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mountainside

/moun-tn-sahyd/US // ˈmaʊn tnˌsaɪd //

山边,山腰,山腰处,山坡

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the side or slope of a mountain.

Examples

  • It ran for more than a third of a mile, was deep enough to expose the mountainside, and threw a massive cloud of snow skyward.

  • That may be because you can go faster in shorter races, and intensity is a key cause of fatigue—particularly if you’re hammering down quad-busting mountainsides.

  • We had entered the Argentière basin across a low point in the ridgeline called the Col des Cristaux—which in English translates to Crystal Pass—before traversing laterally across the mountainside.

  • Oh, and there was a guy in a jet suit gliding up a mountainside.

  • As a young reporter, Jan Morris was on the mountainside, at 22,000 feet, when the first expedition in history reached the top of Mount Everest.

  • When Hanifa reached what seemed a safe place on the mountainside, she called her sisters.

  • Orange parka-clad instructors escorted Marines up and down the mountainside.

  • As superheated liquid rock and gas gushed down the mountainside, an estimated 12,000 local people perished within 24 hours.

  • Everyone ascends via the same route, clipping into ropes stitched up the mountainside—six miles of it—all the way to the top.

  • He had tunneled into the mountainside where he stored all this weaponry.

  • Against the mountainside there seemed to hang one bunch of flame like a star, large, red, and weird.

  • Dont you know they carry down the mountainside and into the city the finest water of the West Indies?

  • Mother and uncle rose from their seats and the whole group started down the mountainside.

  • They climbed out of the canyon and out onto the grassy slope of the mountainside.

  • The scrambling noise was still coming down the mountainside, growing louder and louder, but with no one breaking into view.