erode / ɪˈroʊd /

💦中学词汇冲蚀侵蚀腐蚀

erode2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

e·rod·ed, e·rod·ing.

  1. to eat into or away; destroy by slow consumption or disintegration: Battery acid had eroded the engine. Inflation erodes the value of our money.
  2. to form by erosion.
v. 无主动词 verb

e·rod·ed, e·rod·ing.

  1. to become eroded.

erode 近义词

v. 动词 verb

deteriorate; wear away

更多erode例句

  1. The final results could reveal that vaccines may not block transmission as much as hoped, so if they’re overhyped, trust in public health officials could erode and lead to more vaccine hesitancy.
  2. Now a new study shows just how much this enterprise has eroded our privacy.
  3. Eisen argues that the emphasis on moon shots erodes the foundation that makes those advances possible, which is long-term stable support of pure research.
  4. Trust in public health officials has been dangerously eroded.
  5. Yet for many, it seemed a step too far in government intrusions after a year and counting of a dignity-eroding pandemic.
  6. That started to erode after the two officers were assaulted last week.
  7. Otherwise, we morally erode the environment to be the type that makes interaction with others so difficult in the first place.
  8. It serves as a potent reminder that the cost in lives of one war can erode the will of a people to fight another.
  9. Failure to secure their quick release can erode voter confidence and advertise the impotence of government.
  10. A failure to act “would erode, perhaps obliterate” the taboo against such weapons.
  11. The ages that it had taken this stream to erode such a bed for itself was beyond imagination.
  12. There has not been time to erode them away since the Pleistocene glaciation.
  13. The area up-stream from the culvert will not erode below the level of the top of the box at the inlet end.
  14. It would take a lot of time to erode away that much massive stone.
  15. As a result, there is a substantial defense imbalance that will erode fighting power.