scavenge 的 2 个定义
scav·enged, scav·eng·ing.
- to take or gather from discarded material.
- to cleanse of filth, as a street.
- to expel burnt gases from.
- Metallurgy. to purify by introducing a substance that will combine chemically with impurities.
scav·enged, scav·eng·ing.
- to act as a scavenger.
- to become scavenged of burnt gases.
- to search, especially for food.
scavenge 近义词
等同于 prowl
更多scavenge例句
- What’s more, the presence of preserved Neandertal footprints at the site suggests that the ancient hominids foraged there and may have preyed upon young elephants or scavenged dead elephants or other creatures, Martin says.
- The best thing to do when you want new clothing is to scavenge the forgotten pieces from your own closet or shop secondhand.
- At Ice Lake last summer, people left unburied feces around the lake, lit fires in the fragile alpine environment with wood scavenged from historic mining structures, and trampled vegetation that may take hundreds of years to recover.
- They hunted when hunting made sense, scavenged when scavenging made sense, and otherwise explored, investigated, and took risks.
- And towns on the edge of their range have and will experience more interaction as the bears arrive to scavenge.
- In middle school, the young boy would scavenge nearby trash yards in the capital of Freetown to find parts for his inventions.
- People have to scavenge or make everything, either by themselves or as part of a cooperative community.
- Inspired us to scavenge for even more erotic bedtime reading.
- He will scavenge any book in any language for another puzzle piece.
- It was not implied that it was part of the duty of the Bembridge green committee to scavenge the seashore.
- Neglect of local authority to scavenge after undertaking to do so, 5s.
- The symbiote might produce sugars, scavenge the blood of toxins—there are so many things it could do.
- There was a fair chance this early that he could scavenge something edible.