suddenly, or unexpectedly: Pop, the door flew open!
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. Informal. unexpected; without prior warning or announcement: The teacher gave us a pop quiz.
v. 动词组 verb
  1. pop for, Informal. to pay or buy for oneself or another, especially as a gift or treat; spring for: I'll pop for the first round of drinks.
  2. pop in, Informal. to visit briefly and unexpectedly; stop in; drop by: Maybe we'll pop in after the movie.
  3. pop off, Informal. to die, especially suddenly.to depart, especially abruptly.to express oneself volubly or excitedly and sometimes irately or indiscreetly: He popped off about the injustice of the verdict.

a pop 近义词

a pop

等同于 each

a pop

等同于 apiece

更多a pop例句

  1. Just tap and hold on the keyboard when it pops up in any app, then slide your finger across to the keys you want to press without lifting it.
  2. It started out as a way of finding stuff on the various websites that were popping up, but ended up shaping the very medium it was indexing.
  3. In the original complaint, Murphy made the eye-popping charge that Nielsen had perjured herself in front of Congress.
  4. It’s a revolving door of regular events, from karaoke and DJ nights to pop-up dinners.
  5. Instances of the Sator square have popped up all over Europe.
  6. Sophisticated, nuanced, melodious pop music, that sweeps you away.
  7. The airline industry objects that sometimes these deployable recorders can pop out without cause, spreading needless alarm.
  8. Within a few summer weeks, “Hot N—” had become an inescapable pop-culture phenomenon and Bobby landed a major record deal.
  9. Growing up in that suburbia and air of pop culture, these images stayed with me like a weird dream.
  10. Nicki treats the obsession with her pop ambitions as an irrelevant, surface-level irritation.
  11. Now, when I am called upon to produce a laugh from Timothy, I no longer make faces or "pop."
  12. Pop that shawl away in my castor, Dodger, so that I may know where to find it when I cut; thats the time of day!
  13. There came a "pop" like an exploding fire-cracker, and a bullet whistled past Matt's ear.
  14. Here's my notion: To make a pop'lar measure of it; somethin' that'll appeal to the folks.
  15. To Mildred he was one of that numerous army of brevet relations known as gran-pop, pop, or uncle.