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barging in

/bahrj/US // bɑrdʒ //UK // (bɑːdʒ) //

闯入,闯进来的,闯入了,闯进来

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a capacious, flat-bottomed vessel, usually intended to be pushed or towed, for transporting freight or passengers; lighter.
    • : a vessel of state used in pageants: elegantly decorated barges on the Grand Canal in Venice.
    • : Navy. a boat reserved for a flag officer.
    • : a boat that is heavier and wider than a shell, often used in racing as a training boat.
    • : New England . a large, horse-drawn coach or, sometimes, a bus.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    barged, barg·ing.

    • : to move clumsily; bump into things; collide: to barge through a crowd.
    • : to move in the slow, heavy manner of a barge.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    barged, barg·ing.

    • : to carry or transport by barge: Coal and ore had been barged down the Ohio to the Mississippi.
  1. 1
    • : barge in, to intrude, especially rudely: I hated to barge in without an invitation.
    • : barge into, Also barge in on. to force oneself upon, especially rudely; interfere in: to barge into a conversation.to bump into; collide with: He started to run away and barged into a passer-by.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The initial models have been small, but the concept calls for much larger barges floating in the Chesapeake in the years ahead, which experts say could have a big effect on the aquaculture industry.

  • That’s why tubers, kayakers, and canoeists stop at this river barge, just north of Trenton, that serves hot dogs and burgers to those drifting by.

  • The contractor could use barges in the river, rather than more of the island, to store construction materials and equipment, Brookman said.

  • Using construction cranes and barges, workers removed the old draw section and its rusted machinery, and replaced it with a new non-opening segment.

  • Choices range from speedy, lightweight e-commuters to ponderous kid-hauling land barges called cargo bikes.

  • I wandered around aimlessly for a while, then gave the goose to an acquiescent hippy on a barge.

  • His shirt was torn, one of his worn sneakers was more like a rubber-soled barge—the SS Nike.

  • When they moved back to London, the only accommodation they could afford was a freezing, leaky barge on the Thames.

  • At last, two peasants barge into the scene, with spades and threshers on their backs.

  • Because without them, and the things they make, the world would be a garbage barge.

  • From this child's arm matter was taken and transferred to that of J. Barge, a boy of seven years old.

  • One day, Kari and Kopee and I went to the river bank to help pull a big barge up the river.

  • The rope almost broke and the barge swayed in the water, almost toppled, and then drifted to its previous position.

  • After he had pulled the barge about two hundred yards he stopped; the rope slackened and then the current pulled against us.

  • That done we went to the Globe and there had a good dinner, and by and by took barge again and so home.