trench 的 4 个定义
- Fortification. a long, narrow excavation in the ground, the earth from which is thrown up in front to serve as a shelter from enemy fire or attack.
- trenches, a system of such excavations, with their embankments, etc.
- a deep furrow, ditch, or cut.
- Oceanography. a long, steep-sided, narrow depression in the ocean floor.
- to surround or fortify with trenches; entrench.
- to cut a trench in.
- to set or place in a trench.
- (5)
- to dig a trench.
- trench on / upon to encroach or infringe on.to come close to; verge on: His remarks were trenching on poor taste.
trench 近义词
ditch, channel dug in earth
更多trench例句
- Now, let’s return to the trenches and talk about what’s going on up front.
- I’m looking at a trench on part of a 7,500-acre ranch outside Big Timber, Montana.
- Ranch owner Kevin Halverson, 70, spent the morning shoveling snow out of the trench.
- As trenches flooded, bomb craters on the battlefield filled with muddy water and swallowed artillery, horses, and people.
- If there are a half-dozen “Floridas,” one of them is sure to be Wisconsin, home to some of the closest elections and nastiest partisan trench warfare of the past decade.
- You don't bag something and leave it by the trench while you go back to the truck for your lunch.
- Early airpower theorists were not only repelled by trench warfare.
- The guys that I was partnering with early on wanted the logo to be a guy opening his trench coat.
- The goal was to get a human being to the bottom of the Mariana Trench for the first time since Cameron was a 5-year-old.
- And the highlight for me was touching down at the bottom of the trench.
- No word of the bombs and trench mortars I asked for six weeks ago, but the "bayonets" are coming in liberally now.
- I asked him if that amounted to one shell per yard and he said the whole length of the trench was less than 100 yards.
- The band took up a position in an old Spanish trench and played as the troops filed past along the beach.
- The Anzacs are very much depressed to hear they are to get no more bombs for their six Japanese trench mortars.
- On their march the Americans had to fight a hidden foe who slipped from trench to trench, or found safety in the woods.