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spring out

/spring/US // sprɪŋ //UK // (sprɪŋ) //

伸出手来,涌现出的春天,涌现出来的,涌现出一批又一批

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    sprang or, often, sprung; sprung; spring·ing.

    • : to rise, leap, move, or act suddenly and swiftly, as by a sudden dart or thrust forward or outward, or being suddenly released from a coiled or constrained position: to spring into the air; a tiger about to spring.
    • : to be released from a constrained position, as by resilient or elastic force or from the action of a spring: A trap springs. The door sprang open and in he walked.
    • : to issue forth suddenly, as water, blood, sparks, fire, etc.: Blood sprang from the wound.
    • : to come into being, rise, or arise within a short time: Industries sprang up in the suburbs.
    • : to come into being by growth, as from a seed or germ, bulb, root, etc.; grow, as plants.
    • : to proceed or originate from a specific source or cause.
    • : to have as one's birth or lineage; be descended, as from a person, family, stock, etc.; come from: to spring from ancient aristocracy.
    • : to rise or extend upward, as a spire.
    • : to take an upward course or curve from a point of support, as an arch.
    • : to come or appear suddenly, as if at a bound: An objection sprang to mind.
    • : to start or rise from cover, as a pheasant, woodcock, or the like.
    • : to become bent or warped, as boards.
    • : to shift or work loose, as parts of a mechanism, structure, etc.: The board sprang from the fence during the storm.
    • : to explode, as a mine.
    • : Archaic. to begin to appear, as day, light, etc.; dawn.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    sprang or, often, sprung; sprung; spring·ing.

    • : to cause to spring.
    • : to cause to fly back, move, or act, as by resiliency, elastic force, a spring, etc.: to spring a lock.
    • : to cause to shift out of place, work loose, warp, split, or crack: Moisture sprang the board from the fence.
    • : to split or crack: The ship sprang its keel on a rock.
    • : to develop by or as by splitting or cracking: The boat sprang a leak.
    • : to bend by force, or force in by bending, as a resilient slat or bar.
    • : to stretch or bend beyond its elastic tolerance: This clip has been sprung.
    • : to bring out, disclose, produce, make, etc., suddenly: to spring a joke.
    • : to leap over.
    • : Slang. to secure the release of from confinement, as of jail, military service, or the like.
    • : Nautical. to move into or out of a berth by pulling on the offshore end of a warp made fast to the pier.
    • : to explode.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a leap, jump, or bound.
    • : a sudden movement caused by the release of something elastic.
    • : an elastic or bouncing quality: There is a spring in his walk.
    • : elasticity or resilience: This board has spring in it.
    • : a structural defect or injury caused by a warp, crack, etc.
    • : an issue of water from the earth, taking the form, on the surface, of a small stream or standing as a pool or small lake.
    • : the place of such an issue: mineral springs.
    • : a source or fountainhead of something: a spring of inspiration.
    • : an elastic contrivance or body, as a strip or wire of steel coiled spirally, that recovers its shape after being compressed, bent, or stretched.
    • : the season between winter and summer: in the Northern Hemisphere from the vernal equinox to the summer solstice; in the Southern Hemisphere from the autumnal equinox to the winter solstice.
    • : the season of the year following winter and characterized by the budding of trees, growth of plants, the onset of warmer weather, etc.
    • : the first stage and freshest period: the spring of life.
    • : sometimes initial capital letter. a period of growth, recovery, or regeneration: signs of an economic spring.
    • : usually initial capital letter. a popular movement calling for liberal reforms and opposing authoritarian restrictions on freedom and information access: the brief Seoul Spring of 1979–80; the Academic Spring’s goal of free access to published research.See also Prague Spring, Arab Spring. a period of liberalization or democratization.
    • : Nautical. warp. a line from the quarter of a vessel to an anchor on the bottom, used to hold the vessel at its mooring, broadside to the current.
    • : Also called springing. Architecture. the point at which an arch or dome rises from its support.the rise or the angle of the rise of an arch.
    • : Archaic. the dawn, as of day, light, etc.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or suitable for the season of spring: spring flowers.
    • : resting on or containing mechanical springs.
  1. 1
    • : spring for, Informal. to pay for; treat someone to.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Your credentials will follow you across multiple platforms, devices, and browsers—whenever you need to log in, the password manager should spring into life.

  • New Mexico Health Connections’ decision to close at year’s end will leave just three of the 23 nonprofit health insurance co-ops that sprung from the Affordable Care Act.

  • Naturally, Airbnb was among the first names to spring to mind.

  • We had planned a July 7 start, so a lot of the spring was just kind of watching and waiting.

  • Most of the area’s rainfall occurs in winter and spring, so those oxygen isotopes are indicative of conditions between February and May, rather than summer.

  • She completed a yoga teacher-training program and, in the spring of 2008, went on a retreat in Peru to study with shamans.

  • This is the Mexico that U.S. college students would be wise to steer clear of on spring break.

  • It is the only tourist center Ukraine has left on the Black Sea, since Russia annexed Crimea last spring.

  • Having graduated Juilliard last spring, Alex Sharp is too young to have given the performance of a lifetime.

  • Althea is now re-scheduled with her surgeon for this spring.

  • It was a spring day, and the fat buds of the chestnuts were bursting into magnificent green plumes.

  • I do not know what I think; all my thoughts seem whirling round as leaves do in brooks in the time of the spring rains.

  • In the spring of 1868 he was taken by his mother for a visit to England, and there, in the same year, his sister was born.

  • The cat had been about to spring at Grandfather Mole again when Mr. Crow spoke to her.

  • In the spring of 1877 Mrs. Kipling came to England to see her children, and was followed the next year by her husband.