impend / ɪmˈpɛnd /

🎓大学词汇迟滞迟早会发生的迟来的迟早会发生

impend 的定义

v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to be imminent; be about to happen.
  2. to threaten or menace: He felt that danger impended.
  3. Archaic. to hang or be suspended; overhang.

impend 近义词

v. 动词 verb

threaten

更多impend例句

  1. Over the last few weeks, anytime I’ve asked media buyers what they’re focused on I’ve heard that the impending changes from Apple’s iOS 14 update are top of mind.
  2. The third-party cookie’s impending demise is one catalyst pushing publishers to prioritize their first-party data in programmatic ad sales, but advertiser demand has accelerated that push in 2020.
  3. But, in this time of impending climate crisis, O’Rourke says that every little bit counts.
  4. Despite a pandemic that’s shocked the entire economy and impending antitrust lawsuits, Big Tech is doing rather well.
  5. In mid-July, Robert Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said that the impending fall and winter could be “one of the most difficult times that we have experienced in American public health.”
  6. Fines and imprisonment impend over us, for exercising one of the holiest charities of our religion.
  7. At the distance of a mile they appeared to tower and almost impend over us.
  8. Concealing his agitation, he began the routine of such familiar labors as impend on the eve of battle.
  9. One speaks upon occasion, giving him warning when grave troubles impend.
  10. The Kalmuck priest wears a leather coat, over the laps of which impend hundreds of strips, with leather tassels on the breast.