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stationing

/stey-shuhn/US // ˈsteɪ ʃən //UK // (ˈsteɪʃən) //

派驻,驻扎,驻守,驻留

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a place or position in which a person or thing is normally located.
    • : a stopping place for trains or other land conveyances, for the transfer of freight or passengers.
    • : the building or buildings at such a stopping place.
    • : the district or municipal headquarters of certain public services: police station; fire station; postal station.
    • : a place equipped for some particular kind of work, service, research, or the like: gasoline station; geophysical station.
    • : the position, as of persons or things, in a scale of estimation, rank, or dignity; standing: the responsibility of persons of high station.
    • : a position, office, rank, calling, or the like.
    • : Radio and Television. a studio or building from which broadcasts originate.a person or organization originating and broadcasting messages or programs.a specific frequency or band of frequencies assigned to a regular or special broadcaster: Tune to the Civil Defense station.the complete equipment used in transmitting and receiving broadcasts.
    • : Military. a military place of duty.a semipermanent army post.
    • : Navy. a place or region to which a ship or fleet is assigned for duty.
    • : the area in which the British officials of a district or the officers of a garrison resided.
    • : Biology. a particular area or type of region where a given animal or plant is found.
    • : Australian. a ranch with its buildings, land, etc., especially for raising sheep.
    • : Surveying. Also called instrument station, set-up. a point where an observation is taken.a precisely located reference point.a length of 100 feet along a survey line.
    • : a section or area assigned to a waiter, soldier, etc.; post: The waiter says this isn't his station.
    • : stations of the cross.
    • : Archaic. the fact or condition of standing still.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to assign a station to; place or post in a station or position.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Earlier this month, Emrod received funding from Powerco, New Zealand’s second biggest utility, to conduct a test of its system at a grid-connected commercial power station.

  • Plastic gloves were distributed along with hand sanitizer at multiple stations around the National Mall.

  • Finally, CEOs might encourage able employees to consider volunteering as nonpartisan election officers at polling stations, which are currently tracking to be understaffed.

  • She likes voting by mail because it means she doesn’t have to take time off from her job as a cook to stand in line at a polling station and just has to walk five minutes from her home to the post office.

  • Long before Michael came along, it was a kind of refuge or way station for pilgrims making the journey on foot to Rome.

  • Security officials told Agence France-Presse that the gas station manager said he had recognized the two men.

  • Unconfirmed reports in the French media claimed that the brothers were spotted at a gas station in northern France on Thursday.

  • “We met the smuggler in the train station; he came to speak with us about the services he provided,” Yazbek says.

  • McCauley may have married beneath her station, but Gordon-Levitt has obsessive fans.

  • Speaking to a local radio station today Antonella Ramelli said the video gives her hope.

  • In particular the Governor of Adinskoy offered us a guard of fifty men to the next station, if we apprehended any danger.

  • My station was on the right of the line, where the breastwork, ending in a redoubt, was steep and high.

  • The General in command of the station was a feeble old man, suffering from senile decay.

  • It was only the engine drawing the train of cars up to the station to take the passengers away.

  • On his arrival at the local railway station he was met by his lordship in person.