badge 的 2 个定义
- a special or distinctive mark, token, or device worn as a sign of allegiance, membership, authority, achievement, etc.: a police badge; a merit badge.
- any emblem, token, or distinctive mark: He considered a slide rule as the badge of an engineering student.
- a card bearing identifying information, as one's name, symbol or place of employment, or academic affiliation, and often worn pinned to one's clothing.
- Digital Technology. digital badge.
badged, badg·ing.
- to furnish or mark with a badge.
badge 近义词
emblem worn
更多badge例句
- A review board must not accept an officer’s version of events simply because the officer wears a badge.
- They’re federal agents, but with no name tags or badges, they are, in the moment of Simonis’s arrest, impossible to identify.
- Sprinkle in trust badges like “Safe Checkout” or “Money-back Guarantee” across your site.
- While many of the professional groups out there had unique items like a badge that identified them for most people, that wasn’t enough.
- So, I took my badge and I got on the bus, which drove me across campus.
- These days, to be featured by Travel Noire on Instagram is like a badge of honor for many black millennial travelers.
- Let Jourdan Dunn be the first of many—not an island, or badge of self-congratulation.
- In fact, Clark fell back first from her blows, losing his cap, tie, and badge in the melee.
- It denotes the person that puts on the badge, puts on the blue uniform, and goes into the streets to put their life at risk.
- In the West Bank, serving time in Israeli jails is a badge of honor.
- The badge of the order was a ribbon, striped black, white and yellow, and the device something like an icicle.
- The string of pearls was coiled up in the midst of the roll of soiled muslin and the badge was pinned to one of the folds.
- He stooped to pick up the turban and his eye fell on the regimental device of the metal badge.
- It was then the badge of infamy and sign of shame—the punishment of the basest of slaves and the vilest of malefactors.
- On leaving the church, some young people put on tricolor cockades, and this badge was soon common in the streets.