encompassed 的定义
- to form a circle about; encircle; surround: He built a moat to encompass the castle.
- to enclose; envelop: The folds of a great cloak encompassed her person.
- to include comprehensively: a work that encompasses the entire range of the world's religious beliefs.
- Obsolete. to outwit.
encompassed 近义词
surround, circumscribe
include, contain
更多encompassed例句
- The Adirondacks encompass a huge park of 6 million acres, as large as the state of Vermont, according to the Adirondack Council, a nonprofit group supporting the park’s ecological health.
- Coronaviruses encompass a broad class of bugs which can include everything from some types of the common cold to SARS and MERS.
- Currently, school board candidates are required to run citywide – rather in their small “sub-districts,” which only encompass smaller portions of the city – in the general election.
- Investment disclosures encompass stocks bought or sold the year prior.
- The Neural Filters work on Adobe’s Sensei platform, which encompasses its machine learning technology.
- They encompassed diversity of many kinds, sex-worker rights, and labor rights.
- They had a unified vision of conspiracy that encompassed Jews, blacks, Zionist bankers, greedy plutocrats, and Bolsheviks.
- Last year, the event encompassed around 700 stores in 12 major cities around the globe.
- The exceptions carved out by the court “encompassed our entire agenda.”
- That critical number—the biggest pool of youngish, single men—encompassed 60% of the weighting.
- Encompassed by danger though he knew that they now must be, Peter found himself possessed by one thought and one thought only.
- The peasants had encompassed all the footways, though they were mostly of a mind that the Earl had made off to his ships.
- The path practically encompassed ten acres, so that it 178 made quite a respectable stroll.
- Five and thirty winters had been encompassed since his fall, and five and thirty years had he lived in the world.
- Jericho is a plain encompassed by a mountainous district, which slopes towards it somewhat in the manner of a theatre.