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draw from

/draw/US // drɔ //UK // (drɔː) //

取自,取自于,来自于,从中提取

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    drew [droo], /dru/, drawn [drawn], /drɔn/, draw·ing [draw-ing]. /ˈdrɔ ɪŋ/.

    • : to cause to move in a particular direction by or as if by a pulling force; pull; drag.
    • : to bring, take, or pull out, as from a receptacle or source: to draw water from a well.
    • : to bring toward oneself or itself, as by inherent force or influence; attract: The concert drew a large audience.
    • : to sketch in lines or words; delineate; depict: to draw a vase with charcoal; to draw the comedy's characters with skill.
    • : to compose or create in lines.
    • : to mark or lay out; trace: to draw perpendicular lines.
    • : to frame or formulate: to draw a distinction.
    • : to write out in legal form: Draw up the contract.
    • : to inhale or suck in: to draw liquid through a straw.
    • : to derive or use, as from a source: to draw inspiration from Shakespeare.
    • : to deduce; infer: to draw a conclusion.
    • : to get, take, or receive, as from a source: to draw interest on a savings account; to draw a salary of $600 a week.
    • : to withdraw funds from a drawing account, especially against future commissions on sales.
    • : to produce; bring in: The deposits draw interest.
    • : to disembowel: to draw a turkey.
    • : to drain: to draw a pond.
    • : to pull out to full or greater length; make by attenuating; stretch: to draw filaments of molten glass.
    • : to bend by pulling back its string in preparation for shooting an arrow.
    • : to choose or to have assigned to one at random, by or as by picking an unseen number, item, etc.: Let's draw straws to see who has to wash the car.
    • : Metalworking. to form or reduce the sectional area of by pulling through a die.
    • : to wrinkle or shrink by contraction.
    • : Medicine/Medical. to cause to discharge: to draw an abscess by a poultice.
    • : to obtain from an issuing agency, as an army quartermaster.
    • : Nautical. to need to float: She draws six feet.
    • : to leave undecided; finish with neither side winning, as in a tie.
    • : Cards. to take or be dealt from the pack.Bridge.to remove the outstanding cards in by leading that suit: He had to draw spades first in order to make the contract.
    • : Billiards. to cause to recoil after impact by giving it a backward spin on the stroke.
    • : Northeastern U.S. . to haul; cart.
    • : Hunting. to search for game.
    • : Cricket. to play with a bat held at an angle in order to deflect the ball between the wicket and the legs.
    • : Curling. to slide gently.
    • : to steep in boiling water.
    • : to form or shape as it comes from the furnace by stretching.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    drew [droo], /dru/, drawn [drawn], /drɔn/, draw·ing [draw-ing]. /ˈdrɔ ɪŋ/.

