take cover 的定义
- Seek protection, find a hiding place, as in It started to pour so we took cover under the trees, or He wanted to avoid the reporters so we said he could take cover in our summer cottage. This term uses cover in the sense of “shelter” or “concealment,” a usage dating from the 1400s.
take cover 近义词
等同于 stash
take cover 的近义词 49 个
- bury
- conceal
- disguise
- hole up
- lock up
- secrete
- smuggle
- tuck away
- adumbrate
- cache
- camouflage
- cloak
- cover
- curtain
- dissemble
- ditch
- duck
- eclipse
- ensconce
- harbor
- mask
- obscure
- occult
- plant
- protect
- reserve
- screen
- shadow
- shelter
- shield
- shroud
- squirrel
- stifle
- suppress
- veil
- withhold
- blot out
- go into hiding
- go underground
- hold back
- hush up
- keep from
- keep secret
- lie low
- not give away
- not tell
- put out of the way
- salt away
- stow away
take cover 的反义词 12 个
等同于 hide
take cover 的近义词 48 个
- bury
- camouflage
- cover
- disguise
- hole up
- mask
- obscure
- plant
- protect
- shelter
- shield
- smuggle
- stash
- suppress
- tuck away
- withhold
- adumbrate
- cache
- cloak
- curtain
- dissemble
- ditch
- duck
- eclipse
- ensconce
- harbor
- reserve
- screen
- secrete
- shadow
- shroud
- squirrel
- stifle
- veil
- blot out
- go into hiding
- go underground
- hold back
- hush up
- keep from
- keep secret
- lie low
- lock up
- not give away
- not tell
- put out of the way
- salt away
- stow away
take cover 的反义词 15 个
更多take cover例句
- Yet this, in the end, is a book from which one emerges sad, gloomy, disenchanted, at least if we agree to take it seriously.
- They took cover inside a print works to the north east of Paris, where they held a member of staff as a hostage.
- And now, similarly, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee: "Bend over and take it like a prisoner!"
- Clad in a blue, striped button-down, a silver watch adorning his left wrist, Huckabee beams on the cover.
- ROME — What does it take for a Hollywood A-lister to get a private audience with Pope Francis?
- I take the Extream Bells, and set down the six Changes on them thus.
- All elements of expression modify each other, so that no mere rule can cover all cases.
- Wycliffe translates the Vulgate: “And it as a modir onourid schal meete hym, and as a womman fro virgynyte schal take him.”
- The Vine is a universal favorite, and rarely out of view; while it often seems to cover half the ground in sight.
- But it was necessary to take Silan, which the rebels hastened to strengthen, closely followed up by the Spaniards.