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hitch up

/hich/US // hɪtʃ //UK // (hɪtʃ) //

搭乘,拴住了,拴住,拴好

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to fasten or tie, especially temporarily, by means of a hook, rope, strap, etc.; tether: Steve hitched the horse to one of the posts.
    • : to harness to a vehicle.
    • : to raise with jerks; hike up: to hitch up one's trousers.
    • : to move or draw with a jerk.
    • : Slang. to bind by marriage vows; unite in marriage; marry: They got hitched in '79.
    • : to catch, as on a projection; snag: He hitched his jeans on a nail and tore them.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to stick, as when caught.
    • : to fasten oneself or itself to something.
    • : to move roughly or jerkily: The old buggy hitched along.
    • : to hobble or limp.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act or fact of fastening, as to something, especially temporarily.
    • : any of various knots or loops made to attach a rope to something in such a way as to be readily loosened.Compare bend.
    • : Military Slang. a period of military service: a three-year hitch in the Navy.
    • : an unexpected difficulty, obstacle, delay, etc.: a hitch in our plans for the picnic.
    • : a hitching movement; jerk or pull.
    • : a hitching gait; a hobble or limp.
    • : a fastening that joins a movable tool to the mechanism that pulls it.
    • : Mining. a fault having a throw less than the thickness of a coal seam being mined.a notch cut in a wall or the like to hold the end of a stull or other timber.
  1. 1
    • : hitch up, to harness an animal to a wagon, carriage, or the like.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inattach

Examples

  • One person easily walked around a room to look at a wall-mounted sign while having his eyes, brain activity, and other biomarkers tracked without a hitch.

  • Now she found herself hitched to a guy obsessed with business success.

  • The hitch in all this, however, is the TV network groups’ pay-TV contracts.

  • However, there is a hitch in the pitch that underscores why repeatedly showing viewers the same ad continues to be an issue dogging the streaming ad industry.

  • The hitch is that it’s difficult to detect force fields that have nothing to push on.

  • When Hitch is feeling good, when he is not in pain, he throws himself into the business of preproduction.

  • After everything is in order and the call has been placed, Hitch picks up the receiver and says “How do you do?”

  • In 1945 or 1946, Hitch and Alma were in New York with Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman, on a publicity tour.

  • We are talking about Redford one day, an actor Hitch admires.

  • Hitch picks up his cane, pushes her aside, and laboriously tries to get to his feet, saying, “I'll do it myself.”

  • Accordingly, she had the boys to hitch a team to a buggy and took him driving over the great estate.

  • He just got a good holt–a shore enough diamond hitch–on that thirst-parlour dawg, and chawed.

  • Every pull in the shoulders, every hitch in the back, every kink in the sleeves makes me a profound materialist.

  • The burial of 3,000 Turks by armistice at Anzac seems to have been carried out without a hitch.

  • The organist might leave his Swell-box shut or, by means of a catch on the pedal, hitch it full open.