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signed

/sahyn/US // saɪn //UK // (saɪn) //

签署,已签署,签名,签字

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a token; indication.
    • : any object, action, event, pattern, etc., that conveys a meaning.
    • : a conventional or arbitrary mark, figure, or symbol used as an abbreviation for the word or words it represents.
    • : a motion or gesture used to express or convey an idea, command, decision, etc.: Her nod was a sign that it was time to leave.
    • : a notice, bearing a name, direction, warning, or advertisement, that is displayed or posted for public view: a traffic sign; a store sign.
    • : a trace; vestige: There wasn't a sign of them.
    • : an arbitrary or conventional symbol used in musical notation to indicate tonality, tempo, etc.
    • : Medicine/Medical. the objective indications of a disease.
    • : any meaningful gestural unit belonging to a sign language.
    • : an omen; portent: a sign of approaching decadence.
    • : sign of the zodiac.
    • : sign language.
    • : Usually signs. traces, as footprints, of a wild animal.
    • : Mathematics. a plus sign or minus sign used as a symbol for indicating addition or subtraction.a plus sign or minus sign used as a symbol for indicating the positive or negative value of a quantity, as an integer.multiplication sign. division sign. a symbol, as  or !, used to indicate a radical or factorial operation.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to affix a signature to: to sign a letter.
    • : to write as a signature: to sign one's name.
    • : to engage by written agreement: to sign a new player.
    • : to mark with a sign, especially the sign of the cross.
    • : to communicate by means of a sign; signal: He signed his wish to leave.
    • : to convey in a sign language.
    • : Obsolete. to direct or appoint by a sign.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to write one's signature, as a token of agreement, obligation, receipt, etc.: to sign for a package.
    • : to make a sign or signal: He signed to her to go away.
    • : to employ a sign language for communication.
    • : to obligate oneself by signature: He signed with another team for the next season.
  1. 1
    • : sign away / over to assign or dispose of by affixing one's signature to a document: She signed over her fortune to the church.
    • : sign in, to record or authorize one's arrival by signing a register.Also sign out.
    • : sign off, to withdraw, as from some responsibility or connection.to cease radio or television broadcasting, especially at the end of the day.Informal.to become silent: He had exhausted conversation topics and signed off.to indicate one's approval explicitly if not formally: The president is expected to sign off on the new agreement.
    • : sign on, to employ; hire.to bind oneself to work, as by signing a contract: He signed on as a pitcher with a major-league team.to start radio or television broadcasting, especially at the beginning of the day.Computers.log.
    • : sign up, to enlist, as in an organization or group; to register or subscribe: to sign up for the navy; to sign up for class.

Phrases

  • sign in
  • sign off
  • sign on
  • sign one's own death warrant
  • sign on the dotted line
  • sign out
  • sign over
  • sign up
  • high sign
  • show signs of

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Although coronavirus cases have been rising in Virginia all fall, leading Northam to tighten certain restrictions on businesses and private gatherings, the economy has shown signs of improvement.

  • Ames believed those 600 turkeys weren’t just another meal, but a sign of stability for families that had little of it in the past eight months.

  • That’s another sign that stocks in other industries could enjoy a prolonged spell in the sunshine as the global economy gets healthier.

  • Mason and colleagues looked for signs of species diversity hidden in the genetic makeup of colugos, a task that required samples of colugo DNA from across Southeast Asia.

  • The Bucks also agreed with the Sacramento Kings Monday on a sign-and-trade for Bogdan Bogdanovic, but the veteran guard has yet to sign off on the deal by Wednesday, according to multiple people with knowledge of the evolving situation.

  • A declaration of candidacy signed by Cuomo was in the trunk of his car.

  • In fact, by the end of 2014, it passed over 220 bills, which were signed into law by President Barack Obama.

  • In 2007, President Bush signed a law that required all Head Start grantees to be evaluated using an evidence-based system.

  • And now the Chinese courts have effectively signed their name to it.

  • Craig is signed on for just one more Bond flick after Spectre.

  • A tall phantom in livery appeared, as if by magic, and signed to me to ascend the grand staircase.

  • Some were inquisitive enough to ask, Has a treaty been signed or a trick been played upon the rebels?

  • Each entry on the vault record book shall be signed by the persons having access to the safe.

  • “Chaplet”—a wreath or garland signed for by him in his ambitious hopes—expresses his birth-date by Con.

  • They were taken to the quarters of the general-in-chief in command, and it was he himself who signed their condemnation.