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stanch

/stawnch, stanch, stahnch/US // stɔntʃ, stæntʃ, stɑntʃ //UK // (stɑːntʃ) //

锚,锚定,锚固,锚杆

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to stop the flow of.
    • : to stop the flow of blood or other liquid from.
    • : Archaic. to check, allay, or extinguish.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to stop flowing, as blood; be stanched.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Also called flash-lock, navigation weir . a lock that, after being partially emptied, is opened suddenly to send a boat over a shallow place with a rush of water.

Examples

  • Adding other measures to stanch viral spread remains critical, he said.

  • Only by studying both groups will researchers determine how well vaccines work in stanching the virus’s spread.

  • They could be a vital component in stanching the spread of the virus — especially in the crucial months before most Americans are vaccinated against the pathogen.

  • Xavier is also a stanch ally to the LGBTQ community, and I know that he will work with us to ensure health equity for our community.

  • State and regional water officials are also stepping in, increasingly trying to stanch surface expressions.

  • A neighbor tried in vain to stanch the bleeding with a towel.

  • In a swift move to stanch the controversy, Governor Rockefeller demanded the piece be removed.

  • But Clapper  has also failed fundamentally to stanch the leakage of secrets so emblematic of his tenure atop the community.

  • The Obama administration began 2009 with an aggressive stimulus to stanch the rapid deterioration of the economy.

  • This is the first and principal point at which we can stanch the wastage of teaching energy that now goes on.

  • Here, then, the League and their stanch friends have sustained an unexpected and serious shock.

  • I tried to stanch it with my waistband, but ineffectually; it relieved him for a moment, and he asked for water.

  • It seemed too bad that such a stanch dwelling should be given over to neglect, but such is often the case in a new country.

  • To this I agreed, knowing that Tim was a stanch old soldier, who would not beat a retreat unless we were likely to be overpowered.