shoe 的 2 个定义
plural shoes, shoon [shoon]. /ʃun/.
- an external covering for the human foot, usually of leather and consisting of a more or less stiff or heavy sole and a lighter upper part ending a short distance above, at, or below the ankle.
- an object or part resembling a shoe in form, position, or use.
- a horseshoe or a similar plate for the hoof of some other animal.
- (21)
shod or shoed, shod or shoed or shod·den, shoe·ing.
- to provide or fit with a shoe or shoes.
- to protect or arm at the point, edge, or face with a ferrule, metal plate, or the like.
shoe 近义词
footwear
由shoe构成的短语
- shoe is on the other foot, the
- comfortable as an old shoe
- fill someone's shoes
- goody-two-shoes
- if the shoe fits
- in someone's shoes
- step into someone's shoes
- wait for the other shoe to drop
更多shoe例句
- Clarke also posted shots of the ad and the shoe on Instagram.
- Try raising it and attaching it to the studs, leaving room below for your shoe collection.
- The theory suggests that when I put myself in your shoes, my brain tries to copy the computations inside your brain.
- Attached to the sole of a shoe, it stays flat as someone stands.
- With this information, they can do anything from show us an ad for a pair of shoes we’ll probably like to try to change our minds about which candidate to vote for in an election.
- If we begin to see the other as our possession and commodity, our shoe, the shadow of our shadow, is there ever a happy outcome?
- They seem to belong to us, and then they freely go—behavior very uncharacteristic of a shadow or a shoe.
- If I say “my shoe,” do I mean it in the same way as “my life,” or “my sister” or “my husband”?
- And a perfectly amber whisky might as well taste like an old shoe.
- And Christopher Walken warbling and doing a little soft-shoe?
- Bondad sua, seor, I'll be sworn there is not one fit to tie the latchet of your shoe in the whole army.
- I should judge from the streets that not more than one-fourth of the females of Galway belong to the shoe-wearing aristocracy.
- The pig-headed prowler I saw, with my pompon missing from his shoe, and his bonne amie wearing the stolen ring.
- Buckles were first worn as shoe fastenings in the reign of Charles II.
- With her little satin shoe she tapped the carpet, biting her under lip and seeming to be listening.