number one 的 2 个定义
- oneself, especially one's own well-being or interests: to look out for number one.
- a person, company, etc., that is first in rank, order, or prestige: Our team is number one.
- urination: used especially by or with reference to children.
- of the highest in quality, status, importance, etc.; first-rate: a number one performance.
- first in rank, order, or prestige: the number one book on the bestseller list.
number one 近义词
most important person or thing
更多number one例句
- We held the number one spot for three years straight before recently being overtaken by Bakersfield, California.
- The series was viewed by more than 70 million households within its first month on the streaming service, and landed on the platform’s number one spot in their top 10 rankings across the globe, from Brazil to Germany to the Philippines.
- With jaw-droppingly steep canyon walls that plunge for over a mile to the churning Colorado River below, it would be easy to assume that falling is the number one cause of death in this storied national park.
- See for yourself why Feetures has become the number one running sock in America.
- Websites with more than 300 referring domains are much more likely to rank in the number one spot than, let’s say, a website with only 50 backlinks.
- Added to drinking water at concentrations of around one part per million, fluoride ions stick to dental plaque.
- In his view, a writer has only one duty: to be present in his books.
- Yet this, in the end, is a book from which one emerges sad, gloomy, disenchanted, at least if we agree to take it seriously.
- The fear of violence should not determine what one does or does not say.
- The al Qaeda-linked gunmen shot back, but only managed to injure one officer before they were taken out.
- Practise gliding in the form of inflection, or slide, from one extreme of pitch to another.
- He alludes to it as one of their evil customs and used by them to produce insensibility.
- There was a rumor that Alessandro and his father had both died; but no one knew anything certainly.
- Truth is a torch, but one of enormous size; so that we slink past it in rather a blinking fashion for fear it should burn us.
- Under the one-sixth they appear as slender, highly refractive fibers with double contour and, often, curled or split ends.