carried out
进行的,进行了,所进行的,已进行的
Related Words
Definitions
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- : 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.