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bypass

/bahy-pas, -pahs/US // ˈbaɪˌpæs, -ˌpɑs //UK // (ˈbaɪˌpɑːs) //

旁路,绕开,绕过,旁通

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a road enabling motorists to avoid a city or other heavy traffic points or to drive around an obstruction.
    • : a secondary pipe or other channel connected with a main passage, as for conducting a liquid or gas around a fixture, pipe, or appliance.
    • : Electricity. shunt.
    • : a surgical procedure in which a diseased or obstructed hollow organ is temporarily or permanently circumvented.Compare coronary bypass, gastric bypass, heart-lung machine, intestinal bypass.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    by·passed or by·past; by·passed or by·past; by·pass·ing.

    • : to avoid by following a bypass.
    • : to cause to follow a secondary pipe or bypass.
    • : to neglect to consult or to ignore the opinion or decision of: He bypassed the foreman and took his grievance straight to the owner.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Last year, after bypass surgery at the age of 40, I came to this pond in a wetsuit on the front edge of April.

  • Four groins will be placed south of Wisconsin Street to test their effectiveness, along with a sand bypass system to transport pumped sand to beaches via a network of underground pipelines.

  • Oceanside city leaders voted to test beach groins and a sand bypass system in an effort to save the city’s beaches at a recent Council meeting.

  • My father had a heart attack in his late 50s and, later, bypass surgery.

  • The most energy-efficient of these is the bypass humidifier, which extracts the existing moisture from the house’s ductwork and collects it in a tray, where it is evaporated and redistributed.

  • It has allowed the project to bypass normal due diligence and environmental impact assessments.

  • In 2005, DOC paid $37,244 for one coronary bypass surgery and $32,897 for one kidney transplant surgery.

  • Problems so big it only makes common sense for Bieber to bypass any plea offer and move forward with a trial.

  • With that audience in mind, I hope to hear how the President will bypass Washington gridlock and get some things done.

  • First, Obama offered that there is “no short-cut to democracy” and that he could not utilize executive orders to bypass Congress.

  • If the bypass is pulled wide open, the motors beyond do not turn; for the oil fails to reach them.

  • At will we pass it into our distant motors, allowing some to escape back in this direction through a bypass.

  • Dark slowed and entered the cloverleaf that took him onto the bypass expressway.

  • For you tithe mint and rue and every herb, but you bypass justice and the love of God.

  • Driving the loose horses at full run, the women and children raced toward that bypass.