released / rɪˈlis /

发布的发布发布了发布的信息

released2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

re·leased, re·leas·ing.

  1. to free from confinement, bondage, obligation, pain, etc.; let go: to release a prisoner; to release someone from a debt.
  2. to free from anything that restrains, fastens, etc.: to release a catapult.
  3. to allow to be known, issued, done, or exhibited: to release an article for publication.
  4. Law. to give up, relinquish, or surrender.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a freeing or releasing from confinement, obligation, pain, emotional strain, etc.
  2. liberation from anything that restrains or fastens.
  3. some device or agency for effecting such liberation.

released 近义词

adj. 形容词 adjective

freed

released 的近义词 5
adj. 形容词 adjective

announced

更多released例句

  1. Because the NTSB appointed Boeing as a technical adviser for the investigation, they say, the company is also bound by the protocols limiting the release of documents.
  2. That is unlikely to be recouped with a scattershot theatrical release and some new HBO Max subscribers.
  3. The settlement with the school does not include a release for Philbert.
  4. Just note that it’s missing a ton of typical features and you shouldn’t expect to use it for any real work until the official release early next year.
  5. The latest data release shows Illinois public schools reported having secluded and restrained students at least 23,530 times during the 2017-18 school year, up from 17,403 two years earlier.
  6. These are the same hormones that are released when women are breastfeeding.
  7. Another rumor that has existed since before The Empire Strikes Back was released.
  8. I meet Otis J. the night he arrives at “The Castle,” a West Harlem halfway house for newly-released convicts.
  9. Eventually Morrow was released with no money, vehicle, or phone.
  10. Oh, and the first press image they released was a pair of black dudes in tracksuits as a troll of sorts to NME.
  11. About this time the famous Philippine painter, Juan Luna (vide p. 195), was released after six monthsʼ imprisonment as a suspect.
  12. John Wilkes released from the tower by the memorable sentence of chief justice Pratt.
  13. He was released soon after Christmas, and another Vicar filleth his place.
  14. Gently he pushed her from him, released his hold; the little face slipped from his shoulder as though it sank into the sea.
  15. The pedal was thrown back by a spring on being released from the pressure of the foot.