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schedule

/skej-ool, -ool, -oo-uhl; British shed-yool, shej-ool/US // ˈskɛdʒ ul, -ʊl, -u əl; British ˈʃɛd yul, ˈʃɛdʒ ul //UK // (ˈʃɛdjuːl, esp US ˈskɛdʒʊəl) //

时间表,时间安排,计划表,日程表

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
    • : a series of things to be done or of events to occur at or during a particular time or period: He always has a full schedule.
    • : a timetable.
    • : a written or printed statement of details, often in classified or tabular form, especially one forming an appendix or explanatory addition to another document.
    • : Obsolete. a written paper.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    sched·uled, sched·ul·ing.

    • : to make a schedule of or enter in a schedule.
    • : to plan for a certain date: to schedule publication for June.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The schedule adjustment gives Maryland the chance to win three games next week.

  • Some families have grown used to a pandemic schedule — Mom and Dad aren’t going into the office — so they decide that everyone should just stay home.

  • Contact tracing has begun, the league said, and Thursday’s game between the Ducks and Golden Knights remains on schedule.

  • A few others on the list — namely Montana, Terry Bradshaw and Kurt Warner — have had better per-game or per-play Super Bowl performances than Brady after we adjust for schedule and era.

  • After a while, I made a point of having him tell me his travel schedule so I could be sure to see him in person.

  • Therefore, it is not possible for any F-35 schedule to include a video data link  or infrared pointer at this point.

  • At some point during his busy schedule, Israel found the time to write a book, titled The Global War on Morris.

  • Doubling down on Schedule I is, at best, a deranged way to push Americans away from “medical,” and toward recreational, use.

  • If 2014 was any indication, the coming TV schedule is sure to be filled with plenty of water-cooler shows.

  • One minute the script, the next a story about Ivor Novello's tailor or the Tahiti steamer schedule in the Thirties.

  • But we were already behind schedule and the afternoon found us on the road to Ayr.

  • How much time he had lost he did not know, but that down-grade had put his schedule many minutes to the good.

  • The theory of the new scheme was that it might permit of a lower Customs tariff schedule.

  • Great alterations were said to have been made in schedule A: fifty-one boroughs out of fifty-six remained as before.

  • The consideration of the schedule ought to be postponed till that information had been obtained.