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pant

/pant/US // pænt //UK // (pænt) //

喘气,喘息,气喘吁吁,裤子

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to breathe hard and quickly, as after exertion.
    • : to gasp, as for air.
    • : to long with breathless or intense eagerness; yearn: to pant for revenge.
    • : to throb or heave violently or rapidly; palpitate.
    • : to emit steam or the like in loud puffs.
    • : Nautical. to work with the shock of contact with a succession of waves.Compare work.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to breathe or utter gaspingly.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act of panting.
    • : a short, quick, labored effort at breathing; gasp.
    • : a puff, as of an engine.
    • : a throb or heave, as of the breast.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • That “seat of the pants” feeling is what reminds you that gravity is pulling you straight down, for example.

  • You’ve been working from your apartment for 342 days, and you haven’t worn real pants in months.

  • For instance, we can say with mathematical certainty that a straw, a T-shirt and a pair of pants are all topologically different objects because their homology groups are different.

  • John Quincy Adams was the first president to ditch knee breeches for long pants on his big day, in 1825.

  • Here are the three pairs of fleece-lined pants that are getting me through this winter.

  • Finding a great T-shirt or a great cigarette pant in a good fabric is next to impossible.

  • “He would just sit in front of us, staring at us and kind of doing this really slow pant in our face,” Mellon says.

  • The star fell from grace like a leather jogging pant-clad, tattooed Lucifer.

  • Earlier this week, news broke that Lululemon was recalling its Luon pant on account of ‘sheerness’.

  • Three years ago, fashion would have labeled these the new harem pant, but now that moment is over.

  • Somebody had scuffed his right shoe in getting out and now he pulled up the pant leg of his dark grey suit to study it ruefully.

  • His grief was superb, a splendid grief, masculine and strong, which compressed his lips and made him pant.

  • Robinson now began to pant audibly, and finding he could not shake the hunter off, he with some reluctance prepared another game.

  • We soon lost her, for we often paused to pant and lean against one another for a moment's respite in this strange memorable race.

  • But he laboured on with the disabled scissors, and only succeeded in scratching the smooth marble a little; he stopped to pant.