Skip to main content

bouldered

/bohl-der/US // ˈboʊl dər //UK // (ˈbəʊldə) //

巨石嶙峋的,巨石状的,巨石嶙峋,巨石型

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a detached and rounded or worn rock, especially a large one.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • They found that boulders in this area showed bright veins, narrow in width but about a meter in length, similar to what’s found in other carbonaceous chondritic meteorites that have landed on Earth.

  • When NASA’s OSIRIS-REx arrived at near-Earth asteroid Bennu, scientists were dismayed to find a surface covered with hazardous-looking boulders.

  • She continues to boulder and sport-climb both at the gym and outdoors.

  • The trail finishes with a bang, as hikers must scramble hand over foot to climb several massive boulders on their way to the mesa top, where the modern world and parking lot await.

  • If you have trails or open space nearby, scaling small boulders works, too.

  • [Tatum laughs] Like I found the three other artsy goth kids at Boulder and hung out with them.

  • I did one semester at Boulder, which was more a stereotypical, American collegiate experience.

  • But even at Boulder I found the artsy kids and hung out with them.

  • Boulder was attractive because "it's beautiful and peaceful and people are nice—the opposite of New York—and my mother's there."

  • Talia Eisenberg is a self-described former New York “party girl” who moved to Boulder Colorado to get healthy.

  • On the opposite side of the stream, set back about thirty paces from the brink, stood a granite boulder.

  • At the far end we made a little fire and lay round it in the shadow of a big boulder.

  • Boulder beaches are so quick in answering to every slight change in the conditions which affect them that they seem almost alive.

  • The cutting is not altogether in the fixed material, for the boulder itself is also worn and scored in the work.

  • Here and there we will find a boulder perched on a pedestal of ice, which indicates a recent down-wearing of the field.