chop down / tʃɒp /

砍倒砍掉砍倒了砍死

chop down3 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

chopped, chop·ping.

  1. to cut or sever with a quick, heavy blow or a series of blows, using an ax, hatchet, etc.: to chop down a tree.
  2. to make or prepare for use by so cutting: to chop logs.
  3. to cut in pieces; mince: to chop up an onion; to chop meat.
v. 无主动词 verb

chopped, chop·ping.

  1. to make a quick, heavy stroke or a series of strokes, as with an ax.
  2. Boxing. to throw or deliver a short blow, especially a downward one while in a clinch.
  3. to employ or deliver a chop stroke.
  4. to go, come, or move suddenly or violently.
n. 名词 noun
  1. an act or instance of chopping.
  2. a cutting blow.
  3. Boxing. a short blow, especially a downward one, executed while in a clinch.

chop down 近义词

chop down

等同于 knife

chop down

等同于 attack

更多chop down例句

  1. For marketers, one drawback to exploring Minis is the technical chops required to develop the apps, said Garrett Woods, associate director of platforms at Fullscreen, a social content company.
  2. Meanwhile, Microsoft already has a social media business—LinkedIn—and has the technical chops to build a social commerce operation.
  3. Vondracek harnessed his organizational chops to organize a 48-hour session involving 150 volunteers from among the many hundreds who signed up.
  4. From 2005 to 2012, Brazil implemented land-use zoning and paid people not to chop down forests, reducing deforestation by 70 percent.
  5. You don’t want somebody just chopping you up, put you in pain.
  6. He holds up his right hand—“A short chop right above the bridge of the nose”—and gives up a laugh.
  7. On the same block, Northland Chop Suey, a Chinese restaurant, has been looted at least two times.
  8. The nation that once revered him threatened to chop him up and fry him into calamari.
  9. He says he can chop about three an hour, and two face cords translates to 36 barrels.
  10. You see people in war paint or doing the tomahawk chop and saying, “Scalp him.”
  11. They took their chop or steak at their inn or hotel, or visited the tripe houses.
  12. "No sabby lead chop till ploddem withee dipper," explained the Chinaman, imperturbably.
  13. Not far away from the sloop could be seen plainly that tiny chop-sea which is caused by the breaking of a school of mackerel.
  14. One old tree, split by a winter storm, I decided to chop down entirely.
  15. M. Noel, in a dress-coat, very dark skinned and with mutton-chop whiskers, came forward to meet us.