impinge upon / ɪmˈpɪndʒ /

影响到冲撞冲撞了影响

impinge upon2 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

im·pinged, im·ping·ing.

  1. to make an impression; have an effect or impact: to impinge upon the imagination; social pressures that impinge upon one's daily life.
  2. to encroach; infringe: to impinge on another's rights.
  3. to strike; dash; collide: rays of light impinging on the eye.
v. 有主动词 verb

im·pinged, im·ping·ing.

  1. Obsolete. to come into violent contact with.

impinge upon 近义词

impinge upon

等同于 touch

impinge upon

等同于 palpate

更多impinge upon例句

  1. Justice Department guidelines require approval from the attorney general to investigate or charge a member of the news media with a crime, to ensure that law enforcement does not impinge upon freedom of the press.
  2. What’s more, if my hike is already impinged by sprockets, I don’t really need them to quantify their annoyance as if doing me a grand favor.
  3. If they rule in favor of the Catholic foster mothers and CSS, they risk impinging on the rights of LGBTQ Americans—and possibly others—not just among foster agencies, but in any government-sponsored program.
  4. A lot of rank-and-file voters will take notice when big brands speak out against measures that impinge on Americans’ right to vote.
  5. Things are distant, but in so far as they impinge at all, not unpleasant.
  6. Nor does it impinge on "the fundamental right of privacy guaranteed by the United States Constitution."
  7. Hines's pictures don't make us feel miserable enough, for the misery of their subjects to impinge fully on us.
  8. What could come closer to the anti-retinal position of Duchamp than paintings so dark they can barely impinge on our retinas?
  9. The new guidelines do not impinge on the free-trade agreement or other agreements governing cultural and sports exchanges.
  10. It is strange at such times how trivial things impinge on the consciousness with a shock as of something important and immense.
  11. The imagination of the line is meant to be impressed by the spectacle of the heavy mass about to impinge on it.
  12. There the tone is straightened out, and made to impinge on the roof of the mouth at a precisely defined point.
  13. It did not impinge on his own jealously guarded circle of activity, on his own task of bringing a fugitive to justice.
  14. Is such quick acceptance found now where Easterns and Westerns impinge?