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bunker

/buhng-ker/US // ˈbʌŋ kər //UK // (ˈbʌŋkə) //

掩体,地堡,碉堡,沙坑

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a large bin or receptacle; a fixed chest or box: a coal bunker.
    • : a fortification set mostly below the surface of the ground with overhead protection provided by logs and earth or by concrete and fitted with openings through which guns may be fired.
    • : Golf. any obstacle, as a sand trap or mound of dirt, constituting a hazard.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : Nautical. to provide fuel for.to convey from a vessel to an adjacent storehouse.
    • : Golf. to hit into a bunker.
    • : to equip with or as if with bunkers: to bunker an army's defenses.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • They’d given up on the greater good and retreated to their own bunkers, leaving the rest of us to burn.

  • For example, advanced bio-fuels cost 600% more than the bunker fuel that cargo ships run on.

  • He’ll get a bunker dug out beneath Mar-a-Lago, and he’ll be hurried down there by tight-lipped men in suits every time there’s a thunderstorm.

  • Lawmakers barricaded themselves inside offices, bunkers and laid on the floors of the House and Senate.

  • The unmarked offices sprinkled around the building where backroom deals are typically made became makeshift bunkers.

  • Whatever the reason, Burton was committed enough to leave tiny Bunker Hill to seek out her beau.

  • Bunker, along with his brothers Herbert and Lamar, started buying silver in 1970, when it was $1.94 an ounce.

  • Nelson Bunker Hunt, who died this week, made and lost billions of dollars.

  • You feel like you need to bunker up, hide away, and arm yourself.

  • The bunker, so crucial during the final years of the Cold War in the Baltic, was only declassified in 2003.

  • Corner stone of Bunker hill monument laid with great and enthusiastic ceremonies; Lafayette being present.

  • Well, we couldn't even think Bunker Hill but what she'd pipe up about the Alamo.

  • The door in this bunker had been dropped probably when water was first discovered, which was a few minutes after the collision.

  • There was another water-tight door at the after end of the water-tight passage through the bunker immediately aft of D bulkhead.

  • Holding the transmitter tightly Hendricks called the code of the command bunker.