bode 的 2 个定义
bod·ed, bod·ing.
- to be an omen of; portend: The news bodes evil days for him.
- Archaic. to announce beforehand; predict.
bod·ed, bod·ing.
- to portend: The news bodes well for him.
bode 近义词
to foreshadow
更多bode例句
- I don’t know about you, but it strikes me that if the price of land for a new experimental city is too expensive for Alphabet, that doesn’t bode well for the affordability of cities in general.
- That bodes well for the Northern Hemisphere if people continue taking those precautions.
- Such regression doesn’t bode well late in the playoffs, when it’s important to have shot-makers with confidence to score over good defenses.
- That likely bodes well for its US release, despite the still-dire nature of the Covid-19 infection rate in many states.
- “The fact that this drug has already been developed and shown to be successful in treating feline infectious peritonitis, it really bodes well,” Lemieux says.
- Still, the lack of communication with the tribes does not bode well for the future relationships.
- Such thinking does not bode well for women, who are primary targets in honor-seeking attacks.
- Everyone except for Bode Miller, who defended Cooper on Twitter and in a CNN interview, saying, "I felt like it was me, not her."
- The skier most connected to that stratospheric rise is Bode Miller.
- Going into the 2006 Turin Olympics, Bode became the touted star of the Games.
- Suspicion filled the air, and the sudden appearance of innumerable friars seemed to bode some great foreign movement.
- The arrival of the two Germans, Bode and Busche, gave the finishing touch to the conspiracy.
- Quat oget nu at for-bode o wold, GE 324, what now was the import of that prohibition; And vndernam him at it agte awold, id.
- I shall begin to grumble about them myself soon, for I'm aware of warnings in my spine which bode no good.
- "That could bode no good to the place he honoured with his residence," said Gosling.