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hand over

/hand-oh-ver/US // ˈhændˌoʊ vər //

交付,移交,递交,交给

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act of relinquishing property, authority, etc.: a handover of occupied territory.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • After witnessing the handover, the hospital filed a child-neglect report with the Department of Children and Families, which triggered an investigation.

  • The handover is both a victory lap for American and Iraqi officials and a symbolic warning to looters that both governments are committed to eradicating the illicit trade of cultural artifacts.

  • She was a nurse, and after every shift, there’d be a handover report to the incoming doctors and nurses.

  • The handover was peaceful and happened in eastern Afghanistan along the border, according to a senior U.S. Defense official.

  • Their seed money came from a smuggling operation that they ran prior to the 1997 handover of Hong Kong from the UK to China.

  • A spokesman for the ICC said it had received no information about a handover to Libyan authorities in Tripoli.

  • The case has split the top leadership of the Communist party, and has cast a shadow over the handover.

  • But Obama cut off the document handover by invoking executive privilege.

  • Mrs Handover, by virtue of her sex, instinctively triumphed over him.

  • Thoroughly well-meaning, Mrs. Handover was the most incompetent of housewives.

  • On his reply that he thought of removing, Mrs. Handover fell into profound depression, and began to disclose her history.

  • When the revelation could be postponed no longer, he made known to Mrs Handover that he was about to be married.

  • I didn't think he was fool enough'—thus only he replied to Mrs. Handover's anxious questions.