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terry

/ter-ee/US // ˈtɛr i //UK // (ˈtɛrɪ) //

特里,特瑞,特利

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural ter·ries.

    • : the loop formed by the pile of a fabric when left uncut.
    • : Also called terry cloth . a pile fabric, usually of cotton, with loops on both sides, as in a Turkish towel.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : made of such a fabric: a terry bathrobe.
    • : having the pile loops uncut: terry velvet.

Examples

  • Taken together across the four episodes, the stories about and from Terry show a man who was desperate for an answer that’s impossible to find.

  • “This circuit split is untenable,” Terry’s legal team argues in his petition, pointing out “geography alone now determines” whether “countless” people serving low-level crack cocaine convictions can apply for sentence reduction.

  • Terry will also address housing stability by leveraging federal housing dollars and working to establish safe and inclusive shelters.

  • Terry, who did much of the mapping work at ATAC, had spent four years as a contractor with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency working on American drone strikes.

  • When the region was hit by a powerful windstorm last September, Terry flew a drone over massive piles of downed trees and brush collected by the city.

  • Terry Castle has this great book called The Professor, which came out after I was in grad school.

  • At its height in the 1920s, Terry noted, the Klan wielded real political influence, boasting a membership upwards of four million.

  • Don Terry, a senior writer at the Southern Poverty Law Center, doubts it.

  • The film holds a special resonance for Jones, since Terry also served as his mentor.

  • Clark [Terry] always had the ability to put young kids on his shoulders.

  • Then the gang did deliberately combine to waylay and attack Lieutenant Overton and Terry?

  • Further, Lieutenants Overton and Terry were authorized to publish this letter in any way that they chose.

  • "I hope we'll have as good luck with each step upward," beamed young Terry.

  • "Mr. Johnson is first lieutenant of F company, your company, Mr. Terry," stated the major.

  • "I don't suppose Terry or myself will have the luck to be picked for this sort of border patrol work, if it comes," suggested Hal.