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carried out

/kar-ee/US // ˈkær i //UK // (ˈkærɪ) //

进行的,进行了,所进行的,已进行的

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    car·ried, car·ry·ing.

    • : to take or support from one place to another; convey; transport: He carried her for a mile in his arms. This elevator cannot carry more than ten people.
    • : to wear, hold, or have around one: He carries his knife in his pocket. He carries a cane.
    • : to contain or be capable of containing; hold: The suitcase will carry enough clothes for a week.
    • : to serve as an agency or medium for the transmission of: The wind carried the sound. He carried the message to me.
    • : to be the means of conveying or transporting: The wind carried the balloon out of sight.
    • : to be pregnant with: His wife is carrying twins.
    • : to put ahead to a subsequent time, page, etc., or to a higher authority; continue or transfer: to carry a case to a higher court; to carry a footnote to a new page.
    • : to bear the weight, burden, etc., of; sustain: These piers once carried an arch.
    • : to take, as in singing; bear or sustain.
    • : to hold in a certain manner: She carries her head high.
    • : to behave or comport: She carries herself with decorum.
    • : to take the initiative in: The Giants carried the game to the Browns.
    • : to secure the adoption of.
    • : to get a plurality or majority of electoral votes in.
    • : to extend or continue in a given direction or to a certain point: to carry the war into enemy territory.
    • : to bring, impart, hear, transmit, or communicate news, a message, etc.
    • : to lead or influence by emotional or intellectual appeal: The actor carried his audience with him.
    • : to bear the major burden of by superior talent, determination, etc.: The star carried the whole play.
    • : to serve as a conduit for: This pipe carries water to the house.
    • : to have as an attribute, property, consequence, etc.; presume or entail: Violation carries a penalty of five years in prison.
    • : to support or give validity to: One decision carries another.
    • : Commerce. to keep on hand or in stock.to keep on the account books.
    • : to bear as a crop: This land will not carry corn.
    • : to sustain or support: Our grain supply will carry the cattle through the winter. This money will carry us for about a week.
    • : to be enrolled for or to undertake as an amount of work: New students are advised not to carry more than 16 credits.
    • : Golf. to advance beyond or go by with one stroke.
    • : Ice Hockey. to cause to move forward along the ice and in one's control by a series of light, short taps with the stick.
    • : Hunting. to retain and pursue.
    • : to transfer from one denomination to the succeeding one.
    • : to have as a maximum working pressure: This boiler carries 190 pounds per square inch.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    car·ried, car·ry·ing.

    • : to act as a bearer or conductor.
    • : to have or exert propelling force.
    • : to be transmitted, propelled, or sustained: My voice carries farther than his.
    • : to bear the head in a particular manner while in action: The horse carries well.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural car·ries.

    • : range, as of a gun.
    • : Golf. the distance a stroked ball travels.
    • : land that separates navigable waters and over which a canoe or boat must be carried; portage.
    • : a carrying.
  1. 1
    • : carry away, to influence greatly or unreasonably, especially emotionally; excite; transport: The spectators were carried away by the appeal to their patriotism.Nautical. to dislodge or send overboard.Nautical. to lose through breakage.Nautical. to break under strain.
    • : carry back, Accounting. to apply to the net income of a prior period in order to reduce the tax for that period.
    • : carry forward, to make progress with.Bookkeeping.to transfer to the next page, column, or book.Accounting.to apply to the net income of a succeeding period in order to reduce the tax for that period.
    • : carry off, to win.to cause the death of: The Black Plague in the Middle Ages carried off more than one-fourth of the population of Europe.
    • : carry on, to manage; conduct.to continue without stopping: Rescue operations were carried on in spite of the storm.to continue to live, work, etc., despite a setback or tragedy; persevere.Informal.to behave in an agitated, foolish, or indiscreet manner.to misbehave or be disruptive; act up.Nautical.to proceed under excessive sail for the weather conditions.
    • : carry out, to put into operation; execute: He doesn't have the funds to carry out his design.to effect or accomplish; complete: They carried out their plan without incident.
    • : carry over, to hold until a later time; postpone.to be left; remain.Bookkeeping.to transfer to the next page, column, or book.Accounting.to apply to the net income of a succeeding period in order to reduce the tax for that period.to extend from one activity or time to another: He does not carry over his business ethics into his personal relationships.
    • : carry through, to accomplish; complete.to support or help through a difficult situation.to continue or be prevalent in; persist: a theme that carried through all his writing.

Phrases

  • carry a torch for
  • carry a tune
  • carry away
  • carry coals to Newcastle
  • carry forward
  • carrying charge
  • carry off
  • carry on
  • carry out
  • carry over
  • carry the ball
  • carry the can
  • carry the day
  • carry the torch
  • carry through
  • carry too far
  • carry weight
  • fetch and carry
  • (carry) off someone's feet

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Trey Sermon is poised to get the majority of the carries outside of quarterback Justin Fields.

  • Henry, capitalizing on the absence of Colts defensive lineman DeForest Buckner, carried the Titans with 178 yards and three touchdowns on 27 carries.

  • He ran for 44 yards and two touchdowns, and New Orleans running back Latavius Murray also had two scores while rumbling for 123 yards on 19 carries.

  • Henry finished with 178 yards and three touchdowns on 27 carries, and added two pass receptions for seven yards.

  • He had only 19 yards rushing at halftime but finished with a game-high 94 yards on 16 carries and had one catch for 10 yards.

  • You just travel light with carry-on luggage, go to cities that you love, and get to hang out with all your friends.

  • The various members met for the first time when they traveled to Gambia at the beginning of December to carry out their plan.

  • In one of the activities men practiced putting the dolls gingerly on their backs to carry them.

  • They had rarely seen their own fathers carry small children unless their mothers were ill.

  • It used to carry livestock but sailed its final voyage with a hold full of Syrian men, women, and children.

  • The occasion should be seized also to increase the balances of depositors who carry unprofitable accounts.

  • They will carry out the dictum of Carlyle that the modern university is a university of books.

  • It was little better than coal dust, and would not carry a ball fifty paces to kill or wound.

  • The text of the amendments designed to carry out these recommendations will be submitted by the Board at an early date.

  • The Professor, passing benevolently on, was glad he had now enough money to carry out his projects.