rooming-in / ˈru mɪŋˈɪn, ˈrʊm ɪŋ- /
⚽高中词汇同房同居同住同居生活
rooming-in 的定义
n. 名词 noun- an arrangement in some hospitals that enables postpartum mothers to keep their babies with them in their rooms rather than in a separate nursery.
更多rooming-in例句
- This is a guy who has his son-in-law clean his eyeglasses, for crying out loud.
- Her travel clique has been known to arrive at an airport, bags packed, passport-in-hand, within hours of spotting a deal.
- Earl Spencer adds, “Effectively, my great-grandfather sold his children to his father-in-law.”
- The lack of a gun is not likely to be a major problem for close-in air-to-air dogfights against other jets.
- But those weapons are of limited utility, especially during close-in fights.
- Such throats are trying, are they not?In case one catches cold; Ah, yes!
- The commander-in-chief still kept him attached to the headquarter staff, and constantly employed him on special service.
- So far Murat had always held subordinate commands; his great ambition was to become the commander-in-chief of an independent army.
- Their jurisdictions overlapped and the Gascon would play second fiddle to no one save to his great brother-in-law.
- But the novel disappeared under the clothes with amazing celerity as the voice of her sister-in-law demanded admission.