trek / trɛk /

💦中学词汇跋涉跋山涉水徒步旅行跋扈

trek3 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

trekked, trek·king.

  1. to travel or migrate slowly or with difficulty, especially to hike through rough terrain: He's trekked through the Himalayas and summited Mt. Kilimanjaro.
  2. to make a short but difficult trip on foot: We trekked back to our hotel in the pouring rain.
  3. South Africa. to travel by ox wagon.
v. 有主动词 verb

trekked, trek·king.

  1. South Africa. to draw.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a slow or difficult journey, hike, or trip.
  2. South Africa. a migration or expedition, especially by ox wagon.a stage of such a journey, between one stopping place and the next.

trek 近义词

n. 名词 noun

long journey

v. 动词 verb

journey

更多trek例句

  1. Writer Leath Tonino devised a 200-mile solo desert trek, following the path of the legendary cartographer who literally put these contentious canyons on the map.
  2. So, we just made the decision to continue on with the trek, but to do it as conscientiously and as low-impact as possible.
  3. He says that the team was able to show microbes would be able to survive the trek from Mars to Earth without shielding from the dangers of space if they clump together.
  4. During their latest trek they checked these survey stakes and determined the speed with which the ice masses creep.
  5. Until now, measuring these effects has required arduous treks through trackless swamps.
  6. During his trek, Brinsley twice passed within a block of a police stationhouse and he almost certainly saw cops along the way.
  7. The audience--tout Hollywood--stands to cheer his slow and painful trek from the wings to the table.
  8. Overall, few travelers have made the trek into the desert of Sudan to see these architectural wonders.
  9. In fact, some feminist critics have pointed to a long history of objectification in Star Trek.
  10. Horst Ulrich, a 72-year-old German on a trek with a group of friends, watched four Nepali guides swept away by an avalanche.
  11. If his partner's impedimentia was not too bulky, the ancient model was ready for another trek to the hills.
  12. The mountaineers, indeed, suffered less than the townsfolk as being more accustomed than they to conditions of trek and battle.
  13. The cool morning air made it bearable for man and beast to trek.
  14. By the third day of their trek southward along the Great River, the soles of Redbird's moccasins had worn through.
  15. Once more was there a cracking of whips, and the oxen, straightening out along the trek-touw (Note 3), moved reluctantly on.