quench 的定义
- to slake, satisfy, or allay.
- to put out or extinguish.
- to cool suddenly by plunging into a liquid, as in tempering steel by immersion in water.
- to subdue or destroy; overcome; quell: to quench an uprising.
- Electronics. to terminate by application of a voltage.
quench 近义词
destroy, extinguish
satisfy, especially thirst
更多quench例句
- It’s an increasingly precarious resource for the over 40 million people it quenches, which include the cities of San Diego and Los Angeles, as long-term climate change threatens to destabilize the regular snowpack that feeds it.
- The British retreated after a huge storm struck the city — perhaps a hurricane or a tornado — quenching the fires.
- Kosas’s ever so slightly sticky formula is loaded with ultra-moisturizing hyaluronic acid, so it wears tenaciously under a neck tube or mask and leaves lips noticeably more quenched than the average wax stick.
- No one needs to prove to you that a glass of water will quench your thirst, because everyone has experienced that result firsthand.
- With a good hydration bladder in your pack, you’ll be ready to get outside without worrying about quenching your thirst.
- Luckily, ‘Doldo’ from the Second City Network has arrived to quench their thirsts, and have a laugh at their expense.
- Her father runs an antique store and frequently sends the girls goods to quench the Berlin vintage drought.
- The bruised reed he shall not break, and smoking flax he shall not quench, he shall bring forth judgment unto truth.
- One copy was quite able to quench the thirst for "keeping up," and was often read aloud in the intervals between cards.
- "It would be idle," came Wilding's icy voice to quench the gleam of hope kindling anew in Richard's breast.
- The water that was used to quench the fire being pumped into the river Idria, all the fish died excepting the eels.
- Somehow this question seemed to quench the teacher of mathematics' good spirits.