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slice off

/slahys/US // slaɪs //UK // (slaɪs) //

切开,切掉,切断,割掉

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a thin, flat piece cut from something: a slice of bread.
    • : a part, portion, or share: a slice of land.
    • : any of various implements with a thin, broad blade or part, as for turning food in a frying pan, serving fish at the table, or taking up printing ink; spatula.
    • : Sports. the path described by a ball, as in baseball or golf, that curves in a direction corresponding to the side from which it was struck.a ball describing such a path.
    • : Tennis. a stroke executed by hitting down on the ball with an underhand motion and thus creating backspin.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    sliced, slic·ing.

    • : to cut into slices; divide into parts.
    • : to cut through or cleave with or as if with a knife: The ship sliced the sea.
    • : to cut off or remove as a slice or slices.
    • : to remove by means of a slice, slice bar, or similar implement.
    • : Sports. to hit so as to result in a slice.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    sliced, slic·ing.

    • : to slice something.
    • : to admit of being sliced.
    • : Sports. to slice the ball. to describe a slice in flight.

Phrases

  • slice of the pie
  • greatest thing since sliced bread
  • no matter how you slice it

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • That’s because the service, like most social media apps, slices and dices user data to better understand what users want.

  • Ethiopia’s planned opening up of the country’s telecommunications sector had international companies jostling to be among the first to get a slice of a largely untapped industry in Africa’s fastest growing economy.

  • Quantum physics prohibits any slice of time smaller than about 10-43 seconds, a period known as the Planck time.

  • The city of San Diego has a small slice of the district and Democratic candidate Kenya Taylor got 27 percent of the vote.

  • So what we need to do is we need to join every other industrialized country in the world and pass a value-added tax which would give the public a slice, a sliver of every Amazon transaction, every Google search.

  • Finding the shop is a trip in itself and an introduction to a slice of history.

  • The robots can slice through stone and rough out vast blocks of stone while the artisans are sleeping.

  • “There were moments when I was just really tempted to have a slice of pizza or a cheeseburger,” he says.

  • The Good Lie should have been a slice of history, the likes of which never to be repeated.

  • If you drink a diet soda, are you more likely to give yourself permission to have a slice of cake later?

  • Well, the pudding moment arrived, and a huge slice almost obscured from sight the plate before us.

  • "Take some melon, Mr. Mudge," said we, as with a sudden bolt we recovered our speech and took another slice ourself.

  • Ethel found a small boy looking ready to cry at an untouched slice of beef.

  • She even noticed one little thief that darted in and pecked shamelessly at her own slice.

  • Paul went on talking in a quiet, low tone, while Digby was munching a thick slice of bread-and-butter.