    • : to exert a pulling, moving, or attracting force: A sail draws by being properly trimmed and filled with wind.
    • : to move or pass, especially slowly or continuously, as under a pulling force: The day draws near.
    • : to take out a sword, pistol, etc., for action.
    • : to hold a drawing, lottery, or the like: to draw for prizes.
    • : to sketch or to trace figures; create a picture or depict by sketching.
    • : to be skilled in or practice the art of sketching: I can't paint, but I can draw.
    • : to shrink or contract.
    • : to make a demand: to draw on one's imagination.
    • : Medicine/Medical. to act as an irritant; cause blisters.to cause blood, pus, or the like to gather at a specific point.
    • : to produce or permit a draft, as a pipe or flue.
    • : to leave a contest undecided; tie.
    • : Hunting. to search a covert for game.to follow a game animal by its scent.
    • : to attract customers, an audience, etc.: Our newspaper advertisement drew very well.
    • : to pull back the string of a bow in preparation for shooting an arrow.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an act of drawing.
    • : something that attracts customers, an audience, etc.
    • : something that is moved by being drawn, as the movable part of a drawbridge.
    • : something that is chosen or drawn at random, as a lot or chance.
    • : drawing.
    • : a contest that ends in a tie; an undecided contest.
    • : Also called draw play. Football. a play in which the quarterback fades as if to pass and then hands the ball to a back, usually the fullback, who is running toward the line of scrimmage.
    • : Poker. a card or cards taken or dealt from the pack.draw poker.
    • : Physical Geography. a small, natural drainageway with a shallow bed; gully.the dry bed of a stream.Chiefly Western U.S.a coulee; ravine.
    • : the pull necessary to draw a bow to its full extent.
    • : an amount regularly drawn, as from a drawing account.
    • : a fund, as an expense account or credit line, from which money may be withdrawn when needed.
    • : Horology. the tendency of a tooth of an escape wheel to force toward the center of the wheel a pallet engaging with it.
  1. 1
    • : draw ahead, to gradually pass something moving in the same direction.Nautical. to blow from a direction closer to that in which a vessel is moving; haul forward.Compare veer.
    • : draw away, to move or begin to move away: He drew his hand away from the hot stove.to move farther ahead: The lead runner gradually drew away from his competitor.
    • : draw down, to deplete or be depleted through use or consumption: to draw down crude-oil supplies.
    • : draw in, to cause to take part or enter, especially unwittingly: I heard them debating the point, but I avoided being drawn in.to make a rough sketch of: to draw in a person's figure against the landscape background.
    • : draw off, to move back or away.
    • : draw on, to come nearer; approach: He sensed winter drawing on.to clothe oneself in: She drew on her cape and gloves.Nautical. to gain on.to utilize or make use of, especially as a source: The biography has drawn heavily on personal interviews.
    • : draw out, to pull out; remove.to prolong; lengthen.to persuade to speak: You'll find she's quite interesting if you take the trouble to draw her out.Nautical. to move away from: The boat drew out from the wharf.to take from a place of deposit: She drew her money out of the bank and invested it in bonds.
    • : draw up, to devise or formulate; draft, especially in legal form or as a formal proposal: to draw up a will.to put into position; arrange in order or formation: The officer drew up his men.to bring or come to a stop; halt: Their car drew up at the curb.

Phrases

  • draw a bead on
  • draw a blank
  • draw a line between
  • draw and quarter
  • draw an inference
  • draw a veil over
  • draw away
  • draw back
  • draw blood
  • draw down
  • draw fire
  • draw in
  • drawing board
  • drawing card
  • draw in one's horns
  • draw in the reins
  • draw on
  • draw out
  • draw straws
  • draw the curtain
  • draw the line at
  • draw up
  • back to the drawing board
  • beat to it (the draw)
  • daggers drawn
  • luck of the draw
  • quick on the draw

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inreason

Examples

  • Across the country, in Camarillo, California, home of the Abundant Table, the leaves aren’t much of a draw, but the farm still offers a classic fall experience.

  • A card draw then brings on other events, from clear-cutting of forests to a shark attack to an animal rescue.

  • Learning to draw means taking a scene that we see as three-dimensional and representing it on a two-dimensional piece of paper.

  • North Carolina’s Research Triangle region boasts the sort of academic power and national draw often associated with the Northeast Corridor’s Ivy League.

  • Chelsea can still finish Top 4 if they lose and Sunday’s Manchester United-Leicester game doesn’t end in a draw.

  • In Dresden, Germany, anti-Islam rallies each week draw thousands of demonstrators.

  • Anyone who tries to draw attention to threats instead of quietly burying them is worsening the problem.

  • Sting took over the lead role to try to draw an audience, but his thumpingly inspirational score was already the hero of the show.

  • In another year, stories about the strange new face of an A-list actress might draw chortles and cackles.

  • Neither officer had “the opportunity to draw their weapons,” according to police reports.

  • It was one of those long moments that makes a fellow draw his breath sharp when he thinks about it afterward.

  • Instead of writing slander and flat blasphemy, they propose to draw it, and not draw it mild.

  • It seems hardly possible to draw a more graphic picture of the blessings diffused by the balmy plant, than that just given.

  • I only draw your attention to the facts; which have been sufficiently patent to the world, whatever Lord Hartledon may think.

  • They heard how in the early spring in the meadow by the mill-dam Tim and I had stopped our ploughs to draw lots and he had lost.