accelerate / ækˈsɛl əˌreɪt /

💦中学词汇加速加速推进加速前进加速发展

accelerate2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

ac·cel·er·at·ed, ac·cel·er·at·ing.

  1. to cause faster or greater activity, development, progress, advancement, etc., in: to accelerate economic growth.
  2. to hasten the occurrence of: to accelerate the fall of a government.
  3. Mechanics. to change the velocity of or the rate of; cause to undergo acceleration.
  4. to reduce the time required for by intensifying the work, eliminating detail, etc.
v. 无主动词 verb

ac·cel·er·at·ed, ac·cel·er·at·ing.

  1. to move or go faster; increase in speed.
  2. to progress or develop faster.

accelerate 近义词

v. 动词 verb

increase speed, timing

更多accelerate例句

  1. The next few months will reveal how serious China is about accelerating its decarbonization.
  2. The vendor list includes a number of companies that aren’t the usual suspects in Department of Defense work, reflecting the “innovative acquisition strategy” intended to accelerate the timeline for the ambitious system.
  3. The study authors point to Manaus’ lower socioeconomic conditions, more crowded housing and reliance on boat travel, as factors that could have accelerated the spread of the virus there.
  4. “We are accelerating what probably would have happened in the retail environment on a naturally in the next four years to five years,” said Donahoe.
  5. In other words, the ice surface is now at low enough elevation to accelerate melting.
  6. It may accelerate the adoption of laws giving patients more power.
  7. “Accelerate this process,” said Royce, adding that the Free Syrian Army is the antidote to the ongoing expansion of ISIS in Syria.
  8. This trend will only accelerate as whites lapse at higher rates than nonwhites.
  9. “We have every reason to expect these demographic changes to continue, if not accelerate,” Bonica said.
  10. Conservative evangelicalism is losing millennials in gobs, and the World Vision fallout is sure to only accelerate the fallout.
  11. But the very circumstances that facilitated the settling of the Spanish colonies were also likely to accelerate their liberation.
  12. At the same time he disclaimed all interest in, or desire to accelerate this consummation.
  13. Yet, even this simple communication caused the pulse of Mrs Forster to accelerate.
  14. "It certainly does," replied Shorty, scratching his head to accelerate his mental action.
  15. Trivial as the circumstance was, it not only rendered home more disgusting, but appeared to accelerate his dissolution.