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expert

/noun, verb ek-spurt; adjective ek-spurt, ik-spurt/US // noun, verb ˈɛk spɜrt; adjective ˈɛk spɜrt, ɪkˈspɜrt //UK // (ˈɛkspɜːt) //

专家,专家介绍,专家们

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a person who has special skill or knowledge in some particular field; specialist; authority: a language expert.
    • : Military. the highest rating in rifle marksmanship, above that of marksman and sharpshooter.a person who has achieved such a rating.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : possessing special skill or knowledge; trained by practice; skillful or skilled: an expert driver; to be expert at driving a car.
    • : pertaining to, coming from, or characteristic of an expert: expert work; expert advice.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to act as an expert for.

Synonyms & Antonyms

adj.knowledgeable, proficient
Forms: experts

Examples

  • Postal workers and independent experts say that has caused mail to pile up in post offices and caused multiday delays in localities across the country.

  • She added that she felt Pence’s top officials often showed derision toward the administration’s medical experts.

  • His suspicions are out of step with the views of election experts and many within his own party, who are building large-scale vote-by-mail programs.

  • Unless we have a dermatologist, a doctor, an expert co-sign that product, we don’t cover it.

  • States have broad power — known as “police power” — to protect public health in an emergency, even when doing so infringes on individual liberties, legal experts say.

  • I went into the audition as Fericito, the Venezuelan percussionist, and then I did a self-defense expert.

  • “He was a brave field commander and an expert in intelligence, and in organizing popular and tribal forces,” said the eulogist.

  • Well, one expert I talked to said that physically it involves little more than a $20 cable.

  • An expert in education talks about race relations, the political environment and what can be done to improve things.

  • Carter has also been a fixture on boards and expert panels, in think tanks and at universities.

  • And having an enormous appetite he was fortunate in being expert at finding angleworms.

  • He has his particular likings and tit-bits, and is very expert in carving out the parts of an animal that please him best.

  • But, as many people know, and all may believe, running in a crowded London street is difficult—even to an expert London thief.

  • When conversing recently with an expert on this subject I asked whether the use of asbestos would not effect the desired object.

  • His services as witness and expert adviser were in great request by railway companies.