spring up
兴起,涌现,涌现出来的,兴起来的
Related Words
Definitions
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 1
- : of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or suitable for the season of spring: spring flowers.
- : resting on or containing mechanical springs.
- 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.