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park

/pahrk/US // pɑrk //UK // (pɑːk) //

公园,园区,园,公园里

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an area of land, usually in a largely natural state, for the enjoyment of the public, having facilities for rest and recreation, often owned, set apart, and managed by a city, state, or nation.
    • : an enclosed area or a stadium used for sports: a baseball park.
    • : a considerable extent of land forming the grounds of a country house.
    • : British. a tract of land reserved for wild animals; game preserve.
    • : Western U.S. a broad valley in a mountainous region.
    • : a space where vehicles, especially automobiles, may be assembled or stationed.
    • : amusement park.
    • : theme park.
    • : any area set aside for public recreation.
    • : Military. the space occupied by the assembled guns, tanks, or vehicles of a military unit.the assemblage so formed. the ammunition trains and reserve artillery of an army.
    • : Automotive. a setting in an automatic transmission in which the transmission is in neutral and the brake is engaged.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to place or leave in a certain place for a period of time.
    • : Informal. to put, leave, or settle: Park your coat on the chair. Park yourself over there for a moment.
    • : to assemble in a military park.
    • : to enclose in or as in a park.
    • : Informal. to invest in a stock, bond, etc., considered to be a safe investment with little chance of depreciation, as during a recession or an unstable economic period, or until one finds a more profitable investment.
    • : Aerospace. to place in orbit.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to park a car, bicycle, etc.
    • : Informal. to engage in kissing and caressing in a parked car.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Because there wasn’t much time between checking the traps, there was no point driving back to the park to sit alone on a bench.

  • “Without any revenue, you’re seeing baseball parks and cities having to close their doors,” says Marissa Kiss, doctoral student studying the issue at George Mason University in Virginia.

  • Where this gets tricky is when you play with strangers, either in the park or in an intramural league, Thomas says.

  • You can drive down to the bottom of the hill and park a two-minute walk from the beach, or park at the top and walk down the hill.

  • From downtown Tucson, the 131-mile Loop gets you within two miles of the park.

  • He is expected to spend the next few days closeted with lawyers and advisers at his home, Royal Lodge, in Windsor Great Park.

  • But Sarah Ferguson still lives in the family home, Royal Lodge in Windsor Great Park, when she is in the U.K.

  • Barry showed me his room—a one bedroom with a killer view of Riverbank State Park and the Hudson.

  • Creating PGCs from skin tissue, on the other hand, seems like a walk in the park compared to egg freezing.

  • Park employees helped John quit tobacco by way of a butts-proof glass enclosure, a drastic change in diet, and regular exercise.

  • He used to walk through the park, and note with pleasure the care that his father bestowed on the gigantic property.

  • The great park which surrounded it was one of the most celebrated in all England, celebrated alike for its size and its beauty.

  • The road descended on the other side, and we followed it till we came unexpectedly upon a little circular park.

  • Within were the park and the deer, and the mansion rearing its brilliant columns amidst the redundant groves of a Spanish autumn.

  • In Windsor Park, 960 trees were blown down and more than a thousand damaged; 146 shipwrecks occurred on the coasts.