shinning / ʃɪn /

闪亮的闪闪发光闪亮闪闪发亮

shinning2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. the front part of the leg from the knee to the ankle.
  2. the lower part of the foreleg in cattle.
  3. the shinbone or tibia, especially its sharp edge or front portion.
  4. Chiefly British. a cut of beef similar to the U.S. shank, usually cut into small pieces for stewing.
v. 无主动词 verb

shinned, shin·ning.

  1. to climb by holding fast with the hands or arms and legs and drawing oneself up.

shinning 近义词

shinning

等同于 lambent

更多shinning例句

  1. For touch, the hip is next to the thigh, then the knee, then the shin and then the foot.
  2. There’s no consensus on why this happens, but one theory is that certain muscles in the calves or shin get fatigued or have trouble producing enough force during fast walking, so it’s more comfortable to run even if it costs a bit of extra energy.
  3. Then the researchers scanned each kid’s shin bones using an X-ray technique called computed tomography.
  4. Much of the muscle tissue around his right shin was removed and replaced by muscle from his left leg.
  5. You want to be in the driver’s seat, with your shins pressed firmly against the front of your boots, your weight in the balls of your feet, and your hands forward.
  6. Stacy, acting upon his own advice was already shinning up a tree.
  7. Up the wall, by means of cracks and tufts, was shinning a small boy.
  8. They say one old woman broke her leg, or something, shinning over a fence.
  9. And Bud was shinning down over the edge clawing tightly the stone points of vantage.
  10. He had no difficulty in shinning up the trunk until he reached a lower limb, and then he quite easily drew himself up